Customer Reviews for The Cure for All Diseases: With Many Case Histories

The Cure for All Diseases: With Many Case Histories
by Hulda Regehr Clark

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Book Reviews of The Cure for All Diseases: With Many Case Histories

Book Review: Urgent- Need to Read This
Summary: 1 Stars

HERE IS THE REAL TRUTH...FROM MEDSCAPE.COM

Hulda Regehr Clark, ND, PhD, author of The Cure for All Cancers and The Cure for All Diseases, is facing criminal andncivil charges related to her activities. Clark, 70, claims to cure cancer, AIDS, and many other serious diseases. She describesvherself as an "independent research scientist" with bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Saskatchewan and a PhD degree in physiology from the University of Minnesota (1958). She also lists a naturopathic (ND) degree, but the source is not identified.

Clark's treatment is available at Century Nutrition, a clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, where the basic fee for two weeks of "treatment" is $4,500 (plus 10% tax). This figure does not include the cost of a motel room (approximately $210/ week); meals ($250/ week); blood tests ($70 each); standard diagnostic imaging tests ($40 to $400); dental x-rays (at least $200); "individually tailored" supplements ($400 to $1,500 for a month's supply); equipment (about $350); tooth extractions ($80 each); and partial or full dentures ($450).

Bizarre Claims

Clark claims that all cancers and many other diseases are caused by "parasites, toxins, and pollutants" and can be cured by killing the parasites and ridding the body of environmental chemicals. Herbook The Cure for All Cancers states:

All cancers are alike. They are all caused by a parasite. A singleparasite! It is the human intestinal fluke. And if you kill this parasite, the cancer stops immediately. The tissue becomes normal again. In order to get cancer, you must have this parasite....

In September 1999, Clark was arrested in San Diego, California, based on a fugitive warrant from Indiana, where she faces charges of practicing medicine without a license. In November, a former patient filed suit accusing her of negligence and fraud.

The criminal case originated when Clark lived and practiced in Indiana. In 1993, after a former patient complained to the Indiana attorney general, a health department official visited her office and was diagnosed with AIDS and sent to a laboratory for a blood test. Clark -- apparently tipped off by the lab -- found out she was being investigated and left Indiana a few days later


Book Review: From someone who's been to her clinic.
Summary: 5 Stars

I came across this book in the mid-'90s and pursued it to treat a condition one of my children was having. There was dramatic improvement and, although we have recently found the condition to be genetic, the guidelines in the book have helped to increase my daughter's abilities beyond where medical doctors (who expected her to die) said they could go. (We also used her methods to prevent and cure a variety of smaller problems in our family, such as allergies, colds, headaches, and so on.)

We went to her clinic in Tijuana, since it's not terribly far, and she never charged us more than $50. I can't say with certainty that she charges everyone the same, but we got a lot for our money. Dr. Clark sat down with us on each occasion and managed to actually spot some toxins in our environment we hadn't even considered. (We also got X-rays at one point, but not from her, and it's Tijuana, so they don't cost much.)

While in her clinic, however, I met a lot of people who had before-and-after test results for cancer and AIDS, and many, many people who had only come to her after their MD had written them off.

Obviously one should be sensible about one's health, but that goes both ways. It's just as foolish to believe blindly that the medical establishment is always right about everything as it is to believe every quack that comes down the road peddling snake-oil.

You can do this treatment entirely yourself for a couple hundred bucks so that Dr. Clark doesn't get a dime -- down to borrowing the book from the library and photocopying it. You can take the easy way out and buy supplies from reputable dealers, and it might cost you a hundred bucks more (but require less time investment). Nothing in her program conflicts with standard medical treatment, so it's not like you have to give up going to your M.D.

For some people, there's no worse shame than being "suckered" or spending a dime more than they have to. (Though I have to admit, we've spent nothing on doctors for the past several years, saving way more than we spent on the program.) Ultimately, it's you who has to live (or die) with your choice.


Book Review: Definitely an interesting read and different perspective
Summary: 5 Stars

I got this book because it sounded interesting.

Now for those of you that may be skeptical of the zapper concept, I do actually have a few comments on that.

1. there is various research that has been done on the body's frequencies, such as the fact that florescent lights
actually have a negative impact on you due to how it affects your frequency, but further more they have found that not
just our environment, but what we eat and drink also affects our frequency.

2. they have found that various parasites (virus, bacteria, and etc) can only exist in certain frequency conditions of
the body, and when the body is brought up to a certain frequency for a set duration there are no signs of parasites.

3. they have now begun to electricute meat to kill parasites and disease in the meat, therefore also proving that
electrical current and frequency have some role to play, because the electricuted meat is not cooked by doing this,
therefore it has to be low voltage.

this information was not taken from the book, but from my own research on these things.
So the concept of the zapper is actually pretty sound, but also consider this, it doesn't harm you to try it and
is considering that more then likely at some point you've taken a synthetic drug for your ailments. Is there
really a stretch of imagination to try something as simple as this with no harmful affects and trying something
manmade and with much higher risk of side effects? And the cost to build the zapper is fairly cheap, about [money].
The zapper is not the only thing to this book.

The book also has much more info and helpful tips and herbal remedies. It offers kidney cleansing solutions, liver cleansing,
lists of toxins and what products have them. It also addresses toxins and polluntants as harmful and how to avoid them, as
well as how to detoxify yourself.
I will admit that sometimes the advice is a little on the extreme, but overall it is well worth the money you invest in this book.

Thank you for your time.


Book Review: How outlandish....
Summary: 1 Stars

Up front, I consider myself to be very open-minded when it comes to alternative medicine, and I routinely find myself angry and the pharmaceutical cartel for what it's done to our country plying us with drugs all in the name of the holy dollar. That being said, here are my thoughts on this book. If you believe Hulda Clark's claims of pollutants and parasites, you might as well spend your money on a plastic bubble and take up residence there. The idea that all diseases come from infestation of parasites combined with alcohol or other solvents is preposterous. First off, if this is the case, and these specific pollutants are needed to cause diseases like AIDS and cancer, why was there cancer 100s or 1000s of years ago? Surely pollutants were much less then than now. As for AIDS...um, as far as most people know, this is a phenomenon that has only occurred in the last 3 decades. If her theory holds true, AIDS should've been around way before that. Why all of the sudden in the last 30 years has it developed? Plus, if we are all so infested with parasites, how is it that they haven't evolved into being able to "consume" us and leave us on the bad end of the Darwin theory? It is utter nonsense to believe that we can remove almost EVERYTHING from our homes, including pets, and practically live like a frontierman or hermit. Wait...they got cancer too despite being removed from these pollutants! Come on... we all know that we are overloaded with pollutants and exposure to such in our food and in the air we breathe. But this is ridiculous. Sure, I want to believe that a zapper can cure me of all my ills. Don't we all? But my common sense finds many holes. I'd suggest saving your money on this hooey and instead read how to take care of your body through the works of Johanna Budwig or Udo Eramus. They provide a much better "explanation" into why there is such an increase in degenerative diseases over the last 100 years. It's not about parasites. It's about the lack of quality food and the huge affect that has on humans and disease.

Book Review: Do some research before you buy any of Hulda Clarks books
Summary: 3 Stars

There is truth to some of her claims, and compared to Western medicine, one of her detoxes have good effects on most people. But think about this; isn't it a bit strange that a book written over ten years ago claiming it holds the cure for all diseases hasn't been approved by any authority yet?

This is taken directly from Wikipedia:

"Hulda Clark has been criticized because her claims lack scientific validity and consist of anecdotal evidence. Joseph Pizzorno, a prominent naturopathic physician, evaluated Clark's claims and found that her books mixed patients with conventionally diagnosed cancer with those whose cancer diagnosis was based solely on her use of the "Syncrometer". The patients with medically diagnosed cancer did not respond to Clark's treatment, while those she had diagnosed using the "Syncrometer" were "cured". Pizzorno concluded that Clark's treatments were ineffective and that treatments based on Clark's recommendations "pose a substantive public health danger".

The Swiss Study Group for Complementary and Alternative Methods in Cancer (SCAC) issued a strong warning to cancer patients considering Clark's methods.

Prominent alternative medicine proponent Andrew Weil has written, "No studies have backed up [Clark's] bizarre claims, and it's unclear whether the cancer patients she's supposedly cured ever had cancer to begin with."[16]

In 2002, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported that Clark and her son Geoff operated a restaurant and leased housing for patients at Clark's Tijuana clinic. The article described a couple whose daughter, suffering from spinal muscular atrophy, was treated for 10 months by Clark at a cost of approximately $30,000 without improvement. Despite the cost and lack of improvement, the couple stated that Clark insisted she was close to curing the child, and that stopping treatment might endanger her."


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If you still want to read the book, scroll down to the links section on the wikipedia page.
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