Wikipedia or Wikipediantic ? – wants your 3 pounds of flesh (WikiPEEdia, UR all INe)

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[WP:SOP] Statement of principles from Wikipedia founder Jimbo Wales, as updated by the community since then. 7.”)

Due & undue weight: [3]

“The relative prominence of each viewpoint among Wikipedia editors or the general public is not relevant & should not be considered,”

[WP:NPOV] “History of NPOV:” (Content # 6, Note 3)

(Neutral Point of View)
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TRANSLATION: Wikipedia editors, YOUR OPINION IS NOT RELEVANT
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MEANING: It is meaningless to attempt to slather your biased OPINION all over Wikipedia like butter on Texas toast, since supposedly, we only care about verifiable FACTS
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Wikipedia, what the problem is ?

Jimmy Donal Wales

Who ?

No, “The Who” is actually really British !

(as opposed to some “furreigner” who plops across the pond, wants to pound one of your pelts after a celebrity hunt, pops it in his bonnet, pip-pips about, and mounts it up on his rented wall along with what’s left of his balls)

I’m writing, of course, about “Jimbo,” the one who got away . . . Thankfully

The recipient of the write-up earlier this year in The New York Times [1] (Oh, pithy !!)
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Wales, who no longer runs the day-to-day operations of Wikipedia

“He applies his libertarian worldview to the Internet and has taken on institutions like the United States government
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You must be bloody well right joking me

(joking me ? Quit jokin’ me !)

JimCrow’s ’bout as “libertarian” as Fidel Castro with a gun in his hand and (f)lies between his teeth; from traveling with the windows down

Stephen Colbert shoulda seen that comin’ from a 8 mile away

Hey Stephen, Report’ THAT !!!
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“He grew up in Huntsville, Ala., the son of a teacher and a retail man
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And obviously, he didn’t “learnt” well

I think a refund’s in order

And here’s your free school Insolence to go with it

Happy eat in’

It is claimed that “HE” spends time:
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“traveling the world giving talks on free speech and Internet freedom
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seriously ?

Seriously ??

SERIOUSLY ???

Welcome to MizFitTV

What would “Jymboree” know about “free speech” and “Internet freedom,“ anyway ?

How many days did you serve your country in the United States military ?

Oh, you did NOT realize that while you were in San Diego, you could have signed that contract ?

After all, he’s no Vincent Kennedy McMahon”
(“HE” knows where “HIS” GRAPEFRUITS are)
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“B.D.F.L., or the Benevolent Dictator for Life”
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How ’bout:

Big
Disappointing
Fascist
Loser ?
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Argumentum ad Jimbonem” means dutifully following what Wales says, but there are even arguments about that”
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WP:NICETRY, but that’s “SHEEPLE”
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“One Wikipedia editor said, for instance, that Wales was no longer comfortable with the B.D.F.L. description”
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Jiminy Cricket !

Whazzamatta Jiminy?

Did “FASCIST” hit a bit too close to home ?
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“(There is, among some, a debate over what to call him)”

“Some users have also disputed the Latinized version of “Jimbo.”

“(Should it be “Jimboni” or “Jimbini”?)”
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Can you smell what “The Rock” is cookin’ ?

La-La-La-La-Laaaaaaawwww, JIMBRONI !!!!!!!

Get ready, and bend over, ’cause I’m gonna shine this thing up, turn it sideways, and shove it straight up your Candy AstroTurf hatch
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Introduction (statement of principles) [WP:SOP]

“This is a statement of principles from Wikipedia founder Jimbo Wales, as updated by the community since then”
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(Or if you go by The New York Times article, [1] Jimbroni is the co-founder” who tries to re-write history to make it appear that “HE” is the one-and-only Fascist Founder ?)
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“I should point out that these are my principles, such that I am the final judge of them”

This does not mean that I will not listen to you, but it does mean that at some ultimate, fundamental level, this is how Wikipedia will be run”
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No, actually, it DOES mean that he will NOT listen to you, as was the case when he ignored my 2/7/2013 appeal

In his defense, perhaps Kate Garvey has his balls
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Principles

1. “Wikipedia’s success to date is entirely a function of our open community”

“This community will continue to live and breathe and grow only so long as those of us who participate in it continue to Do The Right Thing

Doing The Right Thing takes many forms, but perhaps most central is the preservation of our shared vision for the neutral point of view policy and for a culture of thoughtful, diplomatic honesty
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The problem with this Wacky Tobacky “We are the (Wiki) World” WikiWhOReD Wonderland Jimbroni’s living in, is that “HE” has NOT been Doing The Right Thing since “HE” abdicated “his” “neutral point of view policy” and “culture of thoughtful, diplomatic honesty,” to “The Skeptics”

“The Skeptics,” who serve as gatekeepers of the Burzynski Clinic article, and who cite Dr. David H. Gorski a/k/a “Orac” aka GorskGeek as if he were a “reliable source”

“The Skeptics,” who bring new meaning to the term “Wikipedia Zero”

“The Skeptics,” who are Intellectual Cowards like their false god Gorski, the Closet Communist of Science-Based Medicine a/k/a Science-Basted Medicine aka Science-Based Mudicine (Spinning Bowel Movement), Wiki Wordsmith Wannabes, nut-jobbers, stale from their failure at the National Peanut Festival in Dothan, Alabama
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3. ““You can edit this page right now” is a core guiding check on everything that we do”

“We must respect this principle as sacred”
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Do the lies just dribble off your chin like phlegm?

You canNOT just go in and “edit” the Burzynski Clinic article “page right now”

That statement is pure, unadulterated Alabama B.S.

That’s NOT a “sacred principle,” it’s sacré “bull”
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7. “Anyone with a complaint should be treated with the utmost respect and dignity”
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Unfortunately, you do NOT practice what you preach, do you, HYPOCRITE ?
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“They should be encouraged constantly to present their problems in a constructive way”
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So that you can ignore the problem(s), right, Jimbroni ?
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“Anyone who just complains without foundation, refusing to join the discussion, should simply be rejected and ignored”
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THAT would automatically exclude all of “The Skeptics” now, wouldn’t it ?
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“We must not let the “squeaky wheel” be greased just for being a jerk
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Jimbroni, why have you allowed “The Skeptics” to choose from their “squeaky” wheel-house bag o’ tricks, get all “greased” up and jerk” so many people around in such a big CIRCLE-JERK, for so long?
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8. “Diplomacy consists of combining honesty and politeness

“Both are objectively valuable moral principles”

“Be honest with me, but don’t be mean to me”

“Don’t misrepresent my views for your own political ends, and I’ll treat you the same way”
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“Honesty” and “politeness” are really great buzzwords,” Jimbroni, but they are as foreign to your “Skeptics,” as “moral principles”
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A great example of the questionable “honesty” and “moral principles” of one of your apparatchiks, was demonstrated 2/3/2013, 6:56, when I sent an arbitration appeal e-mail to Wikipedia, advising, in part, that the e-mail listed on Wikipedia; as the one that blocked users should use, did NOT work, because there was NO “@” sign in it

There was a . (period) where the “@” sign belonged
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2/3/2013, 8:11 AM, Anthony (AGK) BASC
wikiagk@gmail.com
advised:

“Everything you have said in that e-mail demonstrates a misunderstanding or misreading of Wikipedia policy”
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Check the “time” and “place” where you are, so that you, too, can advise, that according to Wikipedia, pointing out to them that the e-mail they advise people to use, DOES NOT WORK; because there is no “@” sign in it (instead, there’s a . (period)), translates into meaning:
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“Everything you have said in that e-mail demonstrates a misunderstanding or misreading of Wikipedia policy”
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Core principles

Wikipedia:Simplified ruleset [WP:SR]

Wikipedia does not have its own views, or determine what is “correct”
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I wish I could LIE like that, but I have a conscience
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12/24/2012, Monday – 3:52 pm – 21:52 (UTC) –
“We are told that 2013 will be a big year, but apparently his plan is to release another bullshit movie not to publish useful research”

[User Talk:JzG|Guy] ([User JzG/help|Help!]) [2]

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“Bullshit movie” ?
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Does anyone other than me NOT think it a “coinkydink” that some “Guy” on Wikipedia, going by the name “Guy”, using the same 2 words (“Bullshit movie”) as a “Guy” on Twitter ?
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2. Founding principles:

“Neutrality is mandatory . . . “
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I call B.S.

Neutrality is mandatory,” EXCEPT on the Burzynski Clinic article, controlled by “The Skeptics”
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4. “Ignore all rules (IAR):”

“Rules on Wikipedia are not fixed in stone”
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Especially when Jimbroni allows “The Skeptics”
to “dictator” the “rules”
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“The spirit of the rule trumps the letter of the rule

“The common purpose of building an encyclopedia trumps both”

“This means that any rule can be broken for a very good reason, if it ultimately helps to improve the encyclopedia”
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And “The Skeptics” are NOT required to provide ANY reason for having broken “any rule”
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“It doesn’t mean that anything can be done just by claiming IAR, or that discussion is not necessary to explain one’s decision”
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But do NOT expect Wikipedia to require anything from The Skeptics”
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Founding principles

1. “Neutral point of view (NPOV) as a mandatory editorial principle”
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EXCEPT when it comes to the Burzynski Clinic article
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12/26/2012 – I attempted to get Wikipedia to reference the interview which Burzynski’s attorney, Richard (Rick) A. Jaffe, and Lola Quinlan’s attorney; who posted it on his web-site, had given: [4]

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Please add re WP:NPOV that Burzynski’s attorney, Richard Jaffe has disputed Lola Quinlan’s claims:

“On February 1, 2012, Dr. Burzynski’s attorney, Richard Jaffe, disputed Lola Quinlan’s allegations on Houston’s KPRC News.”

Thank you very much.[[User: Didymus Judas Thomas 15:03, 12/26/2012 (UTC)
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So? [OR] Disputing it in the media probably means he doesn’t have a case. [/OR] In any case, a lawyer disputing the allegations against his client is not even news. — [[User: Arthur Rubin 15:24, 12/26/2012 (UTC)

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Arthur Rubin, I’m not sure what relevance your above post has re WP:NPOV since the article includes statements from attorneys representing both sides

17:51, 12/27/2012 (UTC) Didymus Judas Thomas

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12/24/2012, Monday – 3:54 pm (21:54.UTC) – “What they mean is that nobody else is doing any meaningful work on it, which necessarily means that it’s not considered in the least promising.”

[[User Talk:JzG|Guy]] ([User JzG/help|Help!])

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“Nobody else is doing meaningful work on it” ?

Ignores independent research done in Poland, Russia, Korea, Egypt, Japan, & China which specifically reference SRB’s publications in their publications re antineoplastons & phenylacetylglutamine (PG); which is AS2-5, & includes phase III trials published in China & continued research being published in China 12/17/2012?

FACTS:

1. I pointed out to Wikipedia, a 12/17/2012 scientific publication re antineoplastons, which referenced Burzynski @ 22. (antineoplaston AS21)

2. 7 days after this scientific journal was published, Wikipedia’a “Guy (Help!’s) ”response, Monday, 12/24/2012 @ 3:54 pm, is to advise me:

“What they mean is that nobody else is doing any meaningful work on it, which necessarily means that it’s not considered in the least promising.”

Guy (Help!) 3:54 pm, 12/24/2012, Monday

3. So, Wikipedia’s, Guy (Help!), defines an event having been published 7 days ago (12/17/2012 to 12/24/2012) as:

“…nobody else is doing any meaningful work on it…”

12/17/2012
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3524164
CDA-2 (cell differentiation agent 2), a URINARY preparation
http://po.st/g71N8P
CDA-2 and its main component PHENYLACETYLGLUTAMINE (PG or PAG)
Antineoplaston AS2-5 is PHENYLACETYLGLUTAMINE (PAG or PG)
http://redd.it/1dk974
Antineoplaston AS2-1 is a 4:1 mixture of phenylacetic acid (PA) and PHENYLACETYLGLUTAMINE (PAG or PG)
Antineoplastons AS2-5 and AS2-1 are derived from Antineoplaston A10
BURZYNSKI Reference: 22.
antineoplaston AS21
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0052117
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12/26/2012, Wednesday – 12:43 – “There is unlikely to be any dispassionate debate over ANPs while Burzynski continues with his unethical practices.”

JzG|Guy User:JzG/help|Help!

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Wikipedia: Judge, Jury, Executioner
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“The world, right now, considers Burzynski to be at best unethical and at worst a quack…”?

Since when did Wikipedia conduct a world-wide “opinion poll” re Burzynski ?

And if Wikipedia is correct, how did this happen ?

Burzynski referenced by other Cancer researchers:

2011 – Phase II trial of tipifarnib and radiation in children with newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas
http://neuro-oncology.oxfordjournals.org/content/13/3/298.full
University of California—San Francisco

Children’s Hospital Boston, Massachusetts

St Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee

Seattle Children’s Hospital, Seattle, Washington

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Ohio

Neuro Oncol (2011) 13 (3): 298-306
doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noq202

5.723 Impact Factor

25. ↵ Burzynski SR
Treatments for astrocytic tumors in children: current and emerging strategies
Paediatr Drugs. 2006;8:167-178
http://link.springer.com/article/10.2165%2F00148581-200608030-00003
Pediatric Drugs
May 2006, Volume 8, Issue 3, pp 167-178
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Rhode Island Red attempts to get away with misquoting me:
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“The other argument is that the secondary sources (i.e., respected cancer organizations, FDA, etc.) are not reliable because they are Burzynski’s “competitors”

[[User: Rhode Island Red]] 4:18 pm, Yesterday (UTC−6)
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What a Wipocrite (Wiki + Hypocrite)

Steve Pereira (SilkTork) is such a “WIPOCRITE,” that he claims:
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“the community were united that your contributions were biased”
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He conveniently; like a good little mini-Jimbroni would, ignores ALL of his fellow WIPOCRITES comments, which completely ignored:
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([WP:SOP] Statement of principles from Wikipedia founder Jimbo Wales, as updated by the community since then. 7.”)

Due & undue weight: [3]

“The relative prominence of each viewpoint among Wikipedia editors or the general public is not relevant & should not be considered,”

[WP:NPOV] “History of NPOV:” (Content # 6, Note 3)

(Neutral Point of View)
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1. 12/24/2012, Monday – 3:52 pm – 21:52 (UTC) – “We are told that 2013 will be a big year, but apparently his plan is to release another bullshit movie not to publish useful research”
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2. 12/24/2012, Monday – 3:54 pm (21:54.UTC) – “What they mean is that nobody else is doing any meaningful work on it, which necessarily means that it’s not considered in the least promising.”
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3. 12/26/2012, Wednesday – 12:43 – “There is unlikely to be any dispassionate debate over ANPs while Burzynski continues with his unethical practices.”
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4. 12/30/2012 8:58 “The world, right now, considers Burzynski to be at best unethical and at worst a quack…”?
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Am I NOT the only one convinced that “the community” was also “united” in something more than just their “goose-stepping ?
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Pereira, the imperfect ‘pedia Pimp tries to Wow his readers by waxing WikiWhOReD, by ignoring that ALL the previous BIASED opinion B.S. that his fellow-Facist forged ahead with, and which Wikipediantic history says means ABSOLUTELY NOTHING (say it again) because it is their BIASED OPINION and is ABSOLUTELY WORTHLESS, and it was as so much WikiLitter, well, he’s just facist-free speechless about that, as any Jimbroni AstroTurf Twerk should be
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To show exactly what zealots these WikiPimps are, just absorb this exchange:
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“The Burzynski Clinic Article has:

“…a Mayo Clinic study found no benefit….”

But that was not what the study concluded

See below:
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“CONCLUSION:

Although we could not confirm any tumor regression in patients in this study, the small sample size precludes definitive conclusions about treatment efficacy.”
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In the interest of Neutrality, please remove the reference to Mayo entirely or change to;
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“…a Mayo Clinic study found that “the small sample size precludes definitive conclusions about treatment efficacy.”
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Thank you very much

Didymus Judas Thomas 21:12, 12/10/2012
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“How is “found no benefit” not a a fair and pithy description of the Mayo Clinic study’s summary?”

Alexbrn 21:24, 12/10/2012
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“I feel this should be changed under WP:NPOV because not every reader is going to understand the “Fair & Pithy” reason I was provided

I feel that the average reader reading this will read it as meaning a study was done & completed with the necessary # of people for an effective study, when that was not the conclusion as pointed out in my above post

Thank you very much.”

Didymus Judas Thomas 11:02, 12/18/2012
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NO RESPONSE

That’s right !

“NO RESPONSE” from the “mini-b” (a/k/a “mini-brain”), wannabe Fascists who are so zealous about using their alleged “Fair and Pithy” “found no benefit” WikiWhOReD; which they utilize in an effort to deceive those who are NOT smarter than a fifth-grader

These WikiPimps are so certain of the righteousness of their evangelical cause, that they do NOT even have the “GRAPEFRUITS” to use what the study’s conclusions actually said, and let the chips fall where they may

There are a lot of “chips” falling at Wikipedia

“BULL CHIPS”

JIMBRONI, you’re no Maggie Thatcher

You can’t even wear her pants
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Margaret Thatcher: “The Iron Lady”

Jimbroni: “No iron in the pants”
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Jimbroni’s list of Facist, mini-Hitler, Monty Pythonesque Women’s underwear wearing Wannabes on Wikipediantic:

1. Alexbrn
2. fluffernutter
3. NE Ent
4. Choyoołʼįįhí:Seb az86556 (Seb az86556)
5. Tom Morris
6. Guerillero
7. Dave Dial
8. John
9. Nstrauss
10. Yobol
11. Drmies
12. foxj
13. Ironholds
14. Rhode Island Red
15. Anthony (AGK) BASC wikiagk@gmail.com
16. Steve Pereira (Silk Tork) silktork@gmail.com
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WikiWhOReD (Wiki + Word + Whore): Pimping a word. Attempting to deceive someone by means of misdirection with words
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The South will rise again, just not in Jimbroni’s pants
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Happy Friday the 13th, Wikipediantic
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REFERENCES:
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[1] – 6/27/2013Jimmy Wales Is Not an Internet Billionaire (By AMY CHOZICK):
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http://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/06/30/magazine/jimmy-wales-is-not-an-internet-billionaire.html
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[2] – 12/24/2012, Monday – 3:52 pm – 21:52 (UTC) – [User Talk:JzG|Guy] ([User:JzG/help|Help!])
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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Burzynski_Clinic&diff=next&oldid=529537854
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[3] – 12/26/2012Lola A. Quinlan:
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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Burzynski_Clinic&diff=prev&oldid=529836971
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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Burzynski_Clinic&diff=next&oldid=529836971
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Houston’s KPRC News:
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http://m.click2houston.com/news/Houston-cancer-doctor-draws-new-complaints-from-patients/-/16714936/8581480/-/hmrbjk/-/index.html
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Lola A. Quinlan’s attorney’s web-site:
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http://www.jag-lawfirm.com/burzynski-suit-kprc-02012012.html
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[4] –
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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Didymus_Judas_Thomas&diff=next&oldid=528610760
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These mini-b’s went so far as to allege all sorts of sockpuppetry

Wikipediantic, why don’t you list all the dates and times I was supposedly doing all of these activities; and don’t forget to include all the time I spent blogging, on Twitter, making comments on articles, etc., and once you have all that data compiled, explain how one individual could do all that in a 24-hour day

That’s right Wikipediantic

I’m challenging you to put up or shut up your cornholio

Count de Money: What Are the Costs of Cancer ? (American Cancer Society Cancer Facts & Figures 2002-2013)

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What Are the Costs of Cancer?
——————————————————————
National Institutes of Health (NIH) estimates:
——————————————————————
overall costs of cancer:
——————————————————————
2010 – $263.8 billion (2011)
2010☝$263.8 billion (2010)

2008👇$201.5 billion (2013)
2008☝$228.1 billion (2009)
2007☝$226.8 billion (2012)
2007☝$219.2 billion (2008)

2006👇$206.3 billion (2007)
2005☝$209.9 billion (2006)
2004☝$189.8 billion (2005)
2003☝$189.5 billion (2004)
2002☝$171.6 billion (2003)
2001☝$156.7 billion (2002)

——————————————————————
direct medical costs
(total of all health expenditures)
——————————————————————
2010 – $102.8 billion (2011)
2010☝$102.8 billion (2010)

2008👇$77.4 billion (2013)
2008👇$93.2 billion (2009)
2007☝$103.8 billion (2012)
2007☝$89.0 billion (2008)
2006☝$78.2 billion (2007)
2005☝$74.0 billion (2006)
2004☝$69.4 billion (2005)
2003☝$64.2 billion (2004)
2002☝$60.9 billion (2003)
2001☝$56.4 billion (2002)

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2008-2011 – indirect morbidity costs
(cost of lost productivity due to illness)
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2010 – $20.9 billion (2011)
2010☝$20.9 billion (2010)
2008☝$18.8 billion (2009)
2007☝$18.2 billion (2008)
2006☝$17.9 billion (2007)
2005☝$17.5 billion (2006)
2004☝$16.9 billion (2005)
2003☝$16.3 billion (2004)

2002👇$15.5 billion (2003)
2001☝$15.6 billion (2002)
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indirect mortality costs
(cost of lost productivity due to premature death)
——————————————————————
2010 – $140.1 billion (2011)
2010☝$140.1 billion (2010)
2008☝$124.0 billion (2013)

2008👇$116.1 billion (2009)
2007☝$123.0 billion (2012)
2007☝$112.0 billion (2008)

2006👇$110.2 billion (2007)
2005☝$118.4 billion (2006)
2004👇$103.5 billion (2005)
2003☝$109 billion (2004)
2002☝$95.2 billion (2003)
2001☝$84.7 billion (2002)

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According to US Census Bureau:
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Americans uninsured
2012-2013 had no health insurance coverage
——————————————————————
2010👇approximately 50 million (2013)
2009 – almost 51 million (2012)
2009☝almost 51 million (2011)
2008☝46 million (2010)
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2008 – approximately 28% aged 18 to 34 years (2010)
——————————————————————
2010👇almost one-third of Hispanics (31%) (2013)
2009 – almost one-third of Hispanics (32%) (2012)
2009☝almost one­-third of Hispanics (32%) (2011)
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2011-2012 (17 years of age and younger)
2010-2012had no health insurance coverage
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2010 – one in 10 children (2013)
2009 – one in 10 children (2012)
2009 – one in 10 children (2011)
2008 – 10% of children (2010)
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2012-2013 PLEASE NOTE:

These numbers are not comparable to those published in previous years as of 2011, NIH calculating estimates using different data source:

2012 – NIH is using a different data source:

2012-2013 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

2012-2013 MEPS estimates based on more current, nationally representative data used extensively in scientific publications

2012-2013 direct and indirect costs will no longer be projected to current year, estimates of indirect morbidity costs discontinued

2012-2013 For more information, please visit nhlbi.nih.gov/about/factpdf.htm.
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Lack of health insurance and other barriers prevents many Americans from receiving optimal health care
——————————————————————
2008 – early release estimates from National Health Interview Survey (2009)
2006 – early release estimates from the National Health Interview Survey (2008)
2004National Health Interview Survey data (2007)
2003National Health Interview Survey data (2006)
——————————————————————
2008 – about 24% aged 18 to 64 years (2009)
2006☝about 24% aged 18-64 (2008)
2004 – about 17% younger than age 65 had no health insurance coverage (2007)
2003☝about 17% younger than age 65 have no health insurance coverage (2006)
——————————————————————
2004 – 27% 65 and older had Medicare coverage only (2007)
2003☝24% 65 and older have Medicare coverage only (2006)
——————————————————————
2008 – 13% of children had no health insurance coverage for at least part of past year (2009)
2006☝13% of children had no health insurance coverage for at least part of past year (2008)
——————————————————————
2008 – More than 36% of adults who lack high school diploma were uninsured in past year (2009)
2006☝Almost 34% of adults who lack high school diploma were uninsured in past year (2008)
——————————————————————
2008 – 23% of high school graduates (2009)
2006☝23% of high school graduates (2008)
——————————————————————
2008👇14% of those with more than high school education (2009)
2006 – 15% of those with more than high school education (2008)
——————————————————————
2008 – Lack of health insurance is not only a concern of unemployed; almost one-quarter of employed individuals (aged 18 to 64 years) were uninsured sometime during past year (2009)
——————————————————————
2004 – Persons in lowest income group 10 times as likely as persons in highest income group not to receive needed medical care because of cost (2007)
——————————————————————
2004 – Almost 16 million citizens (6%) were unable to obtain needed medical care due to cost (2007)
——————————————————————
2003 – In survey, nearly 20% aged 18-44 years reported not having usual place to go for medical care (2006)
——————————————————————
2010-2013 – Uninsured patients and ethnic minorities substantially more likely to be diagnosed with cancer at later stage, when treatment can be more extensive and more costly
——————————————————————
2012-2013 – For more information on relationship between health insurance and cancer, see Cancer Facts & Figures 2008, Special Section, available online at cancer.org/statistics.
2010 – cancer.org.
2009 – (5008.08), Special Section, available online at cancer.org.
2008 – see special section page 22

20131122-005657.jpg

20131122-005720.jpg

20131122-005738.jpg

20131122-005752.jpg
======================================
REFERENCES:
======================================
2013:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-036845.pdf

======================================
2012:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-031941.pdf

======================================
2011:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-029771.pdf

======================================
2010:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-024113.pdf

======================================
2009:
——————————————————————

Click to access 500809webpdf.pdf

======================================
2008:
——————————————————————

Click to access worldcancer.pdf

=====================================
2007:
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2007pwsecuredpdf.pdf

======================================
2006:
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2006pwsecuredpdf.pdf

======================================
2005:
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2005f4pwsecuredpdf.pdf

======================================
2004:
——————————————————————

Click to access CancerRates2004.pdf

======================================
2003:
——————————————————————

Click to access 2003_ACS_Cancer_Facts.pdf

======================================
2002:
——————————————————————

Click to access CancerFacts&Figures2002.pdf

======================================

Childhood Cancers (American Cancer Society: Cancer Facts & Figures 2006-2013)

======================================
2006-2013 – Childhood Cancer (Ages 0-14 years)
——————————————————————
Estimated new cases expected to occur
——————————————————————
2013 – 11,630
2012 – 12,060
2011 – 11,210
2010 – 10,700
2009 – 10,730
2008 – 10,730
2007 – 10,400
2006 – 9,500
——————————————————————
Estimated cancer deaths expected to occur
——————————————————————
about 1/3rd from leukemia
——————————————————————
2013 – 1,310
2012 – 1,340
2011 – 1,320
2010 – 1,340
2009 – 1,380
2008 – 1,490
2007 – 1,545
2006 – 1,560
——————————————————————
Major categories of pediatric cancer and more specific symptoms include:
——————————————————————
According to International Classification of Childhood Cancer, childhood cancers include: (2008-2010)
——————————————————————
• Leukemia (31% of all childhood cancers, including benign brain tumors) 2013
• Leukemia (34% of all childhood cancers) 2011-2012
• Leukemia (31.0% of all childhood cancers) 2010
• Leukemia (32.7% of all childhood cancers) 2009
• Leukemia (32.6% of all childhood cancers) 2008
• Leukemia (30% of all childhood cancers) 2007
• Leukemia (30%) 2006
may be recognized by:
bone and joint pain
weakness
pale skin
bleeding or bruising
fever or infection

——————————————————————
• Brain and other central nervous system tumors (25%) 2013
• Brain and other nervous system (27%) 2012
• Brain and other nervous system (27%) in early stages (2011)
(21.3%), which in early stages (2010)
• Brain and other nervous system (20.7%) in early stages (2009)
• Brain and other nervous system (21.1%) in early stages (2008)
• Brain and other nervous system (22.3%) in early stages (2007)
• Brain and other nervous system (22.3%) in early stages (2006)
may cause:
headaches
nausea
vomiting
blurred or double vision
dizziness
difficulty walking or handling objects

——————————————————————
• Neuroblastoma (6%) 2013
• Neuroblastoma (7%) 2012
• Neuroblastoma (7%) 2011
cancer of sympathetic nervous system
• Neuroblastoma (7.1%) (2010)
• Neuroblastoma (6.9%) (2009)
• Neuroblastoma (6.7%) (2008)
cancer of the sympathetic nervous system, can appear anywhere
• Neuroblastoma (7.3%) (2007)
• Neuroblastoma (7.3%) (2006)
cancer of nervous system
most common in children younger than 5 years of age

usually appears as swelling in abdomen
——————————————————————
• Wilms tumor (5%) 2013
• Wilms tumor (5%) 2012
• Wilms tumor (5%) 2011
• Wilms tumor (5.2%) 2010
• Wilms tumor (4.8%) 2009
• Wilms tumor (4.9%) 2008
• Wilms tumor (5.6%) 2006-2007
kidney cancer
may be recognized by swelling or lump in abdomen
——————————————————————
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4%) and Hodgkin lymphoma (4%) 2013
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4%) and Hodgkin lymphoma (4%) 2011-2012
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4.3%) and Hodgkin lymphoma (3.8%) 2010
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4.3%) and Hodgkin lym- phoma (3.6%) 2009
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4.2%) and Hodgkin lymphoma (3.7%) 2008
• Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4.5%) and Hodgkin lymphoma (3.5%) 2007
• Hodgkin lymphoma (3.5%) and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (4.5%) 2006
affect lymph nodes
may involve:
bone marrow and other organs (2013)
may spread to bone marrow and other organs (2006-2012)
may cause swelling of lymph nodes in:
neck
armpit
groin
as well as weakness and fever

——————————————————————
• Rhabdomyosarcoma (3%) 2011-2013
• Rhabdomyosarcoma (3.3%) 2010
• Rhabdomyosarcoma (3.5%) 2008-2009
• Rhabdomyosarcoma (3.1%) 2006-2007
soft tissue sarcoma
can occur in:
head and neck
genitourinary area
trunk
extremities
may cause pain and/or mass or swelling

——————————————————————
• Osteosarcoma (3%) 2011-2013
• Osteosarcoma (2.5%) 2010
• Osteosarcoma (2.7%) 2008-2009
• Osteosarcoma (2.4%) 2006-2007
bone cancer
most often occurs in adolescents commonly appears as sporadic pain in affected bone that may worsen at night or with activity, with eventual progression to local swelling
often has no initial pain or symptoms until local swelling begins (2006-2009)
——————————————————————
• Retinoblastoma (2%) 2013
• Retinoblastoma (3%) 2011-2012
• Retinoblastoma (2.6%) 2010
• Retinoblastoma (2.7%) 2009
• Retinoblastoma (2.8%) 2006-2008
eye cancer
usually occurs in children younger than 5 years of age
usually occurs in children younger than 4 years (2006-2010)
typically recognized because of discoloration behind pupil (2013)
typically recognized because of discoloration of eye pupil (2010-2012)
——————————————————————
• Ewing sarcoma (1%) 2011-2013
• Ewing sarcoma (1.6%) 2010
• Ewing sarcoma (1.4%) 2006-2009
type of cancer
usually arises in bone

most common in adolescents
typically appears as pain at tumor site
most often occurs in adolescents (2009-2011)
——————————————————————
Signs of childhood cancer include:
Symptoms of childhood cancer include: (2010-2011)
unusual mass or swelling
unexplained paleness or loss of energy
sudden increase in tendency to bruise or bleed
sudden tendency to bruise

(2006-2011)
persistent, localized pain
prolonged, unexplained fever or illness
frequent headaches, often with vomiting
sudden eye or vision changes
excessive, rapid weight loss

——————————————————————
2005-2009 – 0.6% per year
2004 to 2008 – 5% per year consistent trend since 1975
Overall, childhood cancer incidence rates have been increasing slightly 0.6% per year since 1975
Overall, childhood cancer incidence rates increased slightly
most recent 5 years of available data
——————————————————————
cancer is 2nd leading cause of death in children, exceeded only by accidents
——————————————————————
Childhood cancers are rare, representing less than 1% of all new cancer diagnoses
——————————————————————
2009 – 2.1 (per 100,000)
2008 – 2.2 (per 100,000)
1969 – 6.5 (per 100,000)
Mortality rates from childhood cancer have declined
2013 – 68% – over past 4 decades
2012 – 66% – over past 4 decades
2011 – 55% since 1975
2010 – 53% since 1975
2009 – 50% since 1975
2008 – since 1975 – almost 50%
2007 – 48% since 1975
2006 – since 1975 – about 48% –
——————————————————————
5-year survival among children (0-14 years of age) For most recent time period
——————————————————————
Rates vary considerably, depending on cancer type
——————————————————————
(1995- 2001) – 79% – for all sites combined
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 98% – retinoblastoma
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 96% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(2001-2007) – 95% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1999­-2006) – 95% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1999-2005) – 94% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2004) – 96% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2003) – 95% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2002) – 95% – Hodgkin lymphoma
(1995- 2001) – 95% – Hodgkin lymphoma
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 89% – Wilms tumor
(2001-2007) – 88% – Wilms tumor
(1999­-2006) – 89% – Wilms tumor
(1999-2005) – 88% – Wilms tumor
(1996-2004) – 92% – Wilms tumor
(1996-2003) – 92% – Wilms tumor
(1996-2002) – 92% – Wilms tumor
(1995- 2001) – 92% – Wilms tumor
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 86% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(2001-2007) – 86% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(1999­-2006) – 85% – non­Hodgkin lymphoma
(1999-2005) – 85% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2004) – 86% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2003) – 87% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
(1996-2002) – 86% – non-Hodgkin lymphoma
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 84% – leukemia
(2001-2007) – 83% – leukemia
(1999­-2006) – 82% – leukemia
(1999-2005) – 82% – leukemia
(1996-2004) – 82% – leukemia
(1996-2003) – 81% – leukemia
(1996-2002) – 81% – leukemia
(1995- 2001) – 80% – leukemia
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 75% – neuroblastoma
(2001-2007) – 74% – neuroblastoma
(1999­-2006) – 73% – neuroblastoma
(1999-2005) – 74% – neuroblastoma
(1996-2004) – 70% – neuroblastoma
(1996-2003) – 69% – neuroblastoma
(1996-2002) – 69% – neuroblastoma
(1995- 2001) – 66% – neuroblastoma
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 75% – Ewing tumors
——————————————————————
(1996-2004) – 71% – bone and joint
(1996-2003) – 72% – bone and joint
(1996-2002) – 72% – bone and joint
(1995- 2001) – 71% – bone and joint
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 71% – brain and other central nervous system tumors
(2001-2007) – 71% – brain and other nervous system tumors
(1999­-2006) – 71% – brain and other nervous system
(1999-2005) – 71% – brain and other nervous system
(1996-2004) – 74% – brain and other nervous system
(1996-2003) – 74% – brain and other nervous system
(1996-2002) – 74% – brain and other nervous system
(1995- 2001) – 73% – brain and other nervous system
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 71% – osteosarcoma
(2001-2007) – 70% – osteosarcoma
(1999­-2006) – 70% – osteosarcoma
(1999-2005) – 69% – osteosarcoma
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 68% – rhabdomyosarcoma
(2001-2007) – 68% – rhabdomyosarcoma
(1999­-2006) – 66% – rhabdomyosarcoma
(1999-2005) – 66% – rhabdomyosarcoma
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race, US, 1975-2008 (2013)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race, US, 1975-2007 (2012)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1975-2006 (2011)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1975-2005 (2010)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1975-2004 (2009)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-Year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1975-2003 (2008)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-Year Relative Survival* Rates (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1975-2002 (2007)
——————————————————————
Trends in 5-Year Relative Survival Rates* (%) by Race and Year of Diagnosis, US, 1974-2001 (2006)
——————————————————————
Brain & other nervous system
Brain (2006-2012)
——————————————————————
All races
——————————————————————
2002-2008 – 35% (2013)
2001-2007 – 35% (2013)
1999-2006 – 36% (2012)
1999-2005 – 36% (2010)
1996-2004 – 35% (2009)
1996-2003 – 35% (2008)
1996-2002 – 34% (2007)
1995-2001 – 33% (2006)
1987-1989 – 29% (2013)
1984-1986 – 29% (2012)
1984-1986 – 29% (2010)
1984-1986 – 29% (2009)
1984-1986 – 29% (2008)
1984-1986 – 29% (2007)
1983-1985 – 27% (2006)
1975-1977 – 24% (2012)
1975-1977 – 24% (2010)
1975-1977 – 24% (2009)
1975-1977 – 24% (2008)
1975-1977 -24% (2007)
1975-1977 – 22% (2013)
1974-1976 – 22% (2006)
——————————————————————
White
——————————————————————
2002-2008 – 34% (2013)
2001-2007 – 34% (2013)
1999-2006 – 35% (2012)
1999-2005 – 35% (2010)
1996-2004 – 34% (2009)
1996-2003 – 34% (2008)
1996-2002 – 34% (2007)
1995-2001 – 33% (2006)
1987-1989 – 28% (2013)
1984-1986 – 28% (2012)
1984-1986 – 28% (2010)
1984-1986 – 28% (2009)
1984-1986 – 28% (2008)
1984-1986 – 28% (2007)
1983-1985 – 26% (2006)
1975-1977 – 23% (2012)
1975-1977 – 23% (2010)
1975-1977 – 23% (2009)
1975-1977 – 23% (2008)
1975-1977 – 23% (2007)
1975-1977 – 22% (2013)
1974-1976 – 22% (2006)
——————————————————————
African American
——————————————————————
2002-2008 – 41% (2013)
2001-2007 – 40% (2013)
1999-2006 – 41% (2012)
1999-2005 – 41% (2010)
1996-2004 – 39% (2009)
1996-2003 – 37% (2008)
1996-2002 – 37% (2007)
1995-2001 – 38% (2006)
1987-1989 – 32%
1987-1989 – 31%
1984-1986 – 33% (2009)
1984-1986 – 33% (2008)
1984-1986 – 32% (2012)
1984-1986 – 32% (2010)
1984-1986 – 32% (2007)
1983-1985 – 32% (2006)
1975-1977 – 27% (2012)
1975-1977 – 27% (2010)
1975-1977 – 27% (2009)
1975-1977 – 27% (2008)
1975-1977 – 26% (2007)
1974-1976 – 26% (2006)
1975-1977 – 25% (2013)
——————————————————————
For all childhood cancers combined, 5-year relative survival rate has improved markedly over past 30 years due to new and improved treatments
——————————————————————
5-year relative survival rate increased for diagnoses
——————————————————————
Relative 5-Year Survival Rate (%)
——————————————————————
(2002-2008) – 83% in most recent time period
today – 83% (2012)
today – 80% (2011)
today – 80% (2010)
today – 80% (2009)
today – 80% (2008)
today – nearly 80% (2007)
in late 1990s – nearly 80% (2006)
mid-1970s – 58%
1970s – less than 50% before
due to new and improved treatments (2011)
1970s – less than 50% before (2010)
before 1970s – less than 50% (2006-2009)
rates vary considerably depending on
cancer type
patient age
other characteristics

——————————————————————
Survival for all invasive childhood cancers combined has improved markedly over the past 30 years due to new and improved treatments
——————————————————————
rates vary considerably depending on:
cancer type
patient age
other characteristics

patient characteristics (2011)
moreover, within major categories, cancer subtypes may vary in response to treatment and/or survival characteristics (2010)
——————————————————————
substantial progress in reducing childhood cancer mortality largely attributable to improvements in treatment and high rates of participation in clinical trials

substantial progress in childhood cancer largely attributable to improvements in treatment and high propor­tion of pediatric patients participating in clinical trials (2012)

substantial progress in childhood cancer survival rates largely attributable to improvements in treatment and high proportion of patients participating in clinical trials (2011)

substantial progress in pediatric cancer survival rates is attributable largely to improved treatments and high proportion of patients participating in clinical trials (2008-2009)
——————————————————————
Childhood cancers can be treated by combination of therapies
surgery
radiation
chemotherapy
chosen based on type and stage of cancer
(2006-2012)
——————————————————————
Treatment is coordinated by team of experts, including: (2006-2012)
pediatric oncologists
pediatric nurses
social workers
psychologists
and others who assist chil­ dren and their families

——————————————————————
If child is eligible, placement in a clinical trial, which compares new treatment to best current treatment, should also be considered (2011-2012)

If child is eligible, placement in clinical trial, which compares best current treatment to new treatment, should also be considered (2010)

If patient is eligible, placement in clinical trial should also be considered (2008-2009)
——————————————————————
Because these cancers are uncommon, outcomes are more successful when treatment is managed by children’s cancer center (2008-2012)
——————————————————————
Early symptoms usually nonspecific
——————————————————————
Parents should ensure children have regular medical check-ups and be alert to any unusual, persistent symptoms

Parents should ensure children have regular medical checkups and be alert to any unusual symptoms that persist (2006-2012)
——————————————————————
Pediatric cancer patients may experience treatment-related side effects long after active treatment (2013)

Pediatric cancer patients may experience treatment-related side effects not only during treatment, but many years after diagnosis as well (2012)

Pediatric cancer patients may experience treatment ­related side effects not only at time of treatment, but several years after diagnosis as well (2011)

Survivors of childhood cancer may experience treatment-related side effects (2006-2010)
——————————————————————
Late treatment effects include:
impairment in function of specific organs
organ malfunction (2006-2010)
secondary cancers
cognitive deficits (2013)
cognitive impairments (2006-2012)
——————————————————————
The Children’s Oncology Group (COG) has developed long-term follow-up guidelines for screening and management of late effects in survivors of childhood cancer
——————————————————————
For more information on childhood cancer management
http://www.survivorshipguidelines.org
——————————————————————
The Childhood Cancer Survivor Study, has followed more than 14,000 long-term childhood cancer survivors, provided important and valuable information about late effects of cancer treatment
ccss.stjude.org
——————————————————————
(Proportions are provided for all races combined and may vary according to race/ethnicity.) 2010-2012
======================================
REFERENCES:
======================================
2013:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-036845.pdf

======================================
2012:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-031941.pdf

======================================
2011:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-029771.pdf

======================================
2010:
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-024113.pdf

======================================
2009:
——————————————————————

Click to access 500809webpdf.pdf

======================================
2008:
——————————————————————

Click to access worldcancer.pdf

=====================================
2007:
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2007pwsecuredpdf.pdf

======================================
2006:
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2006pwsecuredpdf.pdf

======================================

Critiquing: Doctor accused of selling false hope to families (USA TODAY NEWS, NATION, Liz Szabo, USA TODAY)

20131116-002847.jpg
I gave Liz Szabo and USA TODAY the chance to act like a Spike Lee joint and “Do the Right Thing”, the same day their article came out [1]

I gave them the opportunity to prove that their article was a legitimate piece of journalism with some semblance of integrity, and NOT just akin to one of “The Skeptics™ phoned-in “rubber-stamped” yellow journalism hit pieces

Instead, it seems that Liz Szabo and / or USA TODAY decided to act as if they had rolled a Spike Lee joint

I sent an e-mail with 2 editorial corrections, and only one (correcting Lisa Merritt’s comment
link from taking the reader to the 1999 Mayo Clinic report instead of to her comments), was corrected [2]

The 2nd correction which they #FAILED to do, earns them well deserved INSOLENCE
——————————————————————
The article claims:
——————————————————————
Burzynski, 70, calls his drugs “antineoplastons” and says he has given them to more than 8,000 patients since 1977.”
——————————————————————

20131116-004037.jpg
——————————————————————
However, if you select the “8,000 patients” link, the referenced page does NOT indicate that at all [2]
——————————————————————

20131116-064344.jpg
——————————————————————
It advises:
——————————————————————
“That same year, Dr. Burzynski founded his clinic in Houston where he’s since treated over 8,000 patients.” [3]
——————————————————————

20131116-064326.jpg
——————————————————————
Nowhere does it indicate that he “treated 8,000 patients” with antineoplastons
——————————————————————

20131116-064409.jpg
——————————————————————
The question that Liz Szabo and USA TODAY should answer, is:

1. Who is your “fact-checker”, and
2. are they smarter than a 5th grader ?
——————————————————————
In fact, Burzynski’s 2002 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing advises:

” … in 1997, his medical practice was expanded to include traditional cancer treatment options such as chemotherapy, gene targeted therapy, immunotherapy and hormonal therapy in response to FDA requirements that cancer patients utilize more traditional cancer treatment options in order to be eligible to participate in the Company’s Antineoplaston clinical trials” [4]
——————————————————————
The article continues:
——————————————————————
“Individual success stories can be misleading, said Arthur Caplan, a professor and head of the division of bioethics at NYU Langone Medical Center”
——————————————————————
The question Arthur Caplan should be asking is:

Why has the United States Food and Drug Administration required Burzynski’s clinical trial patients to fail conventional therapies; such as surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, BEFORE they are allowed to be treated with antineoplaston therapy ?

If the F.D.A. did NOT impose these restrictions upon Burzynski’s clinical trials, then the question Arthur Caplan raises would be moot
——————————————————————
The article quotes Dr. Jan Buckner as saying:
——————————————————————
“When I hear a story that is way out of the norm, the first question I ask is,

‘OK, is the diagnosis even correct?‘ ”

Buckner said”

“If the diagnosis wasn’t right to start with, it doesn’t matter what the treatment was.”

“Brain tumors are notoriously difficult to diagnose, Buckner says”

“When dealing with rare brain cancer, doctors may disagree about how to interpret imaging results up to 40% of the time”
——————————————————————
I wonder if Dr. Jan Buckner would agree with David Gorski; who is a BREAST cancer oncology specialist, and NOT a BRAIN cancer oncology specialist, who has the presumptiveness to speculate that 3 different medical opinions could have misdiagnosed Tori Moreno in August 1998; who was diagnosed with a very large tumor, about 3 inches in the largest diameter and located in the brain stem, which was too risky for surgery, and about which her parents were told by ALL 3, that Tori’s brain cancer was fatal and, she would die in a few days or at the most, 2-6 weeks, and that there was nothing that could be done, and was finally put on Burzynski’s antineoplaston therapy in October, when she was about 3 ½ months old, and in such condition that they were afraid that she might die at any time, David H. Gorski, M.D., Ph.D., FACS; who claims, “I do know cancer science” , has the audacity, because of his “book learnin'” has the temerity to postulate his “science-based medicine theory” that Miller’s Children at Long Beach Memorial misdiagnosed Tori Moreno’s inoperable stage 4 BSG

David Gorski has the gall to profer that City of Hope misdiagnosed Tori Moreno’s inoperable stage 4 brain stem glioma

David Gorski has the chutzpah to pontificate that Dr. Fred Epstein in New York misdiagnosed Tori Moreno’s inoperable stage IV brainstem glioma [5]
——————————————————————
The article then quotes Peter Adamson, chair of the Children’s Oncology Group:
——————————————————————
“But these therapies may have delayed benefits, taking weeks or months to shrink a tumor

“So patients treated by Burzynski may credit him for their progress, just because he was the last doctor to treat them, says Peter Adamson, chair of the Children’s Oncology Group, an NCI-supported research network that conducts clinical trials in pediatric cancer

Conventional cancer treatment can also cause tumors to swell temporarily, due to inflammation

“A patient who isn’t familiar with this phenomenon may assume her tumor is growing

“When that swelling subsides, patients may assume it’s because of Burzynski, Adamson says”
——————————————————————
This is laughable

In support of this “phenomenon” , the article provides a link to a Canadian web-site [6]

The site posits:
——————————————————————
“RT/TMZ is now widely practiced and the standard of care for appropriately selected patients, we are learning more about the consequences of RT/TMZ”

“One phenomena, termed Pseudo-Progression (psPD)…”
——————————————————————
The problem is that this only applies to “Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM)”, and the article provides NO proof whatsoever, that any of Burzynski’s “Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM)” patients have taken “RT/TMZ”
——————————————————————
Additionally, the site cites the reference as:

Sanghera, Perry, Sahgal, et al., “Sunnybrook Health Sciences Odette Cancer Centre” (in press, Canadian Journal of Neuroscience)

(“In press” refers to journal articles which have been accepted for publication, but have not yet been published)

However, the journal article in question was published 1/2010, so it has NOT been “in press” for over 3 years and 7 months [7]

Get your act together, aye, Canada !
——————————————————————
The article rants and raves on and on about FDA inspection reports from as far back as 1998, but at least they did quote Richard A. Jaffe:

“In Burzynski’s defense, Jaffe notes that inspection reports represent preliminary findings

“The FDA has not yet issued final conclusions”
——————————————————————
The article posts this ridiculous claim:
——————————————————————
“Yet the National Cancer Institute says there is no evidence that Burzynski has cured a single patient, or even helped one live longer
——————————————————————
That’s NOT what this seems to suggest [8]
——————————————————————
Then the article quotes pediatric oncologist Peter Adamson, a professor of pediatrics and pharmacology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, in what will no doubt soon be known as a “classic”:
——————————————————————
“He’s a snake oil salesman,” says pediatric oncologist Peter Adamson, a professor of pediatrics and pharmacology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia”
——————————————————————
All I’d like to know is, which rock did this clown crawl out from under ?

Dr. Adamson, please advise which “snake oil” has been granted Orphan Drug Designation (“ODD”) from the United States Food and Drug Administration [9], and which “snake oil” has been approved for, and used in, phase III clinical trials ? [10]
——————————————————————
Q: Is it, it the phase 2 trial is finished ?

A: “Mhmm”

Q: but they’re still accepting people ?

A: “Yeah”

Q: on more like a special ?

A: Special basis, and, um, sometimes compassionate grounds

A: “(compassion exception)”

A: “Uh, exceptions

Q: That’s normal ?

A: “Yes”
“So”

A: “(Yes I guess it is a funding issue ?)”

Q: Right

A: “(Like FDA, during the 2nd phase of clinical trials they found the data to be, real, real one, and they gave him the ok to go for 3rd phase of clinical trials, but just to go through this process you would probably need $100,000)”
——————————————————————

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20131021-200529.jpg

20131021-200553.jpg
——————————————————————
Oh, wait !!

Dr. Adamson, when you say “snake oil”, I take it you are referring to the low-dose chemotherapy that Burzynski uses ?

Dr. Adamson, do you know what a “hack” is ?
——————————————————————
In regards to the Merritt’s, the article has:
——————————————————————
“The couple say that Burzynski misled them about the type of treatment that would be offered, as well as the cost”

My questions about the Merritt’s are:

1. Where is their complaint to the Texas Medical Board ?

2. Where is their lawsuit ? Couldn’t they find an attorney to take their case pro bono ?
——————————————————————
The article continues:
——————————————————————
“Yet even Jaffe has acknowledged that the trialnow in its 17th year — was more about politics than science”

“In his 2008 memoirs, Galileo’s Lawyer, Jaffe called it “a joke.”

“”It was all an artifice, a vehicle we and the FDA created to legally give the patients Burzynski’s treatment,” Jaffe said
——————————————————————
What Liz Szabo and her friends at USA TODAY fail to let the readers know, is that this only applied to one trial:
——————————————————————
Burzynski’s lawyer is obviously referring to the CAN-1 clinical trial mentioned in Burzynski’s 11/25/1997 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing [11]
——————————————————————
One trial that is retrospective is CAN-1 Clinical Trial
——————————————————————
CAN-1 PHASE II STUDY OF ANTINEOPLASTONS A10 AND AS2-1 IN

PATIENTS WITH REFRACTORY MALIGNANCIES

133 patients
——————————————————————
Clinical trial of patients treated by Dr. Burzynski through 2/23/1996
——————————————————————
FDA has indicated it will not accept data generated by this trial since it was not a wholly prospective one
——————————————————————
The article continues in the same vein:
——————————————————————
“In an interview, Burzynski said developing new drugs is complex and takes time

“Yet the FDA has approved 108 cancer drugs since Burzynski began his trial”
——————————————————————
Ms. Szabo and “pals” conveniently “forgets” to educate their audience that Burzynski was using Fleming’s One-sample multiple testing procedure for phase II clinical trials [13], which requires that if the 1st 20 patients meet certain criteria, 20 additional patients are added [14]
——————————————————————
“Well, we cannot publish until the time is right” (laughs)

Yeah

“If you would like to publish the results of, of a
10 year survival, for instance”

Mmm

“Which we have
Nobody has over 10 year survival in
malignant brain tumor, but we do, and if you like to do it right, it takes time to prepare it, and that’s what we do now
What we publish so far
We publish numerous, uh, publications which were, interim reports when we are still continuing clinical trials
Now we are preparing, a number of publications for final reports
[15]
——————————————————————
Then Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition makes an outlandish statement, which is quoted in the article:
——————————————————————
“Fran Visco, president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition, describes the FDA’s tolerance of Burzynski as “outrageous.”

“They have put people at risk for a long time,” says Visco, an attorney and breast cancer survivor

“That’s completely unacceptable”

“How can anyone look at these facts and believe that there is a real clinical trial going on … rather than just using the FDA and the clinical trial system to make money?”
——————————————————————
I have a suggestion for Ms. Visco

Take your hypocrisy and ask the American Cancer Society if they are still engaged in this kind of activity:

1. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: More Interested In Accumulating Wealth Than Saving Lives [15]

2. National Cancer Institute and American Cancer Society: Criminal Indifference to Cancer Prevention and Conflicts of Interest [16]
——————————————————————
Then, ask the American Cancer Society, why is it that 10 years ago, estimated breast cancer deaths were expected to be 39,800 (15%), and this year it was 39,620 (14%), which is ONLY 180 LESS than 10 years ago ?
——————————————————————
Estimated Breast Cancer Deaths (Women)-USA
——————————————————————
2013☝39,620 (14%)
2012👇39,510 (14%)
2011👇39,520 (15%)
2010👇39,840 (15%)
2009👇40,170 (15%)
2008☝40,480 (15%)
2007👇40,460 (15%)
2006☝40,970 (15%)
2005👇40,410 (15%)
2004☝40,110 (15%)
2003☝39,800 (15%)
2002
39,600 (15%)
—————————————————————–
American Cancer Society Cancer Facts & Figures (2002-2013)
—————————————————————–
And then ask the American Cancer Society, why is it that 10 years ago, the estimated NEW breast cancer cases were expected to be 211,300 (32%), and this year it was 232,340 (29%), which is 21,340 MORE than it was 10 years ago ?
——————————————————————
Estimated New Breast Cancer (Women) – USA
——————————————————————
2013☝232,340 (29%)
2012👇226,870 (29%)
2011☝238,480 (30%)
2010☝207,090 (28%)
2009☝192,370 (27%)
2008☝182,460 (26%)

2007👇178,480 (26%)
2006☝212,920 (31%)
2005👇211,240 (32%)
2004☝215,900 (32%)
2003☝211,300 (32%)
2002
_-_203,500 (31%)
—————————————————————–
American Cancer Society Cancer Facts & Figures (2002-2013)
——————————————————————
And after that, ask Susan G. Komen how much is spent on legal action to protect her brand, compared to how much is spent on breast cancer research and prevention ?
——————————————————————
Visco, the breast cancer advocate

“I do NOT know why it took YOU so long.”
——————————————————————
The article continues with:
——————————————————————
“Yet hypernatremia is one of antineoplastons’ most common side effects, known to doctors for two decades”
——————————————————————
Yet, “The Skeptics™” refuse to discuss:
——————————————————————
2/13/2013 – The frequency, cost, and clinical outcomes of hypernatremia in patients hospitalized to a comprehensive cancer center

Over 3 month period in 2006 re 3,446 patients, most of the hypernatremia (90 %) was acquired during hospital stay [19]

Division of Internal Medicine, UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

Department of General Internal Medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Division of Endocrinology, Mayo Clinic
——————————————————————
9/1999 – The changing pattern of hypernatremia in hospitalized children [20]

Department of Pediatrics, Texas Children’s Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA
——————————————————————
So, after all that, my question for USA TODAY is, does Liz Szabo, Michael Stravato, Jerry Mosemak or Robert Hanashiro have a
journalism degree ?

Because if any of them do, the institution they obtained it from most be so proud of this piece of “fish wrap” you produced

Thank you, USA TODAY, for censoring my 18 comments

I guess you must be (“intellectual”) cowards

At least Forbes had the GRAPEFRUITS to post some of my comments
——————————————————————
You’ve just been served, INSOLENTLY
——————————————————————
USA TODAY, GONE TOMORROW
——————————————————————

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======================================
REFERENCES:
======================================
[1] – 11/15/2013 – USA TODAY NEWS, NATION
Doctor accused of selling false hope to families
Liz Szabo, USA TODAY
——————————————————————
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/11/15/stanislaw-burzynski-cancer-controversy/2994561/
======================================
[2] – Mayo Clinic – 1999 – report: Lisa Merritt
——————————————————————
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/816819-mayo-clinic-1999-report.html
======================================
[3] – 2012 – former Burzynski web-site screenshots, Pg 3 of 62;
——————————————————————

Click to access burzynski_fdauntitled_promo_2012.pdf

======================================
[4] – 4/26/2013 – Burzynski: FDA requirements that cancer patients utilize more traditional cancer treatment options in order to be eligible to participate in the Company’s Antineoplaston CLINICAL TRIALS:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/04/26/burzynski-fda-requirements-that-cancer-patients-utilize-more-traditional-cancer-treatment-options-in-order-to-be-eligible-to-participate-in-the-companys-antineoplaston-clinical-trials/
======================================
[5] – 11/14/2013 – Critiquing: Why we fight for patients (Why we fight your patience) TAM 2013, TAM2013, “The Amazing Meeting” 2013 #TAM2013 http://www.theamazingmeeting.com
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/11/14/tam-2013-tam2013-tam2013-the-amazing-meeting-2013-the-amazing-meeting-httptheamazingmeeting-com-httpwww-theamazingmeeting-com/
======================================
[6] – Phenomenon – Brain Tumour Foundation of Canada
——————————————————————
http://www.braintumour.ca/1649/ask-the-expert-psuedo-progression-gbm
======================================
[7] – Pseudoprogression following chemoradiotherapy for glioblastoma multiforme
Can J Neurol Sci. 2010 Jan;37(1):36-42
——————————————————————
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20169771/
======================================
[8] – 9/19/2013 – Critiquing: National Cancer Institute (NCI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) CancerNet “fact sheet” :
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/09/19/critiquing-national-cancer-institute-nci-at-the-national-institutes-of-health-nih-cancernet/
======================================
[9] – FDA Orphan Drug Designation
——————————————————————

Click to access PressRelease_12022008_BZYR(2).pdf

======================================
[10] – 11/7/2013Pete Cohen chats with Sonali Patil, Ph.D., Research Scientist at The Burzynski Clinic:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/11/07/pete-cohen-chats-with-sonali-patil-ph-d-research-scientist-at-the-burzynski-clinic/
======================================
[11] – 7/9/2013 – Burzynski: The Original 72 Phase II Clinical Trials:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/07/09/burzynski-the-original-72-phase-ii-clinical-trials/
======================================
[12] – 8/21/2013 – Critiquing David H. Gorski, MD, PhD, FACS http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/editorial-staff/david-h-gorski-md-phd-managing-editor/
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/08/21/critiquing-david-h-gorski-md-phd-facs-www-sciencebasedmedicine-orgeditorial-staffdavid-h-gorski-md-phd-managing-editor/
======================================
[13] – 2003 – pg. 94
——————————————————————

Click to access 960.pdf

======================================
[14] – 3/1982 – Biometrics 1982; 38: 143-51
——————————————————————
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7082756/
======================================
[15] – 11/9/2013Pete Cohen chats with Dr. Stanislaw Burzynski – Interview #2:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/11/09/pete-cohen-chats-with-dr-stanislaw-burzynski-interwiew-2/
======================================
[16] – AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY: More Interested In Accumulating Wealth Than Saving Lives
——————————————————————

Click to access acs.pdf

======================================
[17] – 9/11/2013 – National Cancer Institute and American Cancer Society: Criminal Indifference to Cancer Prevention and Conflicts of Interest:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/09/11/national-cancer-institute-and-american-cancer-society-criminal-indifference-to-cancer-prevention-and-conflicts-of-interest/
—————————————————————
[18] – 11/13/2013 – The War on Cancer (I don’t think it means, what you think it says it means) #Winning?
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/11/13/httpcancer-orgacsgroupscontentepidemiologysurveilancedocumentsdocumentacspc-036845-pdf/
======================================
[19] – 4/24/2013 – Burzynski: HYPERNATREMIA:
——————————————————————
https://stanislawrajmundburzynski.wordpress.com/2013/04/24/burzynski-hypernatremia/
======================================
[20] – 9/1999 – Pediatrics. 1999 Sep;104(3 Pt 1):435-9
——————————————————————
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10469766/
======================================

20131116-002912.jpg

The War on Cancer (I don’t think it means, what you think it says it means) #Winning?

“In 1971, the ACS (American Cancer Society) aggressively campaigned President Nixon to declare the “War on Cancer,” claiming that this could be won, given increased funding for the National Cancer Institute (NCI)

“President Nixon responded by increasing its funding by $200,000”

“This was in excess of the funding that it then received as one of 30 other National Institutes of Health”

“In so doing, President Nixon effectively created an independent status for the NCI [0]
——————————————————————
American Cancer Society
——————————————————————
Cancer Facts & Figures 2002-2013
——————————————————————
Expected New Cancer Cases – USA
——————————————————————
2013☝1,660,290 – (21,380 more than 2012)
2012☝1,638,910 – (42,240 more than 2011)
2011☝1,596,670 – (67,160 more than 2010)
2010☝1,529,560 – (49,810 more than 2009)
2009☝1,479,350 – (42,170 more than 2008)

2008👇1,437,180 – ( 7,740 less than 2007)
2007☝1,444,920 – (45,130 more than 2006)
2006☝1,399,790 – (26,880 more than 2005)
2005☝1,372,910 – ( 4,870 more than 2004)
2004☝1,368,030 – (33,930 more than 2003)
2003☝1,334,100 – (49,200 more than 2002)
2002
1,284,900
——————————————————————
Expected to Die – United States
——————————————————————
2013☝580,350_-_(3,160 more than 2012)
2012☝577,190
_-_(5,240 more than 2011)
2011☝571,950
_-_(2,460 more than 2010)
2010☝569,490
_-_(7,150 more than 2009)
2009👇562,340_-_(3,310 less than 2008)
2008☝565,650_-_(6,000 more than 2007)
2007👇559,650_-_(5,180 less than 2006)
2006👇564,830_-_(5,450 less than 2005)
2005☝570,280_-_(6,580 more than 2004
2004☝563,700
_-_(7,200 more than 2003)
2003☝556,500
_-_(6,000 more than 2002)
2002
_-_555,500
——————————————————————
Deaths – United States of America
——————————————————————
2013almost 1,600 a day
2012 – 1,500+ a day
2011 – 1,500+ a day
2010 – 1,500+ a day
2009 – 1,500+ a day
2008 – 1,500+ a day
2007 – 1,500+ a day
2006 – 1,500+ a day
2005 – 1,500+ a day
2004 – 1,500+ a day
2003 – 1,500+ a day
======================================
Estimated Childhood Cancer Deaths (0-14 years)
——————————————————————
2013👇1, 310
2012☝1,340
2011👇1,320
2010👇1,340
2009👇1,380
2008👇1,490
2007👇1,545
2006👇1,560
2005☝1,585
2004☝1,510
2003☝1,500
2002
1,400
——————————————————————
Estimated New Childhood Cancer (0-14 years)
——————————————————————
2013👇11,630
2012☝12,060
2011☝11,210

2010👇10,700
200910,730
2008☝10,730
2007☝10,400

2006👇9,500
2005☝9,510
2004☝9,200

2003👇9,000
20029,100
======================================
Estimated Brain and other nervous system Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝6,150 (2%)
2012☝5,980 (2%)

2011👇5,670 (2%)
2010☝5,720 (2%)
2009👇5,590 (2%)
2008☝5,650 (2%)
2007☝5,590 (2%)
2006☝5,560 (2%)

2005👇5,480 (2%)
2004👇5,490 (2%)
2003👇5,800 (2%)
20025,900 (2%)
======================================
Estimated All Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇273,430 (100%)
2012☝275,370 (100%)
2011☝271,520 (100%)
2010☝270,290 (100%)

2009👇269800 (100%)
2008☝271,530 (100%)
2007👇270,100 (100%)
2006👇273,560 (100%)
2005☝275,000 (100%)
2004☝272,810 (100%)
2003☝270,600 (100%)
2002
_-_267,300 (100%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Lung and bronchus Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇72,220 (26%)
2012☝72,590 (26%)
2011☝71,340 (26%)
2010☝71,080 (26%)

2009👇70,490 (26%)
2008☝71,030 (26%)
2007👇70,880 (26%)
2006👇72,130 (26%)
2005☝73,020 (27%)
2004👇68,510 (25%)
2003☝68,800 (25%)
2002
65,700 (25%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Breast Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝39,620 (14%)
2012👇39,510 (14%)
2011👇39,520 (15%)
2010👇39,840 (15%)
2009👇40,170 (15%)
2008☝40,480 (15%)
2007👇40,460 (15%)
2006☝40,970 (15%)
2005👇40,410 (15%)
2004☝40,110 (15%)
2003☝39,800 (15%)
2002
39,600 (15%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Colon and rectum Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇24,530 (9%)
2012☝25,220 (9%)
2011👇24,130 (9%)
2010👇24,790 (9%)
2009👇24,680 (9%)
2008👇25,790 (9%)
2007👇26,180 (10%)
2006👇27,300 (10%)
2005👇27,750 (10%)
2004👇28,410 (10%)
200328,800 (11%)
2002
28,800 (11%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Pancreas Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝18,970 (7%)
2012☝18,540 (7%)
2011☝18,300 (7%)
2010☝18,030 (7%)
2009☝17,210 (6%)
2008☝16,790 (6%)
2007☝16,530 (6%)
2006☝16,210 (6%)
2005☝15,980 (6%)
2004☝15,830 (6%)
2003☝15,300 (16%)
2002
15,200 (16%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Ovary Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇14,030 (5%)
2012☝15,500 (6%)
2011☝15,460 (6%)

2010👇13,850 (5%)
2009👇14,600 (5%)
2008☝15,520 (6%)
2007👇15,280 (6%)
2006👇15,310 (6%)
2005☝16,210 (6%)
2004☝16,090 (6%)
2003☝14,300 (5%)
2002
13,900 (5%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Leukemia Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝10,060 (4%)
2012☝10,040 (4%)

2011👇9,040 (3%)
2010👇9,180 (3%)
2009☝9,280 (3%)
2008👇9,250 (3%)
2007👇9,470 (4%)
2006👇9,810 (4%)
2005👇10,030 (4%)
2004☝10,310 (4%)
2003☝9,800 (4%)
2002
9,600 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Non-Hodgkin lymphoma Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇8,430 (3%)
2012👇8,620 (3%)
2011☝9,570 (4%)
2010👇9,500 (4%)
2009☝9,670 (4%)
2008☝9,370 (3%)
2007☝9,060 (3%)

2006👇8,840 (3%)
2005☝9,050 (3%)
2004👇9,020 (3%)
2003👇11,200 (4%)
200211,700 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Uterine corpus Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝8,190 (3%)
2012👇8,010 (3%)
2011☝8,120 (3%)
2010☝7,950 (3%)
2009☝7,780 (3%)
2008☝7,470 (3%)
2007☝7,400 (3%)
2006☝7,350 (3%)
2005☝7,310 (3%)
2004☝7,090 (3%)
2003☝6,800 (3%)
2002
6,600 (2%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Liver and intrahepatic bile duct Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝6,780 (2%)
2012☝6,570 (2%)
2011☝6,330 (2%)
2010☝6,190 (2%)
2009☝6,070 (2%)
2008☝5,840 (2%)
2007
5,500 (2%)
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
——————————————————————
Estimated Multiple myeloma Cancer Deaths (Women)
——————————————————————
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006👇5,630 (2%)
20055,640 (2%)
2004☝5,640 (2%)
2003☝5,500 (2%)
2002
5,300 (2%)
======================================
Estimated New Cancer All (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝805,500 (100%)
2012☝790,740 (100%)
2011☝774,370 (100%)
2010☝739,940 (100%)
2009☝713,220 (100%)
2008☝692,000 (100%)

2007👇678,060 (100%)
2006☝679,510 (100%)
2005👇662,870 (100%)
2004☝668,470 (100%)
2003☝658,800 (100%)
2002
_-_647,400 (100%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Breast Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝232,340 (29%)
2012👇226,870 (29%)
2011☝238,480 (30%)
2010☝207,090 (28%)
2009☝192,370 (27%)
2008☝182,460 (26%)

2007👇178,480 (26%)
2006☝212,920 (31%)
2005👇211,240 (32%)
2004☝215,900 (32%)
2003☝211,300 (32%)
2002
_-_203,500 (31%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Lung and bronchus Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝110,110 (14%)
2012☝109,690 (14%)
2011☝106,070 (14%)
2010☝105,770 (14%)
2009☝103,350 (14%)
2008☝100,330 (14%)
2007☝98,620 (15%)
2006☝81,770 (12%)

2005👇79,560 (12%)
2004☝80,660 (12%)
2003☝80,100 (12%)
2002
79,200 (12%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Colon and rectum Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇69,140 (9%)
2012☝70,040 (9%)
2011👇69,360 (9%)
2010👇70,480 (10%)
2009👇71,380 (10%)
2008👇71,560 (10%)
2007👇74,630 (11%)
2006☝75,810 (11%)
2005☝73,470 (11%)

2004👇73,320 (11%)
2003👇74,700 (11%)
200275,700 (12%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Uterine corpus Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝49,560 (6%)
2012☝47,130 (6%)
2011☝46,470 (6%)
2010☝43,470 (6%)
2009☝42,160 (6%)
2008☝41,100 (6%)

2007👇39,080 (6%)
2006☝41,200 (6%)
2005☝40,880 (6%)

2004👇40,320 (6%)
2003☝41,00 (6%)
2002
39,300 (6%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Thyroid Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝45,310 (6%)
2012☝43,210 (5%)
2011☝36,550 (5%)
2010☝33,930 (5%)

2009👇27,200 (4%)
2008☝28,410 (4%)
2007☝25,480 (4%)
2006☝22,590 (3%)
2005☝19,190 (3%)
2004☝17,640 (3%)
2003☝16,300 (3%)
2002
15,800 (2%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝32,140 (4%)
2012☝31,970 (4%)
2011☝30,300 (4%)
2010☝30,160 (4%)

2009👇29,990 (4%)
2008☝30,660 (4%)
2007☝28,990 (4%)
2006☝28,190 (4%)
2005☝27,320 (4%)
2004☝25,520 (4%)

2003👇25,100 (4%)
200225,700 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Melanoma of the skin Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇31,630 (4%)
2012☝32,000 (4%)
2011☝30,220 (4%)

2010👇29,260 (4%)
2009☝29,640 (4%)
2008☝27,530 (4%)

2007👇26,030 (4%)
2006☝27,930 (4%)
2005☝26,000 (4%)
2004☝25,200 (4%)
2003☝24,300 (3%)
2002
23,500 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Kidney and renal pelvis Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝24,720 (3%)
2012☝24,520 (4%)
2011☝23,800 (3%)
2010☝22,870 (3%)
2009☝22,330 (3%)
2008☝21,260 (3%)
2007
19,600 (3%)
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
——————————————————————
Estimated New Pancreas Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013☝22,489 (3%)
2012👇21,830 (3%)
2011☝21,980 (3%)
2010☝21,770 (3%)
2009 21,420 (3%)

2008
2007
2006☝16,580 (2%)
2005👇16,080 (2%)
2004☝16,120 (2%)
2003☝15,800 (2%)
2002
15,600 (2%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Ovary Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013👇22,240 (3%)
2012☝22,280 (3%)
2011☝21,990 (3%)
2010☝21,880 (3%)

2009👇21,550 (3%)
2008👇21,650 (3%)
2007☝22,430 (3%)
2006👇20,180 (3%)
2005👇22,220 (3%)
2004☝25,580 (4%)
2003☝25,400 (4%)
2002
23,300 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Leukemia (Women)
——————————————————————
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008👇19,090 (3%)
200719,440 (3%)
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
——————————————————————
Estimated New Urinary bladder Cancer (Women)
——————————————————————
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006☝16,730 (2%)
2005☝16,200 (2%)
2004☝15,600 (2%)
2003
15,200 (2%)
2002
15,200 (2%)
======================================
Estimated All Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝306,920 (100%)
2012☝301,820 (100%)
2011☝300,430 (100%)
2010☝299,200 (100%)

2009👇292,540 (100%)
2008☝294,120 (100%)
2007👇289,550 (100%)
2006👇291,270 (100%)
2005☝295,280 (100%)
2004☝290,890 (100%)

2003👇285,900 (100%)
2002_-_288,200 (100%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Lung and bronchus Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013👇87,260 (28%)
2012☝87,750 (29%)
2011👇85,600 (28%)
2010👇86,220 (29%)
2009👇88,900 (30%)
2008☝98,810 (31%)
2007👇89,510 (31%)
2006👇90,330 (31%)
2005👇90,490 (31%)
2004☝91,930 (32%)
2003👇88,400 (31%)
200289,200 (31%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Prostate Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝29,720 (10%)
2012👇28,170 (9%)
2011☝33,720 (11%)
2010☝32,050 (11%)

2009👇27,360 (9%)
2008☝28,660 (10%)
2007👇27,050 (9%)
2006👇27,350 (9%)
2005☝30,350 (10%)
2004☝29,500 (10%)

2003👇28,900 (10%)
200230,200 (11%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Colon and rectum Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013👇26,300 (9%)
2012☝26,470 (9%)
2011👇25,250 (8%)
2010☝26,580 (9%)
2009☝25,240 (9%)

2008👇24,260 (8%)
2007👇26,000 (9%)
2006👇27,870 (10%)
2005☝28,540 (10%)
2004☝28,320 (10%)
2003☝28,300 (10%)
2002
27,800 (10%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Pancreas Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝19,480 (6%)
2012👇18,850 (6%)
2011☝19,360 (3%)
2010☝18,770 (6%)
2009☝18,030 (6%)
2008☝17,500 (6%)
2007☝16,840 (6%)
2006☝16,090 (6%)
2005☝15,820 (5%)
2004☝15,440 (5%)
2003☝14,700 (5%)
2002
14,500 (5%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Liver and intrahepatic bile duct Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝14,890 (5%)
2012☝13,980 (5%)
2011☝13,260 (4%)
2010☝12,720 (4%)

2009👇12,090 (4%)
2008☝12,570 (4%)
2007☝11,280 (4%)
2006☝10,840 (4%)
2005☝10,330 (3%)
2004☝9,450 (3%)
2003☝9,200 (3%)
2002
8,900 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Leukemia Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝13,660 (4%)
2012☝13,500 (4%)
2011☝12,740 (4%)
2010☝12,660 (4%)
2009☝12,590 (4%)
2008☝12,460 (4%)

2007👇12,320 (4%)
2006👇12,470 (4%)
2005👇12,540 (4%)
2004☝12,990 (5%)
2003
12,100 (4%)
2002
12,100 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Esophagus Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝12,220 (4%)
2012☝12,040 (4%)
2011☝11,910 (4%)
2010☝11,650 (4%)
2009☝11,490 (4%)
2008☝11,250 (4%)
2007☝10,900 (4%)
2006☝10,730 (4%)
2005☝10,530 (4%)
2004☝10,250 (4%)
2003☝9,900 (4%)
2002
9,600 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Urinary bladder Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝10,820 (4%)
2012👇10,510 (3%)
2011☝10,670 (4%)
2010☝10,410 (3%)
2009☝10,180 (3%)
2008☝9,950 (3%)
2007☝9,630 (3%)
2006☝8,990 (3%)
2005☝8,970 (3%)
2004☝8,780 (3%)
2003
8,600 (3%)
2002
8,600 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Non-Hodgkin lymphoma Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝10,590 (3%)
2012☝10,320 (3%)

2011👇9,750 (3%)
2010☝10,710 (4%)
2009☝9,830 (3%)
2008☝9,790 (3%)

2007👇9,600 (3%)
2006👇10,000 (3%)
2005👇10,150 (3%)
2004👇10,390 (4%)
2003👇12,200 (4%)
200212,700 (5%)
——————————————————————
Estimated Kidney and renal pelvis Cancer Deaths (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝8,780 (3%)
2012☝8,650 (3%)
2011☝8,270 (3%)
2010☝8,210 (3%)
2009☝8,160 (3%)
2008☝8,100 (3%)

2007👇8,080 (3%)
2006☝8,130 (3%)
2005☝8,020 (3%)
2004☝7,870 (3%)
2003☝7,409 (3%)
2002
7,200 (3%)
======================================
Estimated New Cancer All (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝854,790 (100%)
2012☝848,170 (100%)
2011☝822,300 (100%)
2010☝789,620 (100%)
2009☝766,130 (100%)

2008👇745,180 (100%)
2007☝766,860 (100%)
2006☝720,280 (100%)
2005☝710,040 (100%)
2004☝699,560 (100%)
2003☝675,300 (100%)
2002
_-_637,500 (100%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Prostate Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013👇238,590 (28%)
2012☝241,470 (29%)
2011☝240,890 (29%)
2010☝217,730 (28%)
2009☝192,280 (25%)

2008👇186,320 (25%)
2007👇218,890 (29%)
2006☝234,460 (33%)
2005☝232,090 (33%)
2004☝230,110 (33%)
2003☝220,900 (33%)
2002
_-_189,000 (30%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Lung and bronchus Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝118,080 (14%)
2012☝116,470 (14%)

2011👇115,060 (14%)
2010☝116,750 (15%)
2009☝116,090 (15%)

2008👇114,690 (15%)
2007☝114,760 (15%)
2006👇92,700 (13%)
2005👇93,010 (13%)
2004☝93,110 (13%)
2003☝91,800 (14%)
2002
90,200 (14%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Colon and rectum Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝73,680 (13%)
2012☝73,420 (9%)

2011👇71,850 (9%)
2010👇72,090 (9%)
2009👇75,590 (10%)
2008👇77,250 (10%)
2007☝79,130 (10%)
2006☝72,800 (10%)

2005👇71,820 (10%)
2004☝73,620 (11%)
2003☝72,800 (11%)
2002
72,600 (11%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Urinary bladder Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013👇54,610 (6%)
2012☝55,600 (7%)
2011👇52,020 (6%)
2010👇52,760 (7%)
2009☝52,810 (7%)
2008☝51,230 (7%)
2007☝50,040 (7%)

2006👇44,690 (6%)
2005☝47,010 (7%)
2004☝44,640 (6%)
2003☝42,200 (6%)
2002
41,500 (7%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Melanoma of the skin Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝45,060 (5%)
2012☝44,250 (5%)
2011☝40,010 (5%)

2010👇38,870 (5%)
2009☝39,080 (5%)
2008☝34,950 (5%)

2007👇33,910 (4%)
2006☝34,260 (5%)
2005☝33,580 (5%)
2004 – 29,900 (4%)

2003👇29,900 (4%)
200230,100 (5%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Kidney and renal pelvis Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝40,430 (5%)
2012☝40,250 (5%)
2011☝37,120 (5%)

2010👇35,370 (4%)
2009☝35,430 (5%)
2008☝33,130 (4%)
2007☝31,590 (4%)
2006☝24,650 (3%)
2005☝22,490 (3%)
2004☝22,080 (3%)
2003☝19,500 (3%)
2002
19,100 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (Men)
——————————————————————
2013👇37,600 (4%)
2012☝38,160 (4%)
2011☝36,060 (4%)

2010👇35,380 (4%)
2009☝35,990 (5%)
2008☝35,450 (5%)
2007☝34,200 (4%)
2006☝30,680 (4%)
2005☝29,070 (4%)
2004☝28,850 (4%)
2003☝28,300 (4%)
2002
28,200 (4%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Oral cavity and pharynx Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝29,620 (3%)
2012☝28,540 (3%)
2011☝27,710 (3%)
2010☝25,420 (3%)

2009👇25,240 (3%)
2008☝25,310 (3%)
2007☝24,180 (3%)
2006☝20,180 (3%)
2005☝19,100 (3%)
2004☝18,550 (3%)

2003👇18,200 (3%)
200218,900 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Leukemia (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝27,880 (3%)
2012☝26,830 (3%)
2011☝25,320 (3%)

2010👇24,690 (3%)
2009☝25,630 (3%)
2008☝25,180 (3%)
2007☝24,800 (3%)
2006☝20,000 (3%)
2005☝19,640 (3%)
2004☝19,020 (3%)
2003☝17,900 (3%)
2002
17,600 (3%)
——————————————————————
Estimated New Pancreas Cancer (Men)
——————————————————————
2013☝22,740 (3%)
2012☝22,090 (3%)
2011☝22,050 (3%)
2010☝21,370 (3%)
2009☝21,050 (3%)

2008👇18,770 (3%)
2007☝18,830 (2%)
2006☝17,150 (2%)
2005☝16,109 (2%)
2004☝15,740 (2%)
2003☝14,900 (2%)
2002
14,700 (2%)
======================================

20131113-231037.jpg

20131113-113632.jpg
——————————————————————
American Cancer Society
——————————————————————
Cancer Facts & Figures
======================================
REFERENCES:
======================================
[0] – AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY

More Interested In Accumulating Wealth Than Saving Lives

Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.

Emeritus professor Environmental and Occupational Medicine

University of Illinois School of Public Health

and

Chairman, The Cancer Prevention Coalition
——————————————————————
http://www.wnho.net/acs.pdf
======================================
2013
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-036845.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-036845.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2013/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2013/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2013
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2013
======================================
2012
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-031941.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-031941.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2012/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2012/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2012
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2012
======================================
2011
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-029771.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-029771.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2011
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2011
======================================
2010
——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-024113.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access acspc-024113.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2010/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2010/index
======================================
2009
——————————————————————

Click to access 500809webpdf.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access 500809webpdf.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2009/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2009/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2009
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2009
======================================
2008
——————————————————————

Click to access worldcancer.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2008/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2008/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/allcancerfactsfigures/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/allcancerfactsfigures/index
======================================
2007
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2007pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access caff2007pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2007/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/cancerfactsfigures2007/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2007
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2007
======================================
2006
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2006pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access caff2006pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2006
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2006
======================================
2005
——————————————————————

Click to access caff2005f4pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————

Click to access caff2005f4pwsecuredpdf.pdf

——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/allcancerfactsfigures/index
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsstatistics/allcancerfactsfigures/index
——————————————————————
http://cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2005
——————————————————————
http://m.cancer.org/research/cancerfactsfigures/cancerfactsfigures/cancer-facts-figures-2005
======================================
2004
——————————————————————

Click to access CancerRates2004.pdf

======================================
2003
——————————————————————

Click to access 2003_ACS_Cancer_Facts.pdf

======================================
2002
——————————————————————

Click to access CancerFacts&Figures2002.pdf

======================================