On 09/23/2015 02:15 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:
Diet and Heart Disease
Chronic Lyme Disease
Fibromyalgia
Diet and Cancer
Vaccination and autism
???? and Alzheimer's
Chronic fatigue syndrome
Environmental sensitivity syndrome

First of all, I would like to recruit this list to identify other issues where 
at least one of us Global Warming Believers departs from some other equally 
strong scientific consensus.

Unfortunately, I don't know the consensus in most of those categories.  I can 
wander off what my oncologist claims about diet and cancer, though.  But my 
oncologist was trained as a DO, which puts her credentials at risk in some 
people's eyes:

   http://www.quackwatch.org/04ConsumerEducation/QA/osteo.html

So, the fact that she takes the very conservative position that we just don't 
know enough about the ties between diet and (my type of) cancer, is interesting 
to me.

AND then, I would like to have a discussion concerning  why and when we feel 
qualified to depart from a scientific consensus.

I feel qualified to depart from what she tells me because of my personal experience about 
what has worked for me during chemo and the course of my experimental drug.  But these 
departures do _not_ extend (by induction) to any general population.  I can only say that 
what she tried failed and what I tried worked.  Granted, this is not about diet and 
cancer so much as diet and cancer intervention.  I can, however, proceed by deduction and 
suggest that I'm probably not an entirely unique subject.  There are probably some 
generalizations that could be made and I can explore the space of conclusions to 
speculate on what those might be.  To be concrete, here's an example.  About 2 cycles 
into my treatment, I began to experience a "welling up" in my throat, 
especially when bending over or going upside down on my inversion table.  She tentatively 
diagnosed it as GERD.  She put me on proton pump inhibitors and when they didn't work, 
motility promoters.  Neither worked.  But I discovered that i
nsoluble fiber _did_ work.  She doubts me to this day.  And, to be honest, I 
often doubt myself.  Another issue where I disagree with her is on the subject 
of fasting.  There are these somewhat controversial papers that indicate 
medium-term fasting (more than 48 hours) assists the therapy in triggering 
apoptosis (good cell death that minimizes free toxins) and reducing necrosis 
(bad cell death where toxins roam a bit more freely).  She maintains that 
people on chemo need to eat in order to sustain themselves in the face of the 
poison.  I maintain that as long as we're poisoning ourselves anyway, why not 
do a proper job of it?


--
⇔ glen

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