Darrell Wolfe Explained

Darrell Wolfe is the Canadian founder of The Wolfe Clinic in Toronto, and is most notable for being accused of quackery by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.[1]

Career

Wolfe's own website describes him as a doctor of natural medicine,[2] and he describes himself as a "health practitioner",[3] and the "Doc of Detox".[4]

In 1991, Wolfe wrote an article that claimed that milk was dangerous and polluted with toxins, prompting litigation and a retraction from the magazine's publisher.[5] In 1994, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television program show Marketplace reported on Wolfe selling machines that claimed to cure HIV/AIDS via the rectal administration of ozone. Wolfe sold the machines from his business, The Wolfe Clinic, in Toronto. After closing the clinic, Wolfe began operating from the city of Ixtapa in Mexico, from where he sells educational programs and purported cures for diseases including cancer.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Szeto . Eric . Cowley . Jenny . Common . David . 20 Jan 2023 . He calls himself a doctor and promises to cure cancer. Critics say he's profiting from misinformation . CBC .
  2. Web site: About Us . 2023-01-20 . Doc of Detox World Healing & Training . en-US.
  3. https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/2163236931822 Self-described health practitioner shows aggressive massage technique that he says will heal a recently broken wrist
  4. News: . Busting Miracle Cures: Hidden Camera Investigation - PART 1 . 20 January 2023 . .
  5. News: . AIDS machine . 22 November 1994 . Canadian Broadcasting Corporation .