Sad news, but I think he declined treatment very early on
https://www.fox5dc.com/news/dilbert-scott-adams-dies-prostate-cancer
I think this guy knew he had PC for several yrs but declined treatment...I also think he died by assisted suicide sometime yesterday...doing nothing about PC can get you in big trouble down the road.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
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@heavyphil I agree that Ivermectin is more likely to turn out to have legit clinical applications than perfume 🙂, but right now, we don't know what those applications might be, what doses would help/hurt/kill, what the effective (or deadly) formation would be, what drugs you must, may, or mustn't take with it, etc.
That's why I'm suggesting that at this point, self-dosing with Ivermectin wouldn't be much different than self-dosing with Chanel N° 5. It's not so much like throwing darts blindfolded, as walking into a building blindfolded and throwing darts in every direction hoping it's a pub rather than a police station.
But yes, that could change in the future if current early research on Ivermectin moves forward.
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1 ReactionI read that when he was diagnosed, the cancer was already metastasized and into his bones. It said he did use the SOC treatments that were more of a palliative nature but also tried ivermectin and fenbendazole. If this is true, I see no reason to bash him for trying some alternative treatment at the end. I think it is okay to try to stop cancer by any means.
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2 Reactions@bobgolf Yes, I agree -- nobody deserves to be bashed.
Any information I'm sharing (and I hope this applies to everyone) is for the sake of others reading this discussion, not to bash Mr Adams.
My cancer was also metastasised and into my bones when I was first diagnosed in 2021. Yes, the old standard of care was purely palliative, but that has changed in recent years, at least at the best centres. They're hesitant to use the "cure" word, but many types of metastatic prostate cancer — especially if it's still oligometastatic and castrate-sensitive at time of diagnosis — can be managed, perhaps indefinitely in some cases.
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