Cancer Doctor
Cancer Doctor

IPT Chemotherapy, Hypothermia, Vaccines, Integrative Therapies

In this video, Friedrich Douwes spends about 31 minutes speaking on "IPT Chemotherapy, Hypothermia, Vaccines, Integrative Therapies" at the 38th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.

About Friedrich Douwes

FRIEDRICH DOUWES, M.D. was born in Germany and received his M.D. Degree from the University of Marburg, Zurich, Heidelberg in 1962. He then went to the United States and completed his Internship at Philadelphia General Hospital in 1967 and a Fellowship in Hematology & Oncology from Hahnemann University, also located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1970.

Returning to Germany, Dr. Douwes spent the next 10 years as Senior Physician in the Oncology Department of University Hospital of Gottengun. He published several articles pertaining to biological and immunological problems of tumors.

Not satisfied with the clinical results attained as an Orthodox Oncologist, he began to integrate Alternative Methods into his daily work. In 1980, as the Medical Director of Sonneburg Hospital in Bad Sooden-Allendorf, one of the largest cancer centers in Germany, he founded one of the first self-help groups and first Psych-Oncological Department.

Between 1981 and 1987, Dr. Douwes developed his integrative cancer concept, combining conventional and complementary cancer therapies. In 1991, he founded St. George Hospital in Bad Aibling, Germany. St. George offers Hyperthermia, Immuno-Therapy and Electro-Therapy in its Oncology Department, and they also have a Lyme Disease Center.

Over 5,000 cancer patients from all over the world have received treatment at St. George Hospital. Many receive remarkable results in all types of advanced cancers.

For more information, contact St. George Hospital's United States Office by phone 941-921-3536 and e-mail [email protected].

Transcription

Frank, thank you very much. Thank you very much for this introduction and thank you to give me the chance to speak in front of you.

First of all, I want to read we have to push here.

To go forward.

Where I work, this is sick St. George Hospital, I founded this 20 years ago, and it's a hospital in the meantime, fully integrated into the German system health system.

The hospital has 50 beds as we speak, all languages besides German, English, Spanish and Russian. We take patients at a cancer patient out of all stages and entities. We cooperate with, uh, uh, teaching hospitals, especially with a Munich university. And, uh, we have approximately 450 patients as inpatients every year and 1200 as outpatients. And I am the director of this hospital. Whereas but I bring it's difficult to find it maybe on the map. It's a small little spa, but means spa halfway between, uh, Munich and ZATZ book. And where Germany is very nice. You know, you see the Alps, you see here the legs. This is a Cheam leg and it is the area where you have fresh air, good water and good soil. All entities mean that we take patients with brain cancer and teach you most lung, breast, stomach, colon and voice stages, what we do not take is acute leukemias because we send them to to the main centers in Munich. We follow in this hospital a integrative Kansas syrupy concept that is conventional medicine and conventional medicine as much as necessary, but as little as possible. And we combine this with complementary cancer therapies. You saw this unbelievable story about this melanoma patient who had an improvement on a Gracen diet and on on Fevre treatment was Kulis. This is, you know, what we experience and therefore, we implemented 20, 25 years ago into our system in the meantime. It is a we have no objection anymore. That means we can work freely in Germany with these techniques. I would show you. Why do we need such a conception? Is conventional medicine not effective enough? I think you have heard enough here how of how conventional medicine is failing. And, uh, uh, if you use complementary, uh, treatments, do we have less side effects? And, uh, didn't a conventional oncology make an enormous progress with that? Complementary medicine is not necessary. And we can say yes on one side, but no with, uh, on the other side. And you can see this. If you look at half a million, more than half a million of Americans will die this year of cancer and that hundred fifty years ago, cancer almost

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