Ernesto Contreras (physician) explained

Dr. Ernesto Contreras, Sr.
Birth Name:Ernesto Contreras, Sr
Birth Date:1 June 1915
Birth Place:Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Death Place:Baja California, Tijuana, Mexico
Citizenship:Mexico
Education:Military Medical School, Mexico City
General Practitioner, 1939
Occupation:Physician, researcher, hospital director, military, professor
Relations:
  • Rita Pulido (wife)
  • Francisco Contreras (son)
    current Director, President and Chairman of Oasis of Hope Hospital
Profession:Medical Doctor
Field:Cancer research
Work Institutions:Oasis of Hope Hospital
Specialism:Pediatric pathology
Module2:
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Branch: Mexican Army
Unit:18th Army Air Forces Base Unit
Rank: Major
Serviceyears:1939–43

Ernesto Contreras (1915 - 2003) served as a Mexican medical doctor. He operated the Oasis of Hope Hospital in Tijuana for over 30 years, claiming to "treat" cancer patients with amygdalin (also called "laetrile" or, erroneously, "vitamin B17") which has been found completely ineffective. His practices have been widely condemned.

Contreras received post-graduate training at the Children's Hospital Boston in Boston. He served as the chief pathologist at the Army Hospital in Mexico City and was Professor of Histology and Pathology at the Mexican Army Medical School.

Controversial cancer treatment

About extreme terminal cancer cases, Contreras alleged: "The palliative action [the ability of laetrile to improve comfort of patient] is in about 60% of the cases. Frequently, enough to be significant, I see arrest of the disease or even regression in some 15% of the very advanced cases."[1] There is no evidence to support Contreras' statements.

Many of Contreras' patients came from the United States, where use of laetrile is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.[2] Since the 1970s, the use of Laetrile to treat cancer has been described in the scientific literature as a canonical example of quackery and has never been shown to be effective in the treatment or prevention of cancer.[2] [3] [4]

See also

References

  1. Cancer News Journal, Jan./April, 1971, pp. 20.
  2. Herbert V . Laetrile: the cult of cyanide. Promoting poison for profit . Am. J. Clin. Nutr. . 32 . 5 . 1121–58 . May 1979 . 219680 . 10.1093/ajcn/32.5.1121. free .
  3. 10.1002/1097-0142(19840201)53:3+<815::AID-CNCR2820531334>3.0.CO;2-U . Lerner IJ . The whys of cancer quackery . Cancer . 53 . 3 Suppl . 815–9 . February 1984 . 6362828 . free .
  4. Nightingale SL . Laetrile: the regulatory challenge of an unproven remedy . Public Health Rep . 99 . 4 . 333–8 . 1984 . 6431478 . 1424606 .

External links