13
Jan

Who is Dr. Hulda Clark?

Author: admin

I heard she has a cure for cancer and HIV/AIDS. I thought there was no cure. If she has a cure, why are so many people taking pharmaceutical medications. If she is a cure, why is our government not helping people with her discovery. I am confused. Is there some kind of conspiracy going on?

PJ


Answer:
I don't know. My partner is HIV positive, and we were actually considering giving the cleansing program a go. I don't want to put his health at risk though. He is on no medication at present and he is currently well. Would this work in his favor if he was to take the formula she recommends? You never know unless you give it a go! We are desperate though and I can see how she could make a lot of money out of this. We'll give it a go for a couple of months and if nothing improves, he goes off it. Thats how I see it anyway.

Answer:
There is no conspiracy. The burden of proof falls on Hulda Clark to provide evidence of effectiveness. She has failed to do this. Report It


Answer:
If she's claiming to have a cure for either cancer or AIDS/HIV, then she's a fraud and a charlatan making profits by preying on the ill desperate for good health.

Sounds like a lovely woman.


Answer:
There is no cure for cancer or for AIDs. Clark is not a medical doctor (she is a zoologist that claims cancer is caused by parasites, toxins, and pollutants). Despite having a cult like following there is no physical or scientific evidence to prove that she has ever cured anyone who actually had cancer or AIDs. If she could . . don't you think it would be easy to prove? Cancer tumors are measurable . . you can measure their direct response from any type of treatment that is given. If something works than you can measure the tumor shrinking or disappearing . . that is how it is done in medical science . . no guess work involved . . the tumor shrinks because of treatment or it doesn't. Hulda Clark cannot produce one person whose tumors shrink from her treatment. What is strange is that no one seems to question that at all. If Clark can cure cancer . . she should call in the media and demonstrate it for all the world to see. If she can't prove it this easily . . than her motivation is selling books and products for her own personal gain.

The Bizarre Claims of Hulda Clark

http://www.quackwatch.com/01QuackeryRela…


Answer:
She's a wacko that doesn't know what she's talking about. I can't speak for all medical issues, but for dental, she makes statements without any regard for knowledge of materrials, their limitations and the functioning of the human jaw. Ex., (non-dental) she says the plastic over bread causes mold because of inherent characteristics of the plastic itself, rather than the fact that it holds in moisture and high humidity.

She doesn't "cure" crap.


Answer:
not me

Answer:
http://www.drhuldaclark.org/

http://www.drclark.net/en/hulda_clark/ab…

http://www.huldaclarkproducts.com/mercha…

All the best :)


Answer:
There is no conspiracy. Clark is a fraud, a charlatan and a quack.

She is not a medical doctor; wherever there is cancer (and in her case any other disease) there is a greedy charlatan waiting to cash in on people's desperation and misery. Hulda Clark epitomises this sort of unscrupulous fraud

http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/cl…


Answer:
Hulda Regehr Clark claims to cure cancer, AIDS, and many other serious diseases. She describes herself as an "independent research scientist" with bachelor and master's degrees from the University of Saskatchewan and a Ph.D. degree in physiology from the University of Minnesota (1958).

For several years, Clark's treatment has been administered at Century Nutrition, a clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, where the basic fee for two weeks of "treatment" was $4,500 (plus 10% tax). This figure did 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 $206); "individually tailored" supplements ($400 to $1,500 for a month supply); equipment (about $350); tooth extractions ($80 each); and partial or full dentures ($450).

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.

All of the above notions are absurd. In a 1999 talk that attacked widespread misbeliefs about parasites, the president of the American Society of Parasitologists noted that if Clark's pseudoscientific claims were correct, "the medical establishment and . . . professional pathologists are guilty of a gigantic and cruel fraud on the public."

Two people who seem knowledgeable have informed that Clark's brother, Henry Regehr, died of cancer despite treatment by her.

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

This lady seems to be a shadow character.

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This entry was posted on Sunday, January 13th, 2008 at 11:09 pm and is filed under Cancer Q&A. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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