It is if you assume 100% effectiveness of treatment.is this statement true or false?
It is if you assume 100% effectiveness of treatment.is this statement true or false?
Et voila!When she died she was immediately cured.
The Indian Jesus?
Actually Canada did do that to many indigenous Canadians.
And it is ironic that some breakthroughs in Canadian medicine owe their thanks to medical experiments in residential schools such as research on vitamin supplements to ill-nourished children at residential schools in the '60's.
Which is fine when that belief is doubly effective as placebo is.
Using that more powerful belief along with chemo would have save her life.
Repeating my words?Go bitch at somebody who cares.
If they are under reported how do you know about them? Do they report it to you Beave, just not the authorities?
Holistic treatment. Herbs, berries, sage and hiyiyis is treatment? That my dear is placebo.
What? That coming from the "human" who thinks that humans should suffer until natural death?
F. O. Inquisitor.
Holistic treatment. Herbs, berries, sage and hiyiyis is treatment? That my dear is placebo.
This girl's parents are guilty of criminally negligent homicide, for failing to provide adequate medical care for a child for which they were a guardian.
Repeating my words?
Well, at least you recognize who's the smartest person in the room.
To the OP.
'Oh no! A little girl died because her parents don't subscribe to my beliefs, boo hoo!'
To the next two responses. Pete and Walt.
'Yes kill everyone that doesn't subscribe to my beliefs.'
Makayla died not only from leukemia, but from faith—the faith of her parents, who are pastors. They not only inculcated her with Christianity, but, on religious grounds, removed her from chemotherapy to put her in a dubious institute of “alternative medicine” in Florida. At the Hippocrates Health Institute in West Palm Beach, Makayla was treated with a combination of raw food, vitamin C injections, and “cold laser therapy,” none of which have been shown to have the slightest effect on leukemia. (The Institute is being sued by former staff for operating a “scam.”) Her doctors say that if she had stayed on chemotherapy and standard treatment, she would have had a 75 percent chance of survivaldid you read the article that I posted dated Feb 2015? she was being treated by her ONCOLOGIST ( a specialist in cancer treatment) and her family doctor.
Other treatments include steroids, growth factors, radiotherapy and bone marrow transplant and stem cell transplants.
You didn't read the article from Feb 2015 which stated that she was being treated by her oncologist.
Yup, twice.
Makayla died not only from leukemia, but from faith—the faith of her parents, who are pastors. They not only inculcated her with Christianity, but, on religious grounds, removed her from chemotherapy to put her in a dubious institute of “alternative medicine” in Florida. At the Hippocrates Health Institute in West Palm Beach, Makayla was treated with a combination of raw food, vitamin C injections, and “cold laser therapy,” none of which have been shown to have the slightest effect on leukemia. (The Institute is being sued by former staff for operating a “scam.”) Her doctors say that if she had stayed on chemotherapy and standard treatment, she would have had a 75 percent chance of survival