on 06-03-2015 07:12 AM
She is the young woman with a slow growing (but likely curable) cancer who refused conventional treatment, made money from selling her natural treatment (and from related products like tshirts etc) and lectured and published books about the effectivieness of eschewing traditional medicine etc.
And is now sadly dead.
Personally I think she paid the price for ignorance and did a lot of harm while she lived. Even as she was close to death she made excuses for why her treatment didn't work and encouraged others to continue theirs.
Hopefully her death will be a wake up call to others.
on 06-03-2015 08:44 AM
on 06-03-2015 08:50 AM
on 06-03-2015 10:13 AM
I have a problem with all of her choices. She was a danger to public health and spread delusional ideas that made money out of gullible ill people.
on 06-03-2015 10:14 AM
I totally agree with voluntary euthenasia.
This is a very personal choice and I respect other people who hold very strong opposing views.
If I allowed one of my pets to linger in total agony and did not do anything about it, I could be charged by the RSPCA.
As much as I care greatly for my pets, why is their quality of life more important than mine?
on 06-03-2015 10:18 AM
@jean2579 wrote:I totally agree with voluntary euthenasia.
This is a very personal choice and I respect other people who hold very strong opposing views.
If I allowed one of my pets to linger in total agony and did not do anything about it, I could be charged by the RSPCA.
As much as I care greatly for my pets, why is their quality of life more important than mine?
I agree and if people are against it they don't have to participate. This is a personal choice and it has nothing to do with anybody else.
I strongly object to being told what I can do by interest groups.
I don't want to linger in a nursing home like a vegetable, completely at the mercy of people who don't have your best interests at heart.
on 06-03-2015 10:33 AM
on 06-03-2015 10:51 AM
@i-need-a-martini wrote:She is the young woman with a slow growing (but likely curable) cancer who refused conventional treatment, made money from selling her natural treatment (and from related products like tshirts etc) and lectured and published books about the effectivieness of eschewing traditional medicine etc.
And is now sadly dead.
Personally I think she paid the price for ignorance and did a lot of harm while she lived. Even as she was close to death she made excuses for why her treatment didn't work and encouraged others to continue theirs.
Hopefully her death will be a wake up call to others.
I think it's great shame that she let the fear of losing her arm dictate that her life will be very much shortened.
I think it's where the beauty industry is at odds with the wellness industry. She seems to equate wellness with keeping all her limbs in tact rather than being cancer free.
on 06-03-2015 10:57 AM
@gleee58 wrote:
@i-need-a-martini wrote:She is the young woman with a slow growing (but likely curable) cancer who refused conventional treatment, made money from selling her natural treatment (and from related products like tshirts etc) and lectured and published books about the effectivieness of eschewing traditional medicine etc.
And is now sadly dead.
Personally I think she paid the price for ignorance and did a lot of harm while she lived. Even as she was close to death she made excuses for why her treatment didn't work and encouraged others to continue theirs.
Hopefully her death will be a wake up call to others.
I think it's great shame that she let the fear of losing her arm dictate that her life will be very much shortened.
I think it's where the beauty industry is at odds with the wellness industry. She seems to equate wellness with keeping all her limbs in tact rather than being cancer free.
I agree, choosing beauty is a shallow and tragic choice.
on 06-03-2015 11:46 AM
My wife lost her brother to cancer some 4 years ago.
Stupidly, his wife believed wholeheartedly in alternative, (read Quack) medicines, and the power of prayer.
3 years after initial diagnosis, treatment with herbal medicines, and continued prayer, he returned to mainstream medicine, who advised him that as he was now riddled with Lymphoma, palliative care was his only option. 3 months later he was dead.
My father, many years before this, also suffered from the same cancer, but with traditional medical treatment, (radiation and chemotherapy), lived for 23 years after diagnosis.
I too, was diagnosed with a cancerous thyroid. After its removal, I'm left with a nasty scar across my throat, complications in breathing, so need a cpap machine every night, and replacement thyroid medicine for the rest of my life...but I'm still here!
And curiously, my brother-in-law was devoutly religious, but I'm an atheist - so does this mean that atheism heals better than religion?
Food for thought...
06-03-2015 02:13 PM - edited 06-03-2015 02:13 PM
Going by these two comments, I can understand her choice.
Very sad for the family, to loose both her and her mother.
Ms Ainscough's family strongly rejects the suggestion that her life would have been extended with conventional treatment and say her treating clinicians said this was not the case.
Surgical oncologist and blogger David Gorsk iwrote that Ms Ainscough clearly had noble motivations but was both a victim of, and complicit in, promoting dangerous therapies.
"Jess Ainscough had a shot, one shot. She didn't take it," he said. "What saddens me even more is that I can understand why she didn't take it, as, through a horrible quirk of fate, her one shot involved incredibly disfiguring surgery and the loss of her arm.