According
to Natural
News, a new study has found that nearly 10 percent of U.S. cancer
survivors are still smoking up to 15 cigarettes every day. Are they insane? Do
they know what the cigarettes are doing to their life, or do they not really
have the right "choices" needed to quit? -- That is the question.
They must be counseled, because the scary CDC commercials don't do a thing to
help people quit the third most addictive drug in the world, and the
medications can cause horrific nightmares and suicidal tendencies, and who
needs that coupled with their chemotherapy, surgery, radiation and bad advice?
Chemotheraphy is not as successful as it is projected to be by medical professionals across the globe
Hospitals
in America are full of MDs and oncologists with ZERO advice in the nutritional
"realm" and only offer chemical medications and surgery options for
folks being attacked by cancer of the kidneys and liver, organs which you won't
survive in this world without. Then there are the woman's ovaries to worry
about, another region of the body that cancer likes to attack. Cancer is a
blood disease that finds root in a damaged body that's depleted of oxygen and
nutrients. Plus, smoking reduces the effectiveness of cancer treatment and
increases the "probability of cancer relapse," according to the
research of the new study. This is the first LONG-TERM study done on cancer
survivors, and it obtained data from nearly 3,000 patients nine years after
their diagnoses. They were all part of the American Cancer Society's Study of
Cancer Survivors-I.
To know more:
Using
statistical software about eight years ago, the CDC estimated the number of
people in the United States that were living with cancer. The CDC calls people
living with cancer "cancer survivors" rather than "cancer
victims," and for the 30 years leading up to 2001, the number of cancer
survivors in the U.S. increased by nearly 7 million, but how? We, as Americans,
are consuming MORE toxic food, more toxic water and putting more dangerous
chemicals on our skin. Let's take a look.
As
of 2007, more than 64 percent of people were still alive five years after their
diagnosis of cancer; however, 6 out of 10 of those survivors were senior
citizens. This is where it gets tricky. Because the U.S. population is aging,
the statistics are misleading if viewed in the wrong light, and that's exactly
how the CDC wants you to view the numbers. It's a trick to get you believing in
chemotherapy as a viable option for hope of cancer recovery. In fact, the
number of cancer survivors in the U.S. increased from 3 million in 1971 to a
whopping 10 million in 2001. Breast cancer for females lead the "charge,"
followed closely by prostate and colorectal cancers for the most commonly
diagnosed. In case you didn't know, genetically modified foods hit the fields
without safety testing as early as the mid-1980s. Is the correlative 300
percent increase of cancer cases just a coincidence?
To
see some fascinating and interesting clips regarding the truth about chemotheraphy
and its failure rate, one can easily log onto the links below the pink-washed cancer cell photo:
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