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Friday, January 22, 2010
Kanzius Foundation Turns Down $1 Million
The research reports are promising. CLICK FOR VIDEO
The use of radio waves to destroy cancer cells is working well on laboratory animals. There's been no side effects. Phase One of human trials could begin as soon as two and a half years for pancreas and liver cancer.
Meanwhile the phone rings off the wall at the offices of the John Kanzius Foundation in Erie.Most callers are desperate. They or a loved one are in the advanced stages of cancer and can't wait even one more year. One caller even offered big money if the foundation would change it's focus to benefit him."He said, "If I offer you a million dollars, could you test my colon cancer?" And I said no," said Foundation Executive Director Mark Neidig.
Not even a million dollars can keep the Foundation from going backwards and delaying the schedule for human trials.
Neidig takes the calls. He knows people are desperate for a cure. It breaks his heart to have to tell cancer patients that human testing is still years away."When you talk to a dad. He's 40 years old. He's got a little girl. He's a single parent and he's going to lose his little girl. I feel really helpless," Neidig says.
Neidig tells cancer patients that hopefully soon, other people will not have to go through the same pain that they are going through. It's all he can tell them, but he hopes the patients will take some comfort in that.
That's what gets him through the sad days on the phone."We can't move fast enough," Neidig says, "but it's going to happen. One day, we can take these calls and say, "Here's where you go. Here's what you do." But until that day, we're going to keep fighting forward."
John Last
The use of radio waves to destroy cancer cells is working well on laboratory animals. There's been no side effects. Phase One of human trials could begin as soon as two and a half years for pancreas and liver cancer.
Meanwhile the phone rings off the wall at the offices of the John Kanzius Foundation in Erie.Most callers are desperate. They or a loved one are in the advanced stages of cancer and can't wait even one more year. One caller even offered big money if the foundation would change it's focus to benefit him."He said, "If I offer you a million dollars, could you test my colon cancer?" And I said no," said Foundation Executive Director Mark Neidig.
Not even a million dollars can keep the Foundation from going backwards and delaying the schedule for human trials.
Neidig takes the calls. He knows people are desperate for a cure. It breaks his heart to have to tell cancer patients that human testing is still years away."When you talk to a dad. He's 40 years old. He's got a little girl. He's a single parent and he's going to lose his little girl. I feel really helpless," Neidig says.
Neidig tells cancer patients that hopefully soon, other people will not have to go through the same pain that they are going through. It's all he can tell them, but he hopes the patients will take some comfort in that.
That's what gets him through the sad days on the phone."We can't move fast enough," Neidig says, "but it's going to happen. One day, we can take these calls and say, "Here's where you go. Here's what you do." But until that day, we're going to keep fighting forward."
John Last
CANCER IS A SCOURGE THAT AFFECTS MANY PEOPLE. THE CONSPIRACY THEORISTS WILL TELL YOU THAT THERE IS A CURE, BUT IT IS BEING WITHHELD BECAUSE IT IS SO LUCRATIVE TO TREAT CANCER! TELL THAT TO THE RESEARCHER WHO HAS LOST A PARENT, A SIBLING, A SON OR DAUGHTER OR A BELOVED UNCLE OR AUNT. KANZIUS' RESEARCH IS CUTTING EDGE AND PROMISING!
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