>>11621411The list is endless. Some old treatments most certainly worked on the cancers of the day, but may not work for modern cancers (though it's not studied regardless). Very basic concepts are ignored in favor of the medical-chemical complex's preferred endless search for irrelevant genes and chemicals you can sell for 13k per bottle of 30.
Essiac tea is of course well known.
Hoxsey's remedy. He was ran off to Mexico like many others of the day, including Royal Rife.
Electromedicine. Royal Rife cured cancer. Modern treatments are not using the correct principles, but they do get some results. See Novocure and mmWave treatment of superficial tumors. See also Henry Lai's magnetic destruction of malaria using fields barely stronger than the geomagnetic field.
There are tons of herbs with constituents that show strong tumor attenuating properties. Guarana seed prevents metastais and colonization of melanoma. Ashwagandha kills melanoma in vitro. Wormwood (artemesinin) is well known.
B17 will be somewhat of a mystery due to power and politics. It's worth noting it's difficult to get apricot seeds in the US.
Fasting has some effects due to clearing out acids and waste which is keeping tissue in a stressed state. This is a matter of disrupted membrane mediated intercellular communication.
Vitamin C intravenous for non-hormonal cancers.
Tetramethylpyrazine.
Turpentine. Other essential oils.
Then there are the more strictly physical-chemical methods. Like coconut oil and baking soda, then putting a solid plate against it and applying vinegar. CO2 and water, the CO2 and the coconut oil is forced into the tissues. Again, many anecdotal report, not even studied formally. Because it's not allowed, that kind of solution doesn't fit the criteria. There is a line to how you may refine the design.
On and on. I'm probably forgetting something. My father died of melanoma.