Dr. Gerson lamented that the AMA was on a back stabbing mission to discredit him for his success with “terminal” cancer patients. He referred to his clinic as a would be “death house” if he’d not learned how to treat those who came to him as a last resort. Some arrived on stretchers, as they could not stand on their own 2 feet. Nor could they eat. He referred the practice that grew out of necessity as “very, very difficult”, one that forced him to develop and implement survival treatments for the gravely ill souls who appeared at his door step. If ever there was a healer of heroic significance, it was Dr. Max Gerson.
When someone like him comes along and begins a cycle of changes that has the potential to lead …show more content…
When he returned to his oncologist after a couple of months on the Gerson diet, his CT scan indicated he was tumor free. His doctor said it was a miracle.
Kroschel interviews doctors from Gerson clinics in other countries who are successfully treating cancer patients with the Gerson Therapy. One of them, the Loma Linda Clinic in Japan, is run by 2 doctors, one of whom, Yoshihiko Hoshino, M.D., developed colon cancer metastasized to his liver 16 years prior. He cured his cancer using the Gerson Therapy and has been tumor free for over 15 years. These doctors have treated over 500 cancer patients using the Gerson Therapy, and the single most critical element to its effectiveness is whether or not the patient has already had ruinous conventional treatments.
The core belief rooted in the Gerson therapy is that cancer is a disease condition of the whole organism, and the tumor is merely a symptom of this condition. Dr. Gerson considered tumors to be the outcome of several damaging factors which cumulatively cause deterioration of the whole metabolic system. The goal of the Gerson therapy is to restore the body to a healthy metabolic state and to maintain its natural equilibrium. (You’ll understand what is meant by “metabolic state” when you read Secret