Chemotherapy adds only 2% to the 5-year survival rate of cancer patients.
(pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
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I cannot attest to the efficacy of chemotherapy. Especially not in light of the new found long running medical fraud. However, when you are talking about death as an outcome, 2% is not insignificant. If you are facing death, and taking this stuff increases your survival odds 2%, I'm thinking I'll go ahead and do it.
The other thing that is actually useful about chemotherapy is shrinking down tumors so they are easier to surgically remove. Apparently it causes blood vessels to shrink, so patients in surgery will need less blood units as well as have less risk of uncontrolled bleeding or potential bleed out deaths.
If at some point in life, I am diagnosed with cancer, my first treatment option would be to go on a fast. Cancer cells live on sugar, so a fast will starve the cancer cells, and when the body enters the autophagy stage in a fast, it will consume unneeded cells for energy. In essence the tumor shrinks due to starvation and is killed off by the body for energy. Then the body creates new stem cells which boost the immune system to further kill the cancer. This would be my first treatment option.
I'm with you on this.
Fast, zero sugar/processed foods/starches/alcohol, bump up the vitamin levels, ivermectin/HCQ/Quercetin/Zinc/B/D/K, etc.