Sunday
Independent
by LARISSA NOLAN
An Irish
health writer is set to cause controversy in the US with a shocking new
book that claims the world's health industry is ignoring a possible cure
for cancer.
Dubliner Niall Wogan - who recently
emigrated to California - promises to reveal huge medical cover-ups in
his first book The Silent Betrayal. Early reviews
describe Wogan as the Michael Moore of the health world and compared
What They Won't Tell You to Moore's controversial Stupid White Men.
In it, he claims that western medical
associations have deliberately brushed aside evidence that alternative
medicine can be very effective when used to treat certain forms of
cancer. He points the finger directly at the American Medical
Association who he believes is the main culprit.
Wogan's theory is that this is because
the health industry has developed in such a way that pharmaceutical
giants are given first priority when it comes to cancer treatment.
"In many cases, the medical industry
actually keeps us sick to make themselves more profitable," he rails in
the first chapter.
"The big pharmaceutical companies are
favoured over people. More money is made from cancer than it costs to
actually treat cancer. I believe this is the reason why hard evidence of
successful alternative treatments is constantly brushed aside."
Wogan concedes that there is no single
treatment that can claim to cure all cancers in all people. But he
reveals that there are several documented treatments and cures for
certain types of cancer which have been suppressed by big medical
organisations.
He details evidence to show that
Vitamin B17 has been very effective in stopping the spread of cancer and
curing it; explains how a diet of raw juice works on melanoma; and
describes how 'the Hoxsey treatment' has been shown to cure external
cancers.
Wogan has put three years of research
into What They Won't Tell You, which he says he wrote out of duty to
inform people of what is going on.He also quotes many well- respected
experts to back up his theory. Wogan's book is due to be on the shelves
next year.