Re: killer doctor
- From: Brent <Bite@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 03 Apr 2005 13:50:19 GMT
On 3 Apr 2005 05:53:09 -0700, "a_weisman@xxxxxxxxx"
<a_weisman@xxxxxxxxx> snickered:
>Brent is a despicable bottom feeding scum or a delusional freak. Either
>way he sucks.
Your damn right I do. Thanks for the compliment. I don't know Tim but
I know one thing. He's on the right side. As far as safety tens of
millions of people use peroxide therapy in europe. Two people near
death die in america. They are on a safe and effective treatment that
the world all over uses. What happens? the legal system goes into full
battle mode. GIVE ME A BREAK! I think we all know who is behind this.
Tens of thousands of patients in this country safely receive and
benefit from hydrogen peroxide infusions each year. Find anyone who
has has died from a properly administered treatment.
Fellow practitioners say Bibeau was taking at least two
government-approved drugs whose known side effects could just as
easily have explained the circumstances of her death. Yet they say
authorities rushed to blame Shortt's treatment, because it was
something foreign, unorthodox, outside the realm of "big Pharma."
"There is a war," says Dr. Robert Rowen, a leading proponent of
hydrogen peroxide and other "oxidative" remedies. "The guys with
inferior chemicals that simply suppress symptoms are losing because
their wares, their potions, their snake oil only covers up symptoms."
On the latest battlefield in that war, Shortt, a self-described
"longevity physician," is fighting to keep his medical license - and
possibly his freedom.
"I might be the world's greatest lunatic," he says, but "I'm not going
to do anything to my patients that I think might hurt them."
As posted earlier quackwatch lost and the courts are on the side of
the "alternatives". This is the part I like. To get good medical care
you have to go to court. LMAO
On the case
Seeking support, Shortt traveled to the October conference of the
International Oxidative Medicine Association in Atlanta to present the
Bibeau case. The group developed the regimens Shortt used, and he
considered its board a jury of his peers.
The group, of which Rowen is president, found that Shortt had followed
its "well-established" protocols. Rowen says any oxygen bubbles
released from such a heavily diluted solution, infused at such a slow
rate, would have been absorbed into the blood almost immediately.
In the group's position paper, Rowen instead zeroed in on two
FDA-approved drugs that Bibeau had previously been prescribed: the MS
drug Copaxone and Tegretol, which is used to treat seizure disorders.
Rowen noted that among Copaxone's listed side effects are "metorrhagia
(profuse uterine bleeding), thrombosis, bruising, clotting problems,
and infections." An Internet site dedicated to Tegretol warns of "easy
bruising, or reddish or purplish spots on the skin" as possible "signs
of a blood disorder brought on by the drug."
Rowen says it is "more than reasonable to conclude" that the
interaction of these two drugs was "the proximate cause of this
death."
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/local/10541689.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp
Note: Quackwatch is going down and the people who run it are going
down.
It's called supply and demand. Yes someone may sell quack stuff but
the use of chelox and silver will be HUGE. Nice to know the courts are
on our side.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: killer doctor
- From: zipzip
- Re: killer doctor
- References:
- Re: killer doctor
- From: zipzip
- Re: killer doctor
- From: Brent
- Re: killer doctor
- From: zipzip
- Re: killer doctor
- From: Brent
- Re: killer doctor
- From: a_weisman@xxxxxxxxx
- Re: killer doctor
- From: Brent
- Re: killer doctor
- From: zipzip
- Re: killer doctor
- From: a_weisman@xxxxxxxxx
- Re: killer doctor
- Prev by Date: Re: Phyllis: Activists Say YIKES We need to KILL the MD BILL! LOL
- Next by Date: Re: Phyllis: Activists Say YIKES We need to KILL the MD BILL! LOL
- Previous by thread: Re: killer doctor
- Next by thread: Re: killer doctor
- Index(es):
Loading