The Truth about Cancer PDF Download Free

The Truth about Cancer PDF

Attributes of The Truth about Cancer PDF

New in paperback: the controversial bestseller from one of health care’s most passionate and outspoken advocates that reveals what we need to know about cancer to protect ourselves, treat ourselves, and even save our lives.The Truth about Cancer PDF

After losing seven members of his family to cancer over the course of a decade, Ty Bollinger set out on a global quest to learn as much as he possibly could about cancer treatments and the medical industry that surrounds the disease. As he explains in this book, there are many methods we can access to treat and prevent cancer that go well beyond chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery; we just don’t know about them. Now available in paperback for the first time, The Truth about Cancer delves into the history of medicine–all the way back to Hippocrates’s credo of “do no harm”–as well as cutting-edge research showing the efficacy of dozens of unconventional cancer treatments that are helping patients around the globe. You’ll read about the politics of cancer; facts and myths about its causes; and the range of tools available to diagnose and treat it.The Truth about Cancer PDF

If you’re facing a cancer diagnosis right now, this book may help you and your health-care provider make choices about your next steps. If you’re already undergoing conventional treatment, it may help you support your health during the course of chemo or radiation. If you’re a health-care provider and want to learn all you can to help your patients, it will expand your horizons and inspire you with true stories of successful healing. And if you just want to see cancer in a new light, it will open your eyes.

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Illustrations of The Truth about Cancer PDF

For students of all the branches of medicine and surgery and health professionals that aspire to be greater and better at their procedures and medications. A renowned book by those who have read it and learnt from it. Many have already ordered it and is on the way to their home. Whether you work in the USA, Canada, UK or anywhere around the world. If you are working as a health professional then this is a must read..  The most reviewed on book The Truth about Cancer PDF is available for grabs now here on our website free. Whatever books, mainly textbooks we have in professional courses specially Medicine and surgery is a compendium in itself so understand one book you need to refer another 2-10 books. Beside this there are various other text material which needs to be mastered!! Only reference books are partially read but all other books have to be read, commanded and in fact read multiple times.

The Writers

Ty M. Bollinger is a Christian, happily married husband and father, health freedom advocate, cancer researcher, former competitive bodybuilder, documentary film producer, radio show host, and author. Ty first brought his discoveries to the public in the best-selling book Cancer: Step Outside the Box. He has also co-authored other books on alternatives to conventional medicine. The two groundbreaking documentary series on cancer treatment he has produced–The Quest for the Cures (2014) and The Truth about Cancer: A Global Quest (2015)–have been viewed by more than 10 million people worldwide.

Proportions of The Truth about Cancer PDF

  • Identification Number ‏ : ‎ 1401952259
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hay House Inc.; Illustrated edition (October 9, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 344 pages
  • International Standard Book Number-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781401952259
  • International Standard Book Number-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1401952259
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.36 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.06 x 0.8 x 9 inches

Reviews From Customers

Justin F. Penner
Disinformative, divisive, and markety
February 28, 2020

The only reason this book fell into my hands was because my brother was evangelically giving it out to cancer patients in my family, along with surprisingly bad cancer advice, and I wanted to see where he was getting his information from. I made a lot of notes while I was reading this book and so I decided to share some of them here, in case there are others receiving this book from family members and are confused about some of the claims being made in it.

If your simply looking for alternative treatment ideas you may like this book, but keep in mind that none of these treatments are proven to work (despite what the author hypes), and thus should not be used as replacements for proven treatments, and also many of them cost a lot of money, or require traveling long distances. On the other hand, if your looking for an objective book about cancer, this is NOT it, this book is about promoting alternative medicine and smearing conventional medicine, that’s it. There’s misinformation, marketing, fearmongering, conspiracy thinking, double standards, bad cancer stats, misreferencing, misrepresented testimonials, and it’s not hard to point some of these things out once you scratch the surface.

The author presents himself as someone on an honest “quest for truth”, an unbiased “layman”, however he has some obvious biases which shouldn’t be ignored. He owns supplement companies, a TTAC website, and affiliate programs, which all generate revenue, in the same area he writes and gives advice about. And he’s steeped in conspiracy theories and establishment hate. How does one take his conspiracy narrative seriously when he’s also written conspiracy theories on JFK, 9/11, Illuminati, Fluoride, and so many other cliché conspiracy topics. I could possibly look past the profits if the information given was good and accurate, but it’s not.

Here’s one clear flaw in the book. And it’s a rather large issue since much of his prevention and treatment advice is based off of it. He repeatedly says (alarms) that cancer rates are rising, eg. “they’re ALL increasing steadily, some more than others and admittedly with dips, but increasing nonetheless,” and then he goes on to implicate a long list of recent commercial toxins, namely pesticides, GMOs, pollution, vaccines, mobile phones, fluoride, plastics, chemtrails, and processed meat. But this is wrong, cancer rates aren’t increasing they’re decreasing, and have been for some time now. Incidence and mortality are down 13% and 27% respectively over the last 25 years. And breast cancer isn’t “skyrocketting”, its been fairly level for the last 80 years, aside from a bump in the 80s when mammography screenings were introduced. (You can find cancer charts at NCI SEER or ACS Cancer Statistics Center). I’m assuming he’s using “prevalence” rates instead of “age-adjusted” rates, but it doesn’t make any sense to do this when your talking about environmental factors. And as far as his list goes, epidemiologists would likely only agree with pollution and processed meat, most of the rest are just plain fearmongering. And its odd he doesn’t mention any of the well-established risk factors like cigarettes, alcohol, and obesity, maybe he thought people already know about these. But the general theme is, everyone is being bombarded with things that are making them sicker, and you have to take his advice and buy his products to keep yourself healthy.

He also says, “the earliest evidence we have of cancer’s existence dates back to only about the 17th century,” but this is a very strange thing to say considering the very origin of the word cancer comes from Hippocrates in 400 BC. Not to mention we have greek and egyption writings of cancer, and several hundred records of cancer in ancient fossils.

The referencing is poor. Most of it goes to opinion articles, low-tier journals, or exaggerated or misrepresented findings. Here are some examples…
– “A mere 2.1% of cancer patients survive for longer than five years after undergoing chemotherapy” … So 97.9% of patients die after chemo? How can this possibly be when overall cancer five-year survival is 67%? Misrepresented study.
– “Of more than 1000 doctors, an astounding 88.3 percent admitted that they would forego chemotherapy” … The link goes to a study about Advanced Directives, ie, would you take chemo in a coma, which has nothing to do with the text.
– “Mammograms emit up to 1000 times more radiation than a chest x-ray” … A mammogram dose is 0.4 mSv while a chest x-ray is 0.1 mSv, and for comparison a CT dose is about 10 mSv.
– “The NCI estimates that routine mammograms cause 75 new cases of breast cancer for every 15 they accurately identify” … The link goes to a Dr Axe article (now a dead link), not the NCI, as the NCI would never say such a thing.
– “Colonoscopies don’t even get high enough to find anything important” … This is super irresponsible and ignorant, colonoscopies look at the whole colon and I’m not sure why he thinks they don’t. And I’d like to hear his explanation for why colon cancer incidence has dropped by 40% since the 1980s (he certainly wouldn’t think it was because people were eating better). This author isn’t doing this country any favors by discouraging people away from colonoscopies.
– I’m sure I would find more of these bad references if I looked more.The Truth about Cancer PDF

He has a strange discussion about cancer and genetics, where he misrepresents the NCI (yet again), and I think people get confused on this topic, so I think its worth bringing up. He writes, “The official position of the NCI is that cancer is purely a genetic disease,” but then he says this is a myth, and then he says “truth be told, only 5 percent of all cancers are attributable to one’s ancestry”. However, he’s confusing genetic mutations with genetic inheritance, and I think on purpose so he can have a “teaching moment” and appear smarter than the NCI. Cancer is a genetic disease, yes, but this has nothing to do with inheritance. As the very same NCI website says, “Inherited genetic mutations play a major role in about 5 to 10 percent of all cancers”, so he’s just saying what the NCI is already saying. Beyond this, implying that the other 90-95% are all environmental and in our control is not a good assumption either. There could be genes we don’t know about, environmental causes we don’t know about or aren’t in control of, or even random bad luck, and yes this is an thing, our bodies are chaotic systems.

There are a lot of serious double standards. He has these strong ideologies about “natural”, “non-toxic”, “allopathic”, “the pathogen is nothing, the terrain is everything”, and uses them to discredit conventional treatments but overlooks them to endorse his own. Examples…
– He criticizes conventional treatments for being “allopathic” (attacking the pathogen) yet he endorses RF generators, UV blood irradiation, Hyperthermia, RIGVIR virus, IV Ozone, IV Hydrogen peroxide, Laetrile, Photo-radiation therapy, Metronomic chemotherapy, and Signal transduction therapy, all allopathic in principle.
– He writes “patented medicines do not belong in human bodies” yet the last four treatments use patented synthetic drugs. For example, Laetrile is a patented synthetic plant drug, absolutely no different from plant chemos like Taxol, but he calls it “a vitamin”.
– He criticizes the PSA test because of false positives, yet he highly praises seven alternative urine/blood tests which are prone to the exact same issue.
– He criticizes surgery claiming that a healthy immune system can eliminate cancer, yet he promotes the Latvian virotherapy RIGVIR saying that “cancer cells have a natural ability to hide from the immune system”.
– What’s natural about “taking 143 different vitamins, minerals, enzymes a day”, or injecting sterilizing agents into your bloodstream, or metronomic chemotherapy?
– He criticizes conventional medicine’s profit motive but ignores alternative medicine’s profit motive.

His “pathogen is nothing terrain is everything” mantra, I think, is highly influenced by what the FDA allows for health claims from supplement companies (ie. they can make claims about improving body function, but not specifically about treating disease), and its suspicious that this mantra goes away when he promotes treatments from other countries.

The book is very markety. At times it feels like you’re reading an advertisement straight out of a brochure. Here’s just one example…
“An analysis of over 800 ONCOblots covering 26 different types of clinically confirmed cancers showed a 99.3 percent accuracy rate at a cost of just $850 from the Cancer Center for Healing”
There are a lot of these type of callouts, including five to the author’s own supplement company. I scanned the references section and found 20-30 external links to business selling cancer protocols, diagnostic tests, health products, supplements, water systems, etc. This is WAY too much promotion for an educational book, IMO.

The book is very divisive. He ramps up suspicion toward oncologists, he calls CAM workers “wolves in sheep’s clothing”, he uses fearmongering to draw people away from conventional treatments and screenings, ALL of them. And within his conspiracy narrative, it seems he would like nothing more than for the current medical establishment to crumble to the ground and the FDA disappear with all of its regulations. None of this is productive, and I think it gives alternative medicine a bad name honestly.

His history of medicine is intentionally conspiratorial and frequently doesn’t agree with historians. Like saying that Pasteur believed in spontaneous generation when he’s actually known for disproving it, or that he recanted his life’s work on his deathbed. Or that Rockefeller’s financial interest in petroleum-based pharmaceuticals was the basis for the Flexner medical reform in 1910. Or that the AMA, government, scientists, historians, and the media are all cooperative in a propaganda conspiracy to suppress cures. More references to real historians would be nice.The Truth about Cancer PDF

He says that mainstream medicine is incapable of studying anything natural or unprofitable, since they are only profit-driven. However, he doesn’t address public funding at all, which is quite extensive in cancer, and it all has to be explained. For example, the NCI gets $6 billion a year, and they intentionally fund research that doesn’t repeat the work of industry (and why wouldn’t governments across the world want to reduce their own healthcare costs?). Then there’s 49 comprehensive cancer research centers in the US (like Dana Farber and Sloan Kettering) who’s largely funded by NCI and charity, and they can study anything that shows promise. Then there’s hundreds of charities and nonprofits that fund different types of cancer research, and anyone can start one for any goal, even the author could start one. So there’s avenues to study really anything. It’s true that certain things are harder to study, like diet and lifestyle, but plants and supplements are easy, and they get studied when there is reason to do so. Vincristene originates from folk medicine. Folinic acid, which is used to treat colon cancer, is a vitamin. Many chemos come from the NCI’s Natural Products Branch, which has surveyed more than 120,000 plant and marine species for anti-cancer properties. Look up Taxol. More recently, CAM has studying a lot of the popular alternative therapies, like right now there’s a double-blind trial going on for IV vitamin C. But if the author is going to point a finger about profit-motive, he’s got four pointing back at him, as the alternative medicine industry is quite profitable (and quite unregulated), and nobody there is working from public funds. Book authors, online coaches, and cancer clinics all make money, not to mention the $30 billion supplement industry the author is a part of. Alternative medicine doesn’t get a free pass just because they say they’re in the name of a cause.

The author relies on testimonials to show that his treatments work. While I’m happy that these patients got better, he provides no evidence they got better because of HIS treatments, as they generally received some conventional treatments as well. They may have turned down chemo, but they all received surgery, and surgery cures a lot of people (think of what’s responsible for the majority of the 10.3 million 5-year cancer survivors in the country). He takes credit where ever he can. Also, he announces some patients “cured” when they’ve had recurrences since the book’s publishing.

I decided to dig into some of these testimonials and give my own take on them here…
– Trina Hammack is said to have “stage IV” ovarian cancer, but the diagnosis was done in Mexico and there’s only mention of a pelvic exam and a blood test, no imaging. And no mention of metastasis. So I question the “stage IV”. Her cancer may have been cured by her surgery instead of her sono-photo treatments.
– Pamela Kelsey was said to have beaten “liver cancer” with Hoxsey tonic, but again the diagnosis was done in Mexico, using a CT scan, which isn’t an appropriate tool for diagnosing liver cancer (and the “22 focal lesions” sounds like it could be fatty liver disease). She’s also said to have beaten pancreatic cancer in the 70s, also using Hoxsey tonic, but there’s not much detail in her story, and doesn’t even mention stage.
– Allison Huish is said to have overcome brain cancer with frankincense oil, but she didn’t technically have “cancer” she had a benign tumor (pilocytic astrocytoma). And from what I read, spontaneous regression can happen after a partial resection in some patients.
– Khrystyna Yakovenko is said to have “overcame stage lV melanoma” with RIGVIR and said “the disease is simply just over”, but her journal-published case report says something different, she has “stable disease”.
– Trevor Smith is said to have “cured” stage II bladder cancer with cannabis oil and diet, however he was also receiving laser surgeries and BCG viral treatments, which the book makes no mention of. And he’s not “cured” either, he had a recurrence in 2019 and he’s currently receiving more BCG treatments.The Truth about Cancer PDF
– Charles Daniel is said to beat stage IV bladder cancer at Hope4Cancer, but his three tumors were cleanly removed with surgery, and also treated with chemotherapy, so there’s no evidence that anything happened at Hope4Cancer. Yes stage IV is usually deadly, but it still depends on the case, and you can find survivors if you go looking for them. For example, there’s estimated more than 100,000 stage IV cancer survivors in the US, living 5 years or longer.
– The other testimonials in the book had cancers of lower stages and higher survival rates, and all received surgery and/or chemo in addition to their alternative therapy.The Truth about Cancer PDF

I find it slightly troublesome that all of his treatments are promoted equally, they all work great but none better than others. You would think that if there really were effective ones, that they would at least draw more attention than the least likely and nonsensical ones. Alternative medicine as a whole is this same way, its always expanding its treatment repertoire but never narrowing on anything. Never advancing. For me it’s a bad sign.

I wish there were easy answers against cancer, but this type of hype isnt getting us any closer to cures. The author doesn’t address complicated concepts like tumor heterogeneity or clonal evolution, he just calls a tumor a “bag of toxins”, and his treatments are accordingly simple minded. Its easy to say “your body has the innate ability to heal”, but cancer has the innate ability to adapt and resist. And resistance doesn’t just apply to drugs, it applies to EVERYTHING, including herbs, diet, and even your own immune system. So how exactly do these natural treaments prevent adaptive clones from being selected out? If we just pretend we have answers, then we’re not going to make progress against this deadly disease.

It’s a long review, but I just think its important that cancer patients get accurate information, from all sources, and I think books like this can be very misleading for some people. Ultimately, this book is supposed to enable cancer patients to make more informed choices, but in reality it’s disinformative and will often lead to poorer choices. I would recommend you get your information elsewhere.
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Paul Thomas MD
that idea that we MD’s were superior, and derogatory comments about chiropractors
January 22, 2017

As an MD trained at Dartmouth Medical School 1981 – 1985, I experienced the training that author Ty Bollinger talks about in the first 3 chapters: that idea that we MD’s were superior, and derogatory comments about chiropractors, herbalists, naturopaths, homeopathy etc. Little did we know that big business and pharma had taken over the medical schools. This book is a breath of fresh air and rings true to my experience. I’ve had the parallel experience in the world of autism, and chronic disease in children: label and treat, but don’t look for the real cause or any natural remedies.
We are wonderfully made and indeed it is with good nutrition, avoiding toxins and a healthy immune system that we stay healthy and avoid cancer and most chronic conditions. No need to fear cancer – read this book! The Truth about Cancer PDF

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