MySweetLord
03-18-2009, 01:25 PM
http://www.oasisofhope.com/order-hope-book.php
http://www.oasisofhope.com/faqs.php
http://www.oasisofhope.com/about_us.php
In 1963, the late Dr. Ernesto Contreras, Sr. opened Oasis of Hope Hospital and began a healing tradition known as the Total Care Approach. Dr. Ernesto Contreras, Sr. has been recognized in multiple publications as a pioneer in body, mind and spirit medicine. At the foundation of his philosophy were two principles inspired by Hippocrates, the father of medicine, and Jesus Christ: (1) First, do no harm; and (2) Love your patient as you love yourself.
phonic
03-18-2009, 09:35 PM
Another BS scam running in the name of religion. Did you even bother to research this crackpot 'Doctor' Dr. Ernesto Contreras?
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,947722,00.html
Of the thousands of Americans who visit the seedy Mexican border town of Tijuana each year, many aim not to live it up, but simply to live. For more than a decade, one of Tijuana's busiest spas has been a clinic operated by Dr. Ernesto Contreras Rodriguez, 60, who, in the eyes of his patients, offers that most elusive of medical miracles: a cancer cure. The heart of his treatment, a drug called Laetrile, is banned in the U.S. and Canada as a phony remedy; but it is perfectly legal in Mexico, where Contreras has administered it to some 35,000 often desperate cancer victims.
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Last week federal officials charged that the friendly physician had not limited his practice to south of the border. Following a year's investigation, a San Diego grand jury indicted Contreras and six other Mexicans, one Canadian and eight Americans, as well as three Mexican firms, for peddling the contraband drug in the U.S. through a multimillion-dollar smuggling operation supplying some 10,000 cancer victims a day. It was the biggest crackdown yet against a drug that has a strong and persistent following even though, in the opinion of virtually all U.S. cancer specialists, it offers no real medical benefits.
Or how about: http://www.healthwatcher.net/Quackerywatch/Cancer/Deaths/ppg991207zelem.html
Scared to death
Frightened because she thought she had breast cancer, a Charleroi woman treated herself with useless potions and therapies....
The Federal Trade Commission has started a campaign called "Operation Cure All," to challenge the Web sites that promote phony cures.
:sigh:
When will people ever learn?