André Gernez

André Gernez

André Gernez in 2010 at Palm Beach
Born 25 January 1923 (1923-01-25) (age 89)
Avesnes-les-Aubert, France
Residence France
Nationality French
Fields Physics
Institutions Organic Union International
Alma mater Physician
Doctoral advisor Jean Courtial
Known for Cancer
Notable awards Hans Adalbert Schweigart from World Union for Protection of Life in 1979
Gold medal of Société d'Encouragement au Progrès in 2007

André Gernez is a French non-conventional physician. He created a global non-governmental organisation Organic Union International (OUI) in 1989 with doctors Jacques Lacaze and Jean-Pierre Willem.

Gernez was first to explain diseases such as cancer or neurodegenerations through a theory of mitosis and differentiation that challenged prevailing ideas. He indeed considered that in a tissue, only limited populations of cells were able to divide. He even compares a tissue to a colony of bees, in which, only the Queen ensures reproduction, while most of the other bees are sterile workers[2].

Contents

Hypothesis

Gernez looks for volunteers to create a universal blood bank by immune adoption because:

As tumor cell colony of less than 100,000 cells remains indetectable for imagery, the yearly procedure proposed by Gernez for preventing cancer consists of three essential parts :

  1. apply a low calorie regime during a fasting period, as recommended by most religions ;
  2. eat more fruits, vegetables, less meat, consume products rich in magnesium, vitamins C, E, selenium ;
  3. kill tumor cells by giving for a few day an anti-mitotic, such as colchicine for instance.[4]

Experiments

The process is simple, quick and free : one spray for immune adoption to use on children one to three months after birth. This technology would be practiced in the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada and in Asia with barefoot doctors.

Awards

Bibliography and films

Notes and references

  1. ^ Jane E Brody, Worldwide Nutrient tests Raise Hopes of Preventing Cancer, Herald Tribune, 30 September 1987
  2. ^ « Carcinogenic mechanisms: Anticancer drugs that target tumor metabolism », Maurice Israël, Laurent Schwartz (trad. Daniel Rodet), Biomedical Research (ISSN 0970938X), nº volume 22 issue 2, April-june 2011, p. 143
  3. ^ At 25 January 2006, Radio Canada announced Hospital for Sick Children of Toronto transplanted hearts to babies aged from 0 to 14 months successfully ("10 years ago").
  4. ^ « Carcinogenic mechanisms: Anticancer drugs that target tumor metabolism », Maurice Israël, Laurent Schwartz (trad. Daniel Rodet), Biomedical Research (ISSN 0970938X), nº volume 22 issue 2, April-june 2011, p. 152
  5. ^ La Tribune du Progrès n°34, Hiver/Printemps 2009

See also

External links