Devra Lee Davis eulogizes her friend (author of AntiCancer, A New Way of Life 
(http://www.anticancerbook.com/) in the Environmental Health Trust Newsletter. 
I use his and Devra's books in all my environmental anthropology courses, as we 
continue our battles to educate citizens and professionals about the necessity 
to overthrow biomedicine. 
Best Brian McKenna
 
NEWSLETTER: Passing of Medical Pioneer Leaves a Lasting Legacy to Environmental 
Health Trust
 
With the death of David Servan-Schreiber, the world has lost a bright light, 
his young children have lost a father, I have lost a dear friend and wonderful 
colleague, and Environmental Health Trust has lost its first board member. A 
man of immense Gallic charm and daunting brilliance, his brain cancer at age 31 
was picked up by an experimental study and set the course of the rest of his 
life. For close to two decades, David managed to save his own life and changed 
those who knew him. Having undergone state of the art surgery and treatment for 
his brain tumor, he applied his brilliant scientific mind to identifying the 
best nutritional and other programs to keep cancer in abeyance.



His best-selling block-buster books were unusually personal--sharing his own 
pain, frustrations and successes as he navigated the confusing world of 
integrative treatments. A founder of the Center for Integrative Medicine at the 
University of Pittsburgh, as a psychiatrist, researcher and brain tumor 
survivor, David really walked the talk. When he turned those penetrating dark 
eyes on you, you knew you were in the presence of greatness.
 
Ultimately David took risks in revealing his personal journey through his books 
that changed how the disease is viewed and treated. Scorned by some in the 
French and American medical establishments, he was proud that leaders at M.D. 
Anderson were taking his ideas seriously. His interests ranged from the healing 
power of the deep slow breath and green tea to the latest advances in 
therapeutic radiation and immuno-therapy--subjects he introduced to millions 
through his best-selling books published in forty languages.
 
In the past few years, in addition to his pioneering research on nutritional 
and other interventions, he joined with Ronald B. Herberman, MD and me, to 
tackle the dangers of cellphone radiation, a subject he addressed in the 
preface to my book, Disconnect. David and I spoke often about the mistaken 
presumptions and misleading conclusions of negative studies, like the one just 
published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute that examined 
children ages 7-19 and asked about whether cellphone use up to 2008 could 
account for brain tumors. We both understood, he much more personally than I, 
that brain cancers usually take a decade to arise. Of course, such studies find 
nothing. But far more troubling is the work of Prof. Lennart Hardell that shows 
that those who begin using cellphones as teenagers have quadrupled risks of 
brain tumors within a decade.
 
In the preface, he wrote of our dinner one lovely evening in Pittsburgh, where 
he first learned of the potential dangers of cellphones. When he answered a 
call with his cellphone held directly next to his brain, I practically leaped 
out of my seat. The conversation we began then never ended—til now. It led 
ultimately to the founding of EHT, with his enthusiastically telling me he 
would be our first board member, and to a collaboration that was always 
invigorating and challenging. A demanding scientist, when David looked at the 
remarkable array of studies on the capacity of cellphones to cause biological 
damage, and the paltry nature of research underway, he recognized that there 
was a state of denial that extended to the top tiers of science in many nations.
 
After his surgery for glioma last summer, we met in August at his Paris home 
and spoke with excitement about how the issue had morphed from a fringe concern 
to a serious matter in many countries. He wanted to know all about what had 
happened in California where efforts had advanced to promote a right to know 
about microwave radiation from phones. He had started talked with Orange—a 
large French telecom firm—and felt there was a new receptivity to prevention 
based policies.
 
Just three weeks before his tumor was diagnosed, David had visited with German 
researchers conducting state of the art studies of vaccines to treat brain 
tumors--a treatment he ended up using. As a savvy cancer patient, he 
appreciated that hope remained the most powerful drug, but he also understood 
what he faced.
 
Working with experts in the field, we had created a number of expert statements 
about the need to take precautions in using cellphones that appeared in major 
publications ranging from the International Herald Tribune to a number of 
magazines appearing in many other languages. When the World Health Organization 
affirmed those views in its recent expert report in May of 2011, the relief was 
palpable. That work, like the body of research and popular writing and video 
interviews David produced, leaves a lasting and powerful message about the 
value of taking preventive steps and ensuring that cellphones not become the 
next cigarette. One of the last publications David contributed to is EHT’s 
two-sided pamphlet, produced as part of the Global Campaign for Safer Cell 
Phones Physicians' Advice to Patients and Their Families.
We can no longer walk in David’s shadow, learn his newest ideas, or hear tough 
criticisms of research results. But the shadow David has cast extends 
throughout the world thanks to the broad reach of his writings and his own 
strong and clear sense of what needs to be done to promote environmental 
wellness inside and out.
 
As seen in the July 26, 2011 issue of our Newsletter.
 
full: 
http://www.environmentalhealthtrust.org/content/newsletter-passing-medical-pioneer-leaves-lasting-legacy-environmental-health-trust



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