Childhood Brain Cancer Mother Adrianna Stephenson Testimonial

Описание к видео Childhood Brain Cancer Mother Adrianna Stephenson Testimonial

Adrianna's son Parker was diagnosed with a 4 cm brain tumor at the age of 1. After surgery removed 70% of the tumor, her and her husband were soon faced with a tough decision, the tumor had grown back, and surgery was no longer considered an option. Faced with what she feared would be endless chemotherapy she made an informed decision to follow a therapeutic ketogenic diet. The results speak for themselves.
To find out more about Adrianna and Parker’s journey:
Instagram: keto4mykid
  / keto4mykid  
https://www.instagram.com/stories/hig...
   • Does sugar feed brain tumors?  
   • Can keto help cancer? A mother discus...  
   • What diet is best for fighting cancer?  
   • Is the keto diet used to treat brain ...  
   • How to sustain a keto diet plan for t...  
   • Can the keto diet be used during chem...  
Other resources for children and parents:
https://charliefoundation.org/
https://www.maxloveproject.org/

CANCER/EVOLUTION Docuseries
https://cancerevolution.film/
Revolution Foundation
Donate Tax-free to the 501(c)(3) that supports metabolic therapies at: https://cancerevolution.film/support/

THE NEWEST HOPE FOR CANCER IS ACTUALLY ONE OF THE OLDEST
Buried for a century, the metabolic theory of cancer is overturning entrenched dogma and reshaping the future of cancer treatment.

For over fifty years humanity has marshalled every resource in the war against cancer with little to show for it. The eye-watering amounts of money spent on research and drug development have failed to generate meaningful treatments or improve patient survival.

But what if our most basic, foundational assumption about what causes cancer is wrong?

The idea that cancer is a genetic disease captured minds and research funding with the discovery of DNA in the 1950s. Yet the theory that genes are the root cause of cancer has never been proven. In fact, research is mounting against it, despite establishment attempts to force increasingly contradictory data to fit this profitable theory.

The genetic mutation theory of cancer is ensnaring our best and brightest minds and diverting research dollars, while simultaneously not producing meaningful results. The once heralded treatments targeting genetic mutations have been found to extend life by only months or weeks - at astronomical patient cost.

But there is light on the horizon shining from an unexpected source… the past.

A century ago, a brilliant, Nobel prize-winning scientist staked his reputation on a new understanding of cancer's origins: a dysfunction in the cancer cell's ability to create energy. His discovery, known as the Warburg Effect, is the foundation for the metabolic theory of cancer and a new generation of effective cancer therapies - all of which can be used in conjunction with conventional therapy to dramatically improve outcomes. Despite the overwhelming published evidence for their safety and efficacy, these low cost therapies are struggling for exposure without the profit potential to justify extensive human trials and marketing costs.

This is the story of the revolutionary scientists and practitioners committed to following scientific evidence rather than institutional dogma to find effective cancer treatments. In the process, they are starting to redefine not just cancer treatment, but our very definition of cancer and what causes it.

Video and stills courtesy Adrianna Stephenson.

Music Credits:
Candy Tuft by Jake Ridley, Soldier of Love by Alex Lamy, Our Choices Matter by Neil Purdy and Matthew Cook, Idle Minds by Kent Carter, Elegant Mischief by Alex Collier and Joshua Smoak, Vital Decision by Alex Collier and Joshua Smoak, Heartfelt by Benjamin Hayden, and Life Lessons by Neil Purdy and Matthew Cook, are used under license from Alibi Music.
Jindupe by Lauren Duski, and Creep performed by Emmit Fenn, are used under license from YouTube Audio library.
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