Cancer Doctor
Cancer Doctor

Inflammation, Cancer

In this video, Bradford Weeks spends about 28 minutes speaking on "Inflammation, Cancer" at the 42nd Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.

About Bradford Weeks

BRADFORD WEEKS, M.D. worked for two years doing research at Massachusetts General Hospital’s Mineral Metabolism Unit working on Osteoporosis (calcium, magnesium with Robert Neer, M.D.) and vitamin D metabolism (with Michael Holick, M.D.).

In addition, he studied various nutritional strategies: Macrobiotics (with Mishio Kushi, raw foods, fasting), Acupuncture, Massage (shiatsu), Music Therapy (trained in the Tomatis method), Anthroposophical Medicine (with Otto Wolff, M.D.) and Classical Homeopathy. Medical school at the University of Vermont in Burlington was followed by Medical Internship (1 year) and Psychiatric Residency at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center (3 years). He became a specialist in Psychiatry (focusing on Neuro-Psychiatry and Psycho-Neuro-Immunology).

A beekeeper before he became a physician, Dr. Weeks has utilized Venomology (apitherapy in particular) since founding the American Apitherapy Society (AAS) in 1985 and editing its Journal for the first 6 years of its publication. Fortunate to have developed a close mentoring relationship with the father of Orthomolecular Psychiatry, Abram Hoffer, M.D., Ph.D., Dr. Weeks has developed these principles over the past 20 years in his Psychiatric and Medical Practice.

Invited to work with the world-famous Jonathan Wright, M.D. at the Tahoma Clinic right out of residency, Dr. Weeks subsequently broadened his practice to include Nutritional Therapies, including myriad IV treatments (ACAM accredited in Chelation Therapy 1994), Insulin Potentiation Therapy (IPT) (trained 2002 and Clinical Instructor 2009), while developing the field of “Corrective Medicine and Psychiatry.”

At this point he serves both as a general practitioner and as a specialist and focuses on not fighting illness but rather on correcting imbalances on the mental, emotional, vital and physical levels. When necessary, he has utilized low-dose, targeted chemotherapy methodology referred to as Insulin Potentiation Therapy as part of Corrective Cancer Care. Dr. Weeks strives to empower patients to create peace within by changing their physiology through diet, orthomolecular replenishment, managing their mental state and getting a good nights’ sleep.

His current focus is sharing the principles of Corrective Cancer Care with interested Oncologists addressing the importance of not just killing cancer cells but also nourishing the patient and his/her immune system so that the cancer STEM cells which cause most of the trouble can be reintegrated into a healthy body.

Dr. Weeks may be contacted by telephone at 360-341-2303, e-mail [email protected] and website www.weeksmd.com

Transcription

Thank you for being here. All right. It's my pleasure to be here.

Thank you, Lorraine. Wherever you are. Forty two years. You know, that's a long time to be serving her fellow human beings. Frank, thanks for your help.

All right. Yeah. Lorraine.

Well, I'm going to be talking about inflammation and cancer today, and I hope I'm going to be surprising you a little bit.

This is. Maybe going to surprise you. I see this to see that chock-a-block.

I have been surprised before Chuck's like, do anything on this or. I just keep going.

I'm seeing it on your computer, but not up front, by the way, Chuck, thank you very much for making it all happen. I love it.

While I've got your attention and Chuck is fixing this, I'm going to pretend to take a call from somebody with my cell phone and with my handset, because you all know that when you activate your cell phone, if you look at page four of the iPhone four manual, it says you should never have it on. And closer than three than five eighths of an inch to your body. Because they know this is a very dangerous instrument. So please don't put this up to your head when it's on.

Here. Yeah. We're not getting PowerPoint on the screen.

So, yeah. So I gave a lecture recently in Japan on cancer after Fukushima. And I've tried to clarify that. It's one thing to help everyone who's been battling Fukushima radiation. It's another thing to let all the kids be doing this all day long. All right. Thank you very much, guys. All right. Sorry for that delay. Inflammation and cancer is my topic. The bottom line is that inflammation is both good and bad. So we're going to come back to that. This is a nice graphic of how popular this cancer control society has been. Here's a grandma trying to get in and there's no more room. It's too popular movement save. Thanks to Lorraine and Co.. This was on this morning's Wall Street Journal. Doctors aren't happy. And it's hurting the patients.

Why are doctors unhappy? Doctors aren't happy, in part because especially if you're in oncology, you're not really helping people. You might be well intended, but you're not really helping people. Couple years ago, when I gave a talk here, I asked for a show of hands of everyone who knows someone who's died of cancer. Can we do that again? Chauvin's. And of course, you're all being fooled because you don't know. God bless the deceased.

God bless the suffering. You don't know whether the cancer killed the person or

Inflammation

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