Fighting Cancer Via Self-Experimentation — With Success

About 10 years ago, a UCSD psychology professor named Ben Williams, who is in my area of psychology (animal learning), managed to successfully cure his own terminal cancer by self-experimentation. He wrote a book about it called Surviving Terminal Cancer. As this WSJ story shows, his approach — which can be summed up think for yourself — is spreading.

Just as my dermatologist was irritated by my acne self-experimentation (”Why did you do that?” he asked), Ben’s oncologist, a University of Washington med school prof named Marc Chamberlain, was against what Ben did. Chamberlain now tells the WSJ that Ben’s self-treatment “probably contributed” to saving Ben’s life. Which is like a math professor saying 2 + 2 “probably equals” 4.

A long essay by Williams about his experience.

Addendum: Williams’s book, which had an amazon rank of about 1,000,000 when the WSJ article appeared (Dec 15), is now (morning of the 18th) ranked about 29,000.

3 thoughts on “Fighting Cancer Via Self-Experimentation — With Success

  1. Incurable diseases are heartbreaking, especially in children.
    That said, who knows if anything he was doing was helping? You saw him vacillate in agony over one vitamin addition when the diagnosis was reversed in only a couple days.
    The doctors surely had 2 things in mind, after delivering the original prognosis: the remaining quality of life for the child, and the possibility for malpractice type suits. I’m heartened that in most cases the afflicted were eventually able to find doctors willing to oversee treatment. But it seems like someone with a little more training could have overseen the addition of copper-absorbing chemicals and omega-3 doses (or monitor Accutane et al), for the peace of mind of the parents, if not the child.

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