Poly-MVA, Cancer
In this video, James W. Forsythe spends about 29 minutes speaking on "Poly-MVA, Cancer" at the 33rd Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Thank you. I'm Dr. Forsyth from Reno, Nevada, and I'd like to, first of all, thank the Cancer Control Society for inviting me to this August meeting. I've been here many times in the past and actually was introduced to this group by another esteemed colleague, Dr. Doug Brody, who spoke this morning. I would also like to thank Lorraine Rosenthal for her efforts in putting this conference together and helping me get all my data collected and working out the schedule and so on. And Lorraine and I are both alumni of the University of California at Berkeley. And I guess once you're a rebel in the 60s, you're a medical rebel in that one. Hundreds, I guess. So we'll carry on with that.
I wanted to also mention that being in Nevada, which has recently been deemed the health freedom state by Governor Kenny Quinn of Nevada, thanks to some lobbying efforts of my friends, my wife and a group of homeopaths from Las Vegas, specifically Dr. Royal, Dr. Fuller Royalle and Dan Rowe, who you may know are two of the top homeopaths in Nevada. We also were able in the last legislature and all of you will take heartedness. We're able to get through the legislature, even with the medical board hitting us heads on with it and not wanting this pass. We were able to get an IRP, which is an institutional review board passed with which the governor signed it, which will go into effect the 1st of October, which allows homeopaths in the state to conduct clinical trials under and I. Arbie, which basically keeps the feds at bay and allows you to look into natural substances, complementary alternative. What have you in various diseases, not just cancer. So that is already underway. And I think that's a big accomplishment for Nevada. Now, I want to make a couple of points before I go into my talk on Polli MVA. Anytime you arrest and control a cancer and shrink a tumor down, this will equate directly with not only the quantity of life, but the quality of life of the patient.
This is true unless it is comes at the expense of heavy duty chemotherapy, radiation therapy or radical surgery.
And that is one of the key points in my talk is that we don't always need the sledgehammer killer cure approach to cancer. Cancer can be made into a chronic disease. I did not know this in my training at the University of California many years ago, but I found this out since being in practice. I have patients 20 and 30 years out with stage four cancers who live with them,