
Breast cancer awareness month, which should be called
breast cancer prevention month, can give us an opportunity to learn more about what we can do to
prevent breast cancer, or increase the chance of a successful
remission after breast cancer diagnosis.
Conventional cancer treatment, which depends on the currently hijacked field of conventional
cancer research, has far to go if we want to have acceptable survival statistics for women diagnosed with breast cancer. However, if we
combine conventional treatment with a supportive,
complementary treatment approach, or
adjunct care, we can have new hope, for women diagnosed with breast cancer.
In any complementary regimen, it is essential that you
define your goals, including a realistic timeline. Are the goals for your
complementary care only symptom and comfort oriented? Do you want an additional, and alternative treatment of cancer (fighting the disease on more fronts) to destroy the tumor, or the cancer itself? In other words, do you want your complementary care to be an alternative treatment of disease? Or, as an adjunct care, do you want a supportive
complementary care, to focus on addressing the underlying internal environment and conditions in your body that may be
contributing to why your body developed breast cancer in the first place?
Be realistic with your goals. Will you start right away, or will you wait for chemo or radiation to be over? Why? You must have good reasons for when you should start. What kind of lifestyle change will you need? Will you accept
professional guidance? Will there be signs that you are on the right path? How soon can those signs be expected? Your
complementary care specialist should have concrete answers to these questions!
Nutrition has a role to play, not simply in the primary prevention of cancer, but also in the prevention of cancer recurrence,
which is of utmost importance in determining survival. 1
We all know that nutrients are critical to your health. Which nutritional regimen, homeopathy, or herbs would be right for you? Are antioxidants all that you need? Should you take a Shitake mushroom extract because of its known anticancer components? Should you avoid white sugar, or take iodine (Lugol's, Iodoral)? Without being professionally evaluated,
how can you know what to take, with certainty? If chemical toxicity, or vitamin D deficiency might be part of your problem, when is that addressed? This is not a time for
guessing and doing it yourself! Your
complementary care specialist should know these answers!
To find clear answers to the above

questions, we use a very well structured alternative system of complementary analysis that has a long track record for helping women who have experienced many types of illnesses – from
postpartum depression to
breast cancer – even though it is not a type of “ anticancer treatment” or a "treatment" for breast cancer itself.
The key point about this
alternative holistic system is that it is a way to bring proper attention to the whole body; instead of just focusing on the region of the breasts. Focusing on only one body region at the exclusion of others is something that conventional medicine already does very well. The purpose of this holistic system – called
Nutrition Response Testing – is to bring the rest of your body into focus, and wherever necessary, reveal and strengthen what your body needs strengthened –with
natural medicine– functional nutrition,
functional medicine.
The concept that breast cancer is a problem of only the breasts is a very limiting assumption – which has never been proven. Cancer has a systemic component –the whole body is affected in one way or another. Analogously, a rusty metal chain has its
weakest link. When stressed, that's where it breaks. Do you think all the other rusty links are really unaffected by the rust? The rust and the broken link are signs that something has affected the entire chain – like an illness affecting your
entire body. Our goal with Nutrition Response Testing is to reveal all of the
weakest links of your body and address the
multiple causes of why they became weak in the first place – ultimately to make your whole body stronger.
This is the best prevention, anywhere!
Women can be strong enough to survive through – and have a better recovery after – some very destructive, but often necessary conventional medicine. To tip the scales more in favor of your better recovery, and a really successful remission –where you can prevent recurrence, and experience a better quality of life– the key is the right complement to this medicine. This is the new hope for women diagnosed with breast cancer.
Contact us today. Let our place of hope be yours too.