Good Samaritan Medical Center
In this video, Ricardo James spends about 20 minutes speaking on "Good Samaritan Medical Center" at the 44th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Ricardo James
RICARDO JAMES, M.D. graduated in 1981 from one of the most prestigious Medical Schools in Mexico, the University Autonoma in Guadalajara, which also receives students from the USA & many other countries.
Dr. James spent a couple of years in the conventional field but even then he was interested in the more natural ways of treating patients without drugs and using nutritional methods to heal.
In 1983 Dr. James started working at the Manner Clinic in Tijuana, Mexico. The Clinic was founded by the late Harold Manner, Ph.D., who was a pioneer in Metabolic Therapy. This provided Dr. James with a wide experience in treating cancer and arthritis, as well as multiple sclerosis. In total, Dr. James spent 7 years with Manner, treating patients in the USA as well as Mexico.
In 1989, Dr. James became the Assistant Medical Director at the International Medical Center in Juarez, Mexico. This Center was founded by the late Ray Evers, M.D., who was known as the “Grandfather of Chelation Therapy” and a leader in Alternative Therapy.
After these many years of experience with Manner and Evers, utilizing different and effective protocols, Dr. James opened his own Clinic called “The Good Samaritan Medical Center” in Juarez, Mexico.
The Center features Chelation Therapy, Metabolic Cancer Therapies, Immune System Therapies and other Therapies such as Rejuvenation, Live Cell, Hyperbaric Oxygen, Ozone and Detoxification.
Dr. James’ dedication to his patients has resulted in many patients lovingly referring to him as their doctor who “Heals with His Heart.”
He may be reached at his office in El Paso, Texas by phone/fax 866-229-3720 and email [email protected]
Transcription
Thank you. Thank you.
His honor to be here. My name is. Well, first of all, thanks to Lorraine Fran, I'm the one who with them and I'm not them. And they're doing a tremendous job for many years. I've been involved in treating cancer patients in the last 35 years of my life. And I gave my name is Licadho James. I'm the medical director of the Good Samaritan Medical Center. Somebody suggested one name for me because he knows these people know me and they they'd like that name and I like their name. So I decided to go ahead and do it. The Good Samaritan Medical Center. He's not just a name is a concept. We like to help people because we are bolters. I'm a doctor. I'm a I'm the you know, I used to be kind of the conventional way many years ago, but I didn't find now that this was not working for the cancer patient, you know, care more radio and all of this therapy and people go to the clinic little too late. So now, after 35 years. Well, about 20 years like this, I have to walk by my own and I open this clinic, which I am very proud of them. And. And if you go, I can guarantee that I will do my best to take care of you. I will never granted that it will cure you because that's not true. You know, I can do that. I will do my best and I will treat you like a fighter. You know, when I treat one cancer patient, I listen carefully because here in America, they don't listen to you in Canada. Forget it. One patient there that they say, oh, they treat me like a dog. I say, oh, come on. But does he say, you know, I got quite a few patients from Canada. Anyway, they come all the way to the clinic. And while I try, I treat the patient like I listen to them. What? What type of cancer? What does. What is this stage of the patient? I treat the patient like what I will do if I was the patient. And that's the best way to through one patient. The way you relied to be through it, you know. And in my all these years, I have patients that they are they don't give you they give you a week, two weeks to live. They don't take chemo. They say no chemo. There was a juice of Asian either. Twenty five. They're married that got children's and they never took chemotherapy. Cases aren't. They are very tough. I'm talking about osteosarcoma. Charles.