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Kathleen Janoski's avatar

A friend of mine who was being treated for cancer was told by his cancer doctor to take the covid DeathVax.

He now has 2 more different cancers.

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SEF's avatar
Jun 24Edited

Dr. Marik, as usual, is providing extraordinarily valuable information. The question I have is: for the (majority of) cancer types that chemotherapy is not curative against, DOES IT EVEN "extend life a month or two" as stated? Or does it even perhaps SHORTEN life in a significant fraction of cases, by predisposing the patient to life-threatening risks such as organ failure, or severe immunosuppression that could make even a mild infection deadly and could enable the remaining cancer cells to thrive and/or promote the formation of second cancers due to diminished immunosurvelliance, for example? Or simply cause horrible quality of life (not due to the cancer itself) which makes the patient more likely to "give up" sooner and agree to hospice and passive euthanasia, therefore dying sooner? I have heard multiple doctors mention these issues and I believe Dr. Marik even might have mentioned some of them himself a while back, if I remember correctly?

What I am very interested in is seeing randomized controlled clinical trials (preferably double-blinded) which show that chemotherapy either does or does not improve OVERALL SURVIVAL (even by a month or two etc.) in "incurable" cancers, compared to no chemotherapy. And if survival is indeed improved with chemotherapy in certain clinical trials of "incurable" cancers, what were the doses/regimens used in those trials, and were they much less harsh than the typical doses/regimens used in everyday patients outside of clinical trials?

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