DWQA QuestionsCategory: Healing ModalitiesA viewer asks: “Professor Angus Dalgleish, the chair of oncology at St George’s, University of London, has conducted research and clinical work on the role of vitamin D in cancer, particularly focusing on its potential benefits for cancer patients. He prescribes very high doses of vitamin D to some cancer patients to raise their blood levels significantly to boost vitamin D levels to around 100 nmol/L. How beneficial, as part of a comprehensive cancer treatment approach, are such doses likely to be and how variable in outcomes for different patient demographics?” What can Creator tell us?
Nicola Staff asked 10 months ago
This is a general tonic that helps tune up immune surveillance and, as the primary bulwark in the body's defense against malignancy, that will be a complementary benefit to any other therapy for ongoing treatment of a malignant condition. It is not the be-all and end-all of cancer treatment but a useful adjunct. We cannot give you an encyclopedic tour of all possible conditions and the many variables that will influence an individual response, and to what degree it can make a difference of a practical sort, but it is a useful step to take, especially considering the dearth of useful therapies that are not destructive by design with all the many side effects of current cytotoxic chemotherapy.