Thursday, November 7, 2013
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
The amazing healing power of light
Who Needs Drugs When
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“The Only Side Effect is Chronic Good Health”
That’s what Australian researchers reported after gathering case studies from doctors who used this natural compound in the treatment of cancer and other diseases. Recent studies indicate that this therapy shows promise in destroying cancer cells, leaving healthy ones unharmed. One Florida oncologist reported that in 30 out of his 40 patients with stage 4 cancers, this common compound shrunk tumors by half or more. Why did the mainstream turn its back on this safe and effective cancer treatment? Discover the answer and how to get all the details on the treatment, HERE. |
Mr. Lowe cited some remarkable stats at the 40th Annual Convention of the Cancer Control Society in September of 2012:
- UBI therapy is backed by 70 years of history
- It boasts virtually no side effects
- Treatment is relatively inexpensive
- The efficacy rate falls between 60 and 80 percent
On top of that, ultraviolet blood irradiation has demonstrated a positive effect on over 60 diseases. And according to William Campbell Douglass, author of a book about UBI therapy called Into the Light, it has brought about remarkable results in both prompting cancer remission and extending the lives of patients who have been diagnosed with cancer.
Powerful healing results first seen
seven decades ago
seven decades ago
Though most commonly known as UBI, or ultraviolet blood irradiation, this is a treatment that goes by scores of other names: Biophotonic therapy, photo-oxidation therapy, photopheresis, ultraviolet blood therapy or UVB, hematologic oxidative therapy, extracorporeal photopheresis, and photo-luminescence.
It first came about in 1928 when Emmitt K. Knott, a scientist, began experimenting with light. He assisted in the case of a woman dying of sepsis (infection). Knowing that light kills bacteria and viruses, he withdrew a small amount of her blood, exposed it to light, put it back in her body, and miraculously, the woman lived.
The treatment was studied for the next two decades by scientists at prestigious schools like Georgetown University. A Dr. Henry Barrett reported treating over 110 cases of disease with UBI by 1940. The treatment was even cited in a 1949 issue of Time Magazine, which called it the “miracle of the future.”
But then the 1950s hit and all attention in the medical world began to focus on antibiotics and vaccines as the main tools to fight infections. However, in Russia and Germany, practitioners have continued to take an interest in UBI. Currently around 3,000 European providers offer it to their patients. The U.S. has only around 250 practitioners skilled in UBI treatment.
Twenty years ago, Yale University reignited interest in UBI after using it to treat T-cell lymphoma. The researchers even got FDA approval for the treatment. From there, Johnson & Johnson purchased and named it TherakosTM Photopheresis System. They now administer it in over 200 centers around the world and have treated more than 600,000 patients. Cost ranges between $2,500 and $4,000 per treatment, and patients require an average of 10 treatments total.
That’s interesting because, according to Tom Lowe, you only need a minimum of four treatments (depending on your illness). And many alternative doctors will give you the treatment for a much lower price.
Not to beat around the bush: $2,500- $4,000 per treatment is a ripoff. Mainstream medicine strikes again!
How UV light supercharges the immune system
Here’s how it works: Using a butterfly needle and a syringe, between 40 and 60 cubic centimeters (cc) of blood is withdrawn from your arm. Then it gets mixed with saline solution and passes through 26 seconds of ultraviolet light before being re-infused back into your body.
That’s it. As you can see, this isn’t a $4,000 procedure. But it does deliver $4,000 of value!
The logic behind diluting the blood is that one study showed light couldn’t penetrate more than five blood cells deep (30 microns, or 1 ml). So diluting the blood makes the therapy much easier to administer, not to mention more effective. The calculated mixture works out to be about 12 percent blood and 88 percent saline, which still absorbs 99.9 percent of the UV light. It also means less clotting time, a lower chance of problems, lower disposal quantities, and fewer staffing/nursing costs.
Now, we all know that putting something dank out in bright sunlight for a few hours is bound to kill the smell, lighten the stain, or eliminate bacterial spread. UBI treatment works the same way. The type of activated light from the 400-780 nanometer point on the visible spectrum (white light) flat-out kills bacteria and viruses.
UBI tears apart the DNA strands of the offending particles and sends them back into the body where they exhibit a vaccine-like response. Many people wonder why the treatment requires only 40 ccs of blood at one time, but researchers in this field counter by pointing out it only takes 1 cc of a vaccine to get an effective immune response.
It helps that bacteria and viruses in your bloodstream will absorb five times as much photonic energy as your red and white blood cells. That’s exactly how the UV light exposure kills infecting organisms. The fragments of those killed-off infectious agents are what stimulate the vaccination-like response in your body and go on to heighten your immune response. From there, your supercharged immune system is able to launch a new attack on harmful agents throughout the body.
Now of course, the body has to respond to the treatment. But assuming it does, then any form of virus or bacteria in your blood gets eradicated. And along with ramping up your immune system, the treatment also improves circulation and oxygenates tissues.
If you turn to UBI to treat an autoimmune disorder like lupus, allergies, rheumatoid arthritis, or even a rash, it has a balancing effect that is helpful in 50 to 60 percent of cases. Other benefits to treatment include anti-inflammatory effects, stimulation of red blood cell production, and improvement in blood flow.
It’s even known to cure shingles in two days. Two days! If you’ve ever had shingles – one of the most painful diseases known – you can appreciate what a blessing it would have been to have access to this therapy.
It should be in every doctor’s office in the country – not in a mere 250. And it should cost maybe $100, not $4,000. (Again: The original UBI therapy offered by alternative doctors doesn’t cost anywhere near the price of Johnson & Johnson’s new FDA-approved boondoggle.)
UBI is definitely useful as a cancer therapy, though several practitioners recommend using it as part of a multi-pronged approach. It’s an ideal adjunctive therapy for cancer in that it adds oxygen to the body, cuts pain, reduces inflammation, and decreases infections. Lifestyle, immune system, nutrition, and detoxification all go hand-in-hand with UBI.
One to two treatments per month are recommended. And several practitioners also view ozone therapy (see Issue #226) as a treatment that complements the effects of UBI.
An ideal treatment to add
to any pro-health regimen
to any pro-health regimen
The biggest argument against UBI is that “light simply can’t do that.” And there’s very little new research about it, including dissenting comments. You won’t even find anything about it on Quackwatch, the website run by mainstream docs known for lambasting virtually all alternative therapies—both the good and bad ones.
To the best of my knowledge, UBI is a really effective therapy, and an absolutely safe one. So why aren’t more hospitals and doctors using it? For starters, there’s the ever-present challenge that it’s not mainstream, not officially accepted. There’s also a good dose of skepticism and ignorance out there, plus there’s not enough money to support more research. And of course, it’s not currently business-driven and is being held back as a widespread treatment by the FDA (although it’s not actually illegal -- doctors can legally administer UBI under section 21).
Is it worth a try? Absolutely. To learn more about where you can access treatment, visit http://www.drsubi.com/.
To the best of my knowledge, UBI is a really effective therapy, and an absolutely safe one. So why aren’t more hospitals and doctors using it? For starters, there’s the ever-present challenge that it’s not mainstream, not officially accepted. There’s also a good dose of skepticism and ignorance out there, plus there’s not enough money to support more research. And of course, it’s not currently business-driven and is being held back as a widespread treatment by the FDA (although it’s not actually illegal -- doctors can legally administer UBI under section 21).
Is it worth a try? Absolutely. To learn more about where you can access treatment, visit http://www.drsubi.com/.
References:
“Blood irradiation therapy.” Article: Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Blood_irradiation_therapy
“First Patient Enrolled In Therakos Phase Two Study For Treatment Of Graft-Versus-Host Disease.” Products & Operating Company: Johnson & Johnson News page: Press Release published 6 December 2011.http://www.jnj.com/news/all/ first-patient-enrolled-in- therakos-phase-two-study-for- treatment-of-graft-versus- host-disease
Into the Light, by Douglass, William Campbell. Rhino Publishing, SA: Republic of Panama. 1993.
“The Light Fantastical.” By Mark Crislip for Science-Based Medicine. 2 November 2012. http://www. sciencebasedmedicine.org/the- light-fantastic/
“Therakos: Photopheresis.” Located 19 October 2013. http://www.therakos.com/“UVB UltraViolet Therapy.” Oxygen Healing Therapies, Located 19 October 2013. http://www.
“Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation.” Patient Care: Therapies, The Riordan Clinic. http://www.riordanclinic.org/
“Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation.” Treatments at the Wycoff Wellness Center. Located 19 October 2013.http://www.wycoffwellness.com/
“Ultraviolet Irradiation of Blood.” G.I. Levashenko Biomedical Engineering, Vol. 33, No. 3, 1999, pp. 141-143.
“What The Heck is UBI (Ultraviolet Blood Irradition Therapy) and Why Am I Hooked To An IV?” By Kevin Gianni, The Renegade Health Show #915. Published 27 January 2012. http://renegadehealth.com/
“When Medicines Have Failed: BioPhotonic Therapy – The Cure the Time Forgot.” Physicians UBI Awareness Center. http://www.drsubi.com/
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
VA (Tech) TechSideline.com: Latest articles, November 5, 2013
Rankings: Rivals vs. ESPN
Chris Coleman, TechSideline.com, November 5, 2013Comparing recruiting rankings across the national networks can be interesting.
To read this article, click here: http://virginiatech.sportswar.
Tech Talk Live Notes for November 4, 2013
Chris Coleman, TechSideline.com, November 5, 2013Jim Weaver, Bud Foster, Joshua Stanford, James Johnson and Frank Beamer were Monday's guests.
To read this article, click here: http://virginiatech.sportswar.
Three Bulldogs Selected CIAA Players of the Week
BOWIE, Md. - Seniors Jared Johnston (Dumfries, Va.) and Omar Fahnbulleh (Silver Spring, Md.) along with redshirt sophomore Curtis Pumphrey (Laurel, Md.) were selected as CIAA Players of the Week by the conference Sports Information Directors.
Fahnbulleh played an instrumental role in helping the Bulldogs to a team season-best 557 yards of total offense and was voted the Offensive Lineman of the Week. Johnston set a new BSU Season Passing Yards record in the Bulldogs 76-19 thrashing of Lincoln. The old mark was 1,538 set in 2010. He completed 13-of-23 passes for 262 yards (longest of 56) and two scores and was the Quarterback of the Week. Pumphrey made a statement from the very start of the game versus Lincoln, blocking a field goal and returning it 70 yards for a touchdown. Additionally, Pumphrey had six punt returns for 93 yards (56 longest) to go along with three tackles and selected as Special Teams Player of the Week.
The Bulldogs closeout the 2013 season on the road at Elizabeth City State on Saturday (November 9th). Game time is 1 pm in ECSU's Roebuck Stadium. CLICK HERE to follow the game via live stats.
Fahnbulleh played an instrumental role in helping the Bulldogs to a team season-best 557 yards of total offense and was voted the Offensive Lineman of the Week. Johnston set a new BSU Season Passing Yards record in the Bulldogs 76-19 thrashing of Lincoln. The old mark was 1,538 set in 2010. He completed 13-of-23 passes for 262 yards (longest of 56) and two scores and was the Quarterback of the Week. Pumphrey made a statement from the very start of the game versus Lincoln, blocking a field goal and returning it 70 yards for a touchdown. Additionally, Pumphrey had six punt returns for 93 yards (56 longest) to go along with three tackles and selected as Special Teams Player of the Week.
The Bulldogs closeout the 2013 season on the road at Elizabeth City State on Saturday (November 9th). Game time is 1 pm in ECSU's Roebuck Stadium. CLICK HERE to follow the game via live stats.
Monday, November 4, 2013
This Week in Bowie State Athletics
For complete team schedules, visit www.bsubulldogs.com
Friday, November 8, 2013
Women’s Basketball hosts Nyack (N.Y.) College
Bowie, MD – Leonidas S. James Complex (A.C. Jordan Arena) LIVE STATS TICKETS
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Football at Elizabeth City State University LIVE STATS TICKETS
Elizabeth City, NC – 1 pm – Roebuck Stadium
Men’s Basketball at Fairmont State University
Fairmont, WV – 3 pm – Joe Retton Arena
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Men’s Basketball vs. West Virginia Wesleyan College
Fairmont, WV – 2 pm – Joe Retton Arena
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