Surviving Prostate Cancer
In this video, Peter Starr spends about 29 minutes speaking on "Surviving Prostate Cancer" at the 43rd Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
Thank you. While it was it me or did the room just empty by itself? When I were told that prostate cancer would have bought a lot of people out here. But that's my specialty subject. And just to add to what Frank said. I was diagnosed with prostate cancer eleven years ago and with no surgery, no drugs and no radiation. And I'm still here today with no sign of cancer. And all through what you might call natural healing, I would call it a natural healing. And I started a foundation to teach other people the value of looking elsewhere other than conventional treatment. And because we all know the statistics of conventional treatment, in fact, there's been several of them come by my booth this weekend to share the results of that conventional treatment. And it's not a pretty sight. And so my goal is to try to teach people that before they even consider biopsies, surgery, radiation, androgen deprivation, drugs and stuff like that, try it the natural way. Measure it. See if it works, if you've got some tenacity about doing it. The chances are you'll never need surgery. You'll never need radiation. You'll never need drugs. You'll certainly never need a biopsy. We'll get a little later. But there's one thing that's been bugging me for a long time. I've been talking to people about this, and that's the PSA test. That's what I want to talk to you about today, because the PSA test on its own is caused more devastation among the male population than probably any other single thing.
And it's kind of like buyer beware. Caveat emptor. You've got to know and you've got to learn because otherwise the medical profession will put you in one end of the sheep dip and take you all the way down the sheep dip and you'll be spat out the other end and you go, what the hell happened? And that's the way the system works. You have to know to ask questions. You have to understand. You've got to do your own research. I've done some for prostate cancer. I'm going to try and move this microphone over here just a little bit. Hopefully that's OK. So I can read my script because I actually have real words here. I just let my slide. I took that photograph in Taiwan at five thirty in the morning at Sun Moon Lake. And it's become some of the images now for for the foundation.
This is the front cover of my documentary, Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery, Drugs or Radiation. So three DVD set, plus a 40 page resource guy, because every doctor that's