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Max
Gerson, M.D. was born in Wongrowitz, Germany
(1881). He attended the universities of Breslau, Wuerzburg,
Berlin, and Freiburg. Suffering from severe migraines,
Dr. Gerson focused his initial experimentation with
diet on preventing his headaches. One of Dr. Gersons
patients discovered in the course of his treatment,
that the migraine diet had cured his skin
tuberculosis. This discovery led Gerson to further study
the diet, and he went on to successfully treat many
tuberculosis patients. His work eventually came to the
attention of famed thoracic surgeon, Ferdinand Sauerbruch,
M.D.
Under Sauerbruchs supervision, Dr. Gerson established
a special skin tuberculosis treatment program at the
Munich University Hospital. In a carefully monitored
clinical trial, 446 out of 450 skin tuberculosis patients
treated with the Gerson diet recovered completely. Dr.
Sauerbruch and Dr. Gerson simultaneously published articles
in a dozen of the worlds leading medical journals,
establishing the Gerson treatment as the first cure
for skin tuberculosis.
At this time, Dr. Gerson attracted the friendship of
Nobel prize winner Albert Schweitzer, M.D., by curing
Schweitzers wife of lung tuberculosis after all
conventional treatments had failed. Gerson and Schweitzer
remained friends for life, and maintained regular correspondence.
Dr. Schweitzer followed Gersons progress as the
dietary therapy was successfully applied to heart disease,
kidney failure, and finally cancer. Schweitzers
own Type II diabetes was cured by treatment with Gersons
therapy.
In 1938, Dr. Gerson passed his boards and was licensed
to practice in the state of New York. For twenty years,
he treated hundreds of cancer patients who had been
given up to die after all conventional treatments had
failed.
In 1946, Gerson demonstrated recovered patients before
the Pepper-Neely Congressional Subcommittee, during
hearings on a bill to fund research into cancer treatment.
Although only a few peer-reviewed journals were receptive
to Gersons then radical idea that
diet could effect health, he continued to publish articles
on his therapy and case histories of healed patients.
In 1958, after thirty years of clinical experimentation,
Gerson published A Cancer Therapy: Results of 50 Cases.
This medical monograph details the theories, treatment,
and results achieved by a great physician. Gerson died
in 1959, eulogized by long-time friend, Albert Schweitzer
M.D.: ...I see in him one of the most eminent
geniuses in the history of medicine. Many of his basic
ideas have been adopted without having his name connected
with them. Yet, he has achieved more than seemed possible
under adverse conditions. He leaves a legacy which commands
attention and which will assure him his due place. Those
whom he has cured will now attest to the truth of his
ideas.
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