Fungus, Cancer
In this video, Doug Kaufmann spends about 24 minutes speaking on "Fungus, Cancer" at the 36th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
A lot of you probably see me on television. I host a show called Know the Cause. Thank.
Tullio, there is Tullio, Stephen Cheaney. He is the most fun man away from the hospital you can ever imagine.
Many of you thought, however, you walked by me in the hallway here when I checked out, checked in here yesterday, and you looked at me with an odd look on your face, you think Doug Hoffman, because he takes on the AMAA is six foot four and 280 pounds. Here I am, this little tiny guy with a ball cap on just trying to stay out of trouble. My discovery transcends a lot of the work being done today in cancer development research. And I just want to go back a long way to give you a basis of what I'm going to talk about in 25 minutes here, because I have a few slides that are really important for you to see. Serendipitously, I worked at USC Medical School after I got back from Vietnam. We were trained as nurses. But, you know, no guy want to be a nurse in 1970. And so I went to USC and worked there. And one of my bosses, friends, a lady friend, came up to the hospital to see me on the ninth floor of where I was working. And she said, Dr. Hughes wanted you to see this. And she took a shoe off. And I thought she had painted her toenails black. She had all these black toenails. And he said you could. He would give me something for it. And I said, oh, no. Dr. Hughes is in Canada. She said, please call him. So I called him and he said, look, Doug, give her Nizer all. It's an antifungal drug for toenails long. And the short of it is she said, I'm probably, you know, I'm going to die anyway. Both my husband and I have cancer. This story unfolds in my book The Germ That Causes Cancer. So I gave her NYes a role and I signed Dr. Hughes's name on the scrip so many years ago they couldn't come get me now for that. And interestingly, about a year later, she called Dr. Hughes and said, Dr. Hughes, my husband died. He collected old cars. And I know Doug Hoffman loves old cars. Would he like to buy some of these? What she didn't know was I was earning five hundred twenty five dollars a month and he owned Dewson Burgs. And so I went out to their house and I and she said, I owe you a debt of gratitude, just like so many of