Burzynski: The Movie **SKEPTIC ALERT**
Comments
-
susieq58 wrote:
My chemo/herceptin cost me nothing - not one cent - my health insurance coverted the lot and my oncologist only charged the scheduled fee so I wouldn't be out of pocket. I was admitted to a day hospital every time so that insurance would cover it all.susieq58, your chemo/herceptin cost you nothing; but it did cost someone something. Someone paid the docs that treated you. It was "free" to you, but someone paid.
This is what is wrong with medicine, these days. Everyone perceives that it is "free." But it is not free. No one has a "right" to some one else paying for their health care.
LIke this Avastin debate. Where Medicare/insurance should cover the $100,000 tab for Avastin so a woman can live, miserably, for six more months.
If you want to personally pay that, susieq58, go for it. Or any other treatments.
-
Leia - Susie's country provides universal health coverage (lucky woman) so by societal agreement all pay higher taxes so that all are covered Sounds very humane to me. Perhaps you prefer the system in most of Africa - due to poverty and high rates of drug diversion, many women get virtually no treatment, not even opioids to ease their pain while dying. (Opioids are illegal in many african countries due to drug diversion issues, but available to the rich. I guess to you this is fair - nobody has to be responsible for anyone else. I think its barbaric. I also think its s****y that medical expenses are the number one cause of bankruptcy in the US. As imperfect as univeral care is, I still think it is better than our system.
However I agree with the concept that there a limits to what society can afford, and though I would want treatments to prolong my life as long as QOL is okay, it doesn't make sense to spend $100,000 on someone who is likely to die in a few months anyway.
-
We pay health insurance premiums in the US. People in other civilized countries pay higher taxes but no health insurance costs. Expensive care provided by either system is paid for by others.
Nothing is ever free. I don't know where I wold stand if I were one of the women who would be given several months by Avastin, knowing that that is the average and that some women would get no help from it and some a year or two. I just don't know.
-
I pay my own insurance premiums (but also have a $10,000 deductible) and I pay taxes so that those who cant afford insurance can have coverage....nothing is "free". I also paid a large out of pocket expense for treatment that works but because the FDA says it's quackery, my insurance company will not pay for it. The system needs to be revised. We are a pharmaceutical addicted "sick care" oriented system. When we start focusing on the cause and stop treating the symptoms and start being responsible for our own health, health care costs will fall....but them what would that do to the economy?
-
That is it. We all need to start being responsible for our own health. And the "sick care" costs will fall.
In the short run, this will be bad for the "sick care industry." But in the end, all of these mal-investments will end and the capital will be shifted to more productive uses. Because the people, themselves, being healthier, will also be more productive.
This thread is about Burzynski; even he is still trying to work within the sick care industry. I applaud him, for that, I think his treatments certainly work a lot better than the Cut, Poison, Burn philosophy of the current medical establishment.
But the real answer comes back to the individual. You and me. There is not a lot any of us can do about the "system" we live under. But there is a LOT we can do, with our own lives.
I, for one, have taken charge of my own life, my own health. I am not going to just accept anything some MD tells me ever again.
-
One of the points of this thread is that Burzynski still uses chemo. Does he advise people not to have surgery? I didn't think so. So instead of cut burn and poison he just recommends cut and poison. I guess that is an improvement.
-
I say let's put the sick on an iceburg somewhere and forget about them. They contribute nothing to society, right? Getting my jacket and boots ready! Leia, you kill me. I can't work and I take great offense to your comments.
-
Yep, Leia, it really does come down to the individual, right? So the smoke from your treasured cigarettes that you blow in everyone else's faces doesn't matter, right?
Still hard to take anything you say about promoting healthy lifestyles along with your smoking...how many smokes do you have a day anyway?
-
Leia said "This is what is wrong with medicine, these days. Everyone perceives that it is "free." But it is not free. No one has a "right" to some one else paying for their health care."
That's the difference between the US and almost every other developed nation on the planet. We think people do have a right to health care. Everyone pays via their taxes so that everyone can have health care as they need it. No one goes bankrupt if they get ill. We all contribute according to our income and we all use the health care system as we need it. Sound pretty civilized to me.
-
My wife is a 40 years survivor of breast ca. She underwent radical mastectomy with nodes disection. This was followed by multi-cocktail chemo. Today, she would have undergone lumpectomy, some radiation Tx....as STATISTICS say she wouldn't do better with all the extra-suffering therapy she underwent. Well, think of it this way: if you want to know something about the torque ratios, the physics of your engine to drive shaft transfer of energy, etc, you go to a guy in a snappy clean white coat with a calculator in the pocket: the auto engineer. But if you just want yout tailpipe changed or car tunned up, you go to the gringy guy in dirty overalls, the automechanic.
It's different with cancer. If you want to know about your cancer cells, their genetic aberations, and any prospective gene manipulation, you go to the all knowing young molecular biology PhD who is in gungy jeans and scruffy looking because as a grad student and post-doc he gets paid crap. But if you want to ust go get a standard chemo Tx you go to the know-nothing technician who just works blindly by protocol (in most cases), the oncologist in the starched white coat and with a steoscope on his neck that he probably no longer knows how to use. Burzynski was a rare bird for his time: BOTH the guy who does thethoughtful science and the guy who mindlessly does the chemo by protocols. Invariably, he kept up with the explosion in molecular biology and tried to spply it in a medical profession that had barely gotten through biochem, so it regards all blood values as below, above and within range "biomarkers," much as a Pavlovian dog reacts to the conditioned stimulus. See what makes the FDA approve a drug. It is data provided by the manufacturer through paid clinicians. However, since Reagan, NIH/NSA research results can be patteneted by the PhD. He can sell the patent to PHARMA so that he too can afford fancy pants and a clean starched white coat like the MD. But, so that there's no conflict, PhDs now buy blue or pink coats and MDs wear scrub suits under their white coats so there's no confusion. Now both work together, publish a paper and then go dark until they sell the patent to PHARMA for millions. That's the for profit background in which Burzynski was abused-- as in putting the topic under "complimentary, wholistic..." And, though a feisty fighter, he has not hesitated to seek his millions either. Meanwhile, the the dollar battles for PHARMA romancing go on, people are dying of cancer waiting for the for-profit atmosphere to find a magic cure. Well, there isn't epigenetics is brand new and every step looks like a gold mine-- literally! That's why progress is so much slower than in the "open access" days of pre-Regan corporate cannibalism days. I was a scientist, a physician and a patient, as was my wife. I miss the old days whenA COMMON PURPOSE was enough to see us all collaborate. Sre, ego was a problem, but that is nothing compared to corporate cannibalism. Burzynki seems to have gone through all the phases and is now trying to appear as Mr. PhD for the science and not Mr. MD for the cash. That's a mixed metaphore that won't go over well despite the movie. But as some of us needlessly die because corporate entrepreneurship-- a French term meaning the taker in the middle-- let us recall the days of science and medicine for humanity's sake when MD was a calling as was a PhD. Alas, we'll never know if Burzynski is right because few MDs understand the epigenetic notions of methylation and heterochromatin he refers to and few PhDs have got anything sure enough to get the entrepreneurs at PHARMA to invest in him. Meanwhile, the FDA, which pompously desides only based on the phony data PHARMA sends in on its own drugs (soooo many labs were closed and their directors put in jail for phony results and so many drugs were dumped post marketing that FDA can't act too proud), POLITICALLY chooses whom it sends the FDA after while cancer gets the last laugh and we all vow for our favorite witchcraft. Man-- and woman-- are indeed a Greek Tragedy!
-
Interesting.....Eugnid, a brand new poster, posting about big bad pharma. Begins to sound a little old and trite, you know?
This new post is just a tad too coincidental to me.
-
It is an interesting first post! Wish there was a "like" button, digger
-
you could just type in
LIKE
-
Eugnid wrote: "(soooo many labs were closed and their directors put in jail for phony results and so many drugs were dumped post marketing that FDA can't act too proud), "
Soooo many?? How many directors were put in jail? 10? 20? Can you site them?
This is what bugs be about this forum - there is way too much creative writing here. There could be good information exchanged, but so many people just make stuff up, it buries and discredits whatever helpful information that exists here.
The New Me: Thank you for taking the time to discredit the made-up stuff with concrete, well-supported facts and data. You are performing a huge public service.

-
Eugnid could you concisely state your point please. The only abuse I see is that by practitioners using unapproved therapies or was I confused by the abundance of verbiage?
It does get old when first time posters conveniently show up to "save the day". What PERCENTAGE of labs have been found to falsify results? That is the question I would like answered. We may never know the answer because that is not covered in the talking points these posters seem to have.
-
This is like a court room.is he or is he not!!!!!!!!.Reading all these stories changes the picture.
-
Would you rather discuss phosphorylation of the ER receptors, bypassing Tamoxifen and how we most often lose to cancer's bypass routes? I wrote my impression of the Burzynski story; all that you guys focused on in response was just manure paddies on the road to hope: HOAX ALERT! As for falsification of results, consider how much PHARMA pays for trials and how quickly the funds are cut when the trials seem to go the wrong way. Do any of you wonder why MDs, as of recently, have to list their financial relationship with the product when they publish. Why do you think that practice was adopted? Perhaps if you consider the point Burzynski made about why these trials can't really test his agents (epigenetic individuality) you to might wonder if the "approved" way may not be as good for cancer as for maybe the metabolic syndrome or hypertension. The guy is now working WITH FDA and his studies are in Phase III. I thought he deserves a little more technically educated appreciation here. Remember, he started as a medical scientist in a Communist country, just like me, where profit for any cures was plain "0" and found himself in serious trouble here over issues of profit motive, both his and those of his detractors. That's the sad part that makes me cry, both as professional and patient.
What does "unapproved" mean? My point was that an MD/PhD discursant in epigenetics has been cast into the realm of sidelined occult "commplimentary and holistic" Tx. I also emphasized how the focus on profit motive will slowdown advances. Mukerji's EMPEROR OF ALL MALADIES kind of sais what I said in far more prolix fashion-- one time "approved" Tx is deemed mutilation today and the reasons for that are no more legit than the reasons then for mutilation. Do you all think it so unfair to say that for-profit medicine leaves us touched by cancer-- even in the profession-- hanging by tender mercies?
The rage is understandable but somehow I expected better understanding of the point of the whole Burzynski story.
-
We have a sista on here from 2010 that is telling us first hand that she got ripped off.
I believer her!!!!!!!.
-
I kind of liked the phrase "manure paddies on the road to hope."
-
Oh, digger, didn't you hear? I quit smoking.
Although, I still have not hear what your breast cancer diagnosis is.
-
Everyone has the right to live. We get mad at the government for providing the health care to those who cannot afford it. Why is it that they provide it? Because one would die without it. We live in a world where treatments are so expensive that you must have health insurance to afford it. Whether private or government provided. Why are we getting angry at those without private insurance? Did they ask for cancer? No. Do they deserve a good quality of life? Yes. Why? Because they are human.
-
Eugnid
Since you answered my last question with another, I will not bother with any more. If you want a true discussion and not obsfucation, break it down for the layperson . Appproved means approved by the FDA and Texas state authorities, not treatments that cause a doctor to be convicted of fraud.
ETA: Just a random thought- the ignore button is a wonderful thing.
Diagnosis: 2/25/2007, IDC, Stage I, 0/2 nodes, ER+/PR+, HER2
-
I didn't even read that post. I can smell BS from a mile away!
-
Bwaaahahaha, "manure paddies," indeed.
Hi Eugnid, welcome to the discussion. I consider myself to be literate and fairly "technically educated," but I have no idea what you're trying to say.
I agree, Orange1- far too much creative writing here for my liking. I'm a huge fiction bibliophile, but certainly not with respect to health and medical information, and not for rambling and pointless word dumps.
-
Tenmom~
Great thoughts. Where is that LIKE button?
-
Leia,
How wonderful that you decided to quit smoking! That's great news!
Not sure why you remain so personally obsessed with knowing my diagnosis, but whatever.
Still happy for those around you that you quit those smokes!
-
Leia - I pay for the top cover Health Insurance so the Insurance company paid for my treatment except for the herceptin - our government covers that as it is considered to be so important for treating bc. I am a taxpayer and as I earn a lot, my taxes paid for it. My point about my treatment centre is that they don't charge over the scheduled fee set by the government for the drugs and the oncologist - they could if they wanted to and I would have had to pay the difference.
-
To add - our public hospital system here is not all that good, so I wouldn't ever use it.
-
We only have a public system and it's excellent. Sure there could be some tweaks, as with any system, but I have had stellar help.
-
Tenmom is right but I don't believe anyone is angry at those without insurance. They are the ultimate victims here. It is so unfair that someone has to go bankrupt because of their medical care. She says, "We live in a world where treatments are so expensive that you must have health insurance to afford it." I totally agree. The problem is the System. There is so much corruption within a system that allows pharmaceutical companies to have so much influence in our care. Pharmaceuticals do not heal. They are "symptom" care. We allow lobbyists to influence our politicians who make the laws. (see this link to another thread.)
http://community.breastcancer.org/forum/121/topic/780327?page=1#idx_1
We allow them in our universities to have influence on what our young and upcoming doctors learn about health and in their furthering education once they have become doctors. Pharmaceuticals have their place but because we allow the "gifting" and bribery to go on where our doctors are concerned, our medical industry becomes biased to "sick" care, prescribing a pharmaceutical for whatever ails us and sometimes for what doesn't. We don't teach "wellness". There are illnesses where diet alone would cure but our doctors are only taught to treat the symptoms with pharmaceuticals. We need to teach our children how to be well instead of prescribing meds for every ailment. Our children are on more meds now that ever. Vaccines have increased substantially since we were kids. American children are the most vaccinated in the world. It's a travesty. All for the profit of big pharma.
Categories
- All Categories
- 679 Advocacy and Fund-Raising
- 289 Advocacy
- 68 I've Donated to Breastcancer.org in honor of....
- Test
- 322 Walks, Runs and Fundraising Events for Breastcancer.org
- 5.6K Community Connections
- 282 Middle Age 40-60(ish) Years Old With Breast Cancer
- 53 Australians and New Zealanders Affected by Breast Cancer
- 208 Black Women or Men With Breast Cancer
- 684 Canadians Affected by Breast Cancer
- 1.5K Caring for Someone with Breast cancer
- 455 Caring for Someone with Stage IV or Mets
- 260 High Risk of Recurrence or Second Breast Cancer
- 22 International, Non-English Speakers With Breast Cancer
- 16 Latinas/Hispanics With Breast Cancer
- 189 LGBTQA+ With Breast Cancer
- 152 May Their Memory Live On
- 85 Member Matchup & Virtual Support Meetups
- 375 Members by Location
- 291 Older Than 60 Years Old With Breast Cancer
- 177 Singles With Breast Cancer
- 869 Young With Breast Cancer
- 50.4K Connecting With Others Who Have a Similar Diagnosis
- 204 Breast Cancer with Another Diagnosis or Comorbidity
- 4K DCIS (Ductal Carcinoma In Situ)
- 79 DCIS plus HER2-positive Microinvasion
- 529 Genetic Testing
- 2.2K HER2+ (Positive) Breast Cancer
- 1.5K IBC (Inflammatory Breast Cancer)
- 3.4K IDC (Invasive Ductal Carcinoma)
- 1.5K ILC (Invasive Lobular Carcinoma)
- 999 Just Diagnosed With a Recurrence or Metastasis
- 652 LCIS (Lobular Carcinoma In Situ)
- 193 Less Common Types of Breast Cancer
- 252 Male Breast Cancer
- 86 Mixed Type Breast Cancer
- 3.1K Not Diagnosed With a Recurrence or Metastases but Concerned
- 189 Palliative Therapy/Hospice Care
- 488 Second or Third Breast Cancer
- 1.2K Stage I Breast Cancer
- 313 Stage II Breast Cancer
- 3.8K Stage III Breast Cancer
- 2.5K Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
- 13.1K Day-to-Day Matters
- 132 All things COVID-19 or coronavirus
- 87 BCO Free-Cycle: Give or Trade Items Related to Breast Cancer
- 5.9K Clinical Trials, Research News, Podcasts, and Study Results
- 86 Coping with Holidays, Special Days and Anniversaries
- 828 Employment, Insurance, and Other Financial Issues
- 101 Family and Family Planning Matters
- Family Issues for Those Who Have Breast Cancer
- 26 Furry friends
- 1.8K Humor and Games
- 1.6K Mental Health: Because Cancer Doesn't Just Affect Your Breasts
- 706 Recipe Swap for Healthy Living
- 704 Recommend Your Resources
- 171 Sex & Relationship Matters
- 9 The Political Corner
- 874 Working on Your Fitness
- 4.5K Moving On & Finding Inspiration After Breast Cancer
- 394 Bonded by Breast Cancer
- 3.1K Life After Breast Cancer
- 806 Prayers and Spiritual Support
- 285 Who or What Inspires You?
- 28.7K Not Diagnosed But Concerned
- 1K Benign Breast Conditions
- 2.3K High Risk for Breast Cancer
- 18K Not Diagnosed But Worried
- 7.4K Waiting for Test Results
- 603 Site News and Announcements
- 560 Comments, Suggestions, Feature Requests
- 39 Mod Announcements, Breastcancer.org News, Blog Entries, Podcasts
- 4 Survey, Interview and Participant Requests: Need your Help!
- 61.9K Tests, Treatments & Side Effects
- 586 Alternative Medicine
- 255 Bone Health and Bone Loss
- 11.4K Breast Reconstruction
- 7.9K Chemotherapy - Before, During, and After
- 2.7K Complementary and Holistic Medicine and Treatment
- 775 Diagnosed and Waiting for Test Results
- 7.8K Hormonal Therapy - Before, During, and After
- 50 Immunotherapy - Before, During, and After
- 7.4K Just Diagnosed
- 1.4K Living Without Reconstruction After a Mastectomy
- 5.2K Lymphedema
- 3.6K Managing Side Effects of Breast Cancer and Its Treatment
- 591 Pain
- 3.9K Radiation Therapy - Before, During, and After
- 8.4K Surgery - Before, During, and After
- 109 Welcome to Breastcancer.org
- 98 Acknowledging and honoring our Community
- 11 Info & Resources for New Patients & Members From the Team