--- In [email protected], Sal Sunshine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Here is the article from Quackwatch.   Notice there is no
> mention of any Nobel-prize nominated work.  A read-through
> will make pretty clear why.

I sniffed around Google and found this:

http://uspolitics.about.com/b/a/2005_03_23.htm

About the Schiavo "Nobel Prize Nominated" Doctor
Amended 23 March. NewsMax reports that Dr. William Hammesfahr
"believes that Terri Schiavo can recover with proper treatment."
NewsMax -- along with FOX, MSNBC, the National Review and Dr.
Hammesfahr's website -- indicates that he was nominated for the Nobel
Prize in 1999.

>From Nobel Prize FAQ (emphasis added):

    3. Has X been nominated as a candidate for the Nobel Prize, or
where do I find a list of Nobel Prize nominees?

    According to the Statutes of the Nobel Foundation, information
about the nominations is not to be disclosed, publicly or privately,
for a period of fifty years. The restriction not only concerns the
nominees and nominators, but also investigations and opinions in the
awarding of a prize. Nomination information older than fifty years is
public. 

So, if he had been truly nominated -- he would be violating
fundamental Nobel Foundation principles to say that. The 50 year vow
of silence is up in 2049. But wait. There's more.

The Tampa Tribune reported in 2003 that the Nobel Prize nomination
was a letter written by Hammesfahr's Congressman to the Nobel
committee.

The Nobel Prize website articulates the nomination procedure: a
letter from a Congressman isn't on the list. Does the Nobel Committee
consider these "informal" nominations? In a word: no. (and a nod to
News Hounds)

The Florida court found Hammesfahr's 2002 testimony in the Schiavo
case to be anecdotal. A quick review of the handful of published
research on his web site makes that judgment abundantly clear. It
reminds me of the "doctor-by-mail-order" materials that land by the
truckload in my parents' mailbox each month.

Censured by Florida Board of Medicine
In 2003, the Florida Board of Medicine fined him $2,000 for billing a
patient for services not received, forced him to pay $52,000 in court
costs, and directed him to perform 100 hours of community service.
(cite - pdf) The Board of Medicine also

    ruled that Hammesfahr's treatment of stroke patients, using a
procedure he has claimed could help Terri Schiavo, was "not within
the generally accepted standard of care" (Finding of Fact No. 55, PDF
p. 33), it declined to rule that the treatment was harmful to his
patients and noted that some patients improved after treatment.
(cite) 

In March 2004, an appeals court determined that Hammesfahr did charge
a patient $3,000 for three days of services; however, the patient
received only two days of services. The appeals court reversed the
fine:

    The record contains competent, substantial evidence to support
the Board's finding that the patient enrolled in a $3000
treatment program but only received a $2000 treatment program.
However, the record does not contain clear and convincing evidence to
support the Board's conclusion that the overcharge was the result
of exploitation for financial gain under section 458.331(1)(n)... At
best, the facts in this case provide a basis for a civil contract
dispute between the parties. 

Compares Stroke Treatment to Oxygen-Deprived Brain Injury
On 18 March, he was interviewed on Christian Broadcasting Network's
700 Club, where he reportedly said that "about 40 percent of his
patients are worse than Terri, yet have seen remarkable progress. He
says Terri would do just as well." (cite)

Note that Schiavo did not have a stroke. A stroke is caused by
reduced blood flow to the brain. (My mother had a stroke; I'm
familiar with the cause and effects.) Schiavo's brain injury is due
to reduced oxygen flow.

For the record, I started pursuing this before I ran across it at
MediaMatters. All it took was one look at his website -- which
screams "no credibility" -- to hit Google. A former patient
(self-reported) had already found the Nobel Prize information: it
shows up in a discussion board using the Google search string
[Hammesfahr nobel prize nominee].

I am appalled that mainstream journalists have not done this basic
vetting.

According to Media Matters, both FOX and MSNBC have had this man on
screen, introducing him as a Nobel Prize nominee. He has been held up
as a "world-renowned expert" and Nobel Prize nominee by the National
Review -- a publication that, until now, I thought of as
journalistically sound with a conservative editorial policy. But when
it -- along with MSNBC -- is keeping company with LifeNews, BP News,
The Conservative Voice, Florida Baptist Witness, the Elmira (NY)
Journal, the Christian Broadcasting Network, and World Net Daily ...
that journalistically-sound premise shatters.
02:15 AM  #






To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to