It must be some four years ago now that I mentioned on this forum a friend 
who had cancer of the kidney of a very aggressive kind that workers in 
petroleum workplaces get, and which is supposed to kill every time, and very 
quickly.  The kidney was removed.  Until he got his own generator, this 
friend got CS from me, and changed his diet and pretty much did what he 
could along Hulda Clark lines with the help of a private clinic in Subiaco, 
Western Australia.  (Churchill Clinic). One of the treatments was 
oxygenating the blood; the blood was run into a bag, oxygenated, and then 
allowed to run back into his body through one of three tubes - the blood 
would change colour in front of their eyes.  One tube brought the blood from 
the body, one allowed the oxygen in, and the other took the blood back to 
his body.  This was kinder to the cells, I believe, than having them fill a 
bag, walk out of the room, administer the oxygen in the other room, walk 
back in, and then drip the blood back into him, which was their usual 
practice until then.  I understand the red blood cells begin to die after 
about six minutes away from the body, so this method would have cut down a 
lot of wasted time.  He also had a portion of his lung removed, which was 
cancerous.  This op caused the most discomfort of any.  Before that he had 
not been in pain or felt ill.

They sold up locally and moved closer to the city for his twice or three 
times weekly treatment.

He did well, but they got tired with all the travel and extra work.  In 
time, he submitted to radiation treatment and chemo.  He was also admitted 
to trials of a new anticancer drug.  He lived longer than anybody else on 
the trials, and the doctors were very interested in this; he was the only 
one who had not had a blood transfusion.

The radiation burnt his insides, and he was in a lot of pain.  Last month he 
was operated on to remove a portion of the intestines.  He was in such pain 
that he vomited everything he swallowed, and his veins sank so that they 
weren't able to administer drips or injections.   The operating Dr said he 
could go home as soon as he had a bowel motion, but he didn't have one. 
Eventually it was agreed that he would go to a different hospital for pain 
management.  ("He could die of neglect here.")  Before he got that far, 
after a cheerful morning where he was cracking jokes with the nurses, he 
passed away.

At the funeral his wife expressed her appreciation for the research, and I 
pass those thanks on to you knowledgeable people.  She said there was no 
cancer in his body when he died.  It was a blood clot that killed him.

Lots to think about!

Rowena


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