In the time of Kaliyug, when the need of the hour is to spiritualise society, the role of the householder seeker is a crucial one. Juggling career, family, multiple relationships and traffic jams, the householder must bloom like the proverbial lotus in the muck of everyday life More>>
To mainstream doctors, cancer is a localized disease, to be treated in
a localized manner. By cutting out the tumor, irradiating it, or flooding
the body with toxic (and often carcinogenic) drugs, the orthodox physician
hopes to destroy the tumor and thus save the patient. But all too often,
the cancer is still present and has metastasized (spread elsewhere). The
allopathic, conventional approach, for all its high-tech trappings, is
based on a primitive medical philosophy: aggressively attacking an "enemy"
disease. Often, the patient is devastated in the process, while the cancer
and its underlying causes remain.
In contrast, the alternative healer regards cancer as a systemic disease,
one that involves the whole body. In this view, the tumor is merely a
symptom and the therapy aims to correct the root causes. Instead of aggressively
attacking the tumor, many alternative therapies focus on rebuilding the
body's natural immunity and strengthening its inherent ability to destroy
cancer cells. A number of alternative therapies also include natural measures
to directly attack and destroy the tumor, whether by herbs, enzymes, or
other means.
The three "proven" methods of treating cancerchemotherapy,
radiation, and surgerymay actually shorten life in many instances.
Each of these treatments is invasive, has devastating side effects, and
treats only symptoms. Each can cause the spread or recurrence of cancer.
While these immunity-damaging approaches may at times be necessary, their
successes have mostly been limited to relatively rare forms of cancer
or the early stages of the disease. For most adult cancers, the orthodox
therapies are virtually noncurative, though they may buy some time. For
many patients, the standard therapies shorten the life span: "Most
cancer patients in this country die of chemotherapy," observes Dr.
Alan Levin of the University of California Medical School. "Chemotherapy
does not eliminate breast, colon, or lung cancers. The fact has been documented
for over a decade.... Women with breast cancer are likely to die faster
with chemotherapy than without it."
Most cancers are treated with surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy,
hormone therapy, or biological therapy. Treatment for cancer depends on
the type of cancer; the size, location, and stage of the tumor; the person's
general health; and other factors. The doctor develops a treatment plan
to fit each person's situation. A team of specialists, which may include
a surgeon, radiation oncologist, medical oncologist, and others, often
treat people with cancer.
The doctors may decide to use one treatment method or a combination of
methods. These are the standard treatments that are being used on cancer
patients. But since the treatment of cancer is usually a traumatic and
painstaking process, the patient needs other therapies alongside the conventional
ones. Cancer needs to be treated and cured not only in body but also in
spirit.
These are the tried, tested and clinically proven therapies for cancer.
They may also be called standard treatments. Such therapies are most commonly
used and widely accepted by the medical world inspite of debates on their
side-effects and curative capabilities in the later stages of cancer.
Treatment options may include:
Surgery This isthe oldest form of treatment for cancer. Surgery
is performed in order to remove the cancerous tumor as well as some of
the surrounding tissue and lymph nodes near it.
Radiation Therapy Radiation therapy (also called radiotherapy) uses high-energy particles
or waves, such as x-rays or gamma rays, to destroy cancer cells.
Chemotherapy This is the use of medicines to treat cancer. Systematic chemotherapy
uses anticancer drugs that enter the bloodstream and reach all areas of
the body, making this treatment potentially useful for cancer that has
spread.
Hormone Therapy Hormone therapy is used against certain cancers that depend
on hormones for their growth. This treatment may include the use of drugs
that stop the production of certain hormones or that change the way they
work. Hormone production or hormone action can also be stopped by the
surgical removal of hormone-producing glands.
Immunotherapy Immunotherapy (also called biological
therapy) is the use of treatments that promote or support the body's
immune system response to a disease such as cancer.