Neville You did great no worries. Please don't be so hard on yourself we all learn from each-other. By the way I learned much from Youtube...just type in what your looking to learn on computers in the Youtube search bar and there are endless people putting up short informed videos showing you how on just about everything under the sun. :) Truck drivers are just as important as anyone else if you all stopped the stores would be empty within days. Drive safe On Wednesday, November 27, 2019, 08:58:19 PM EST, Neville Munn <one.red...@hotmail.com> wrote: #yiv0154072247 P {margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;}Deborah, I am illiterate when it comes to computers. I tried to put a link up but stuffed if I know how. I searched for "using silver in chemotherapy" and the first one to come up was some information by a Dr Charlotte Willans in the University of Leeds in the UK. I think the article I read was from 2012, so it's fairly recent? She is highly credentialed seemingly when I researched her. But, I have read other articles some years back, couldn't understand a word they wrote about though, way above my head, I am only a truck driver, not a biochemist <g>. I believe Dr Charlotte Willans is a biochemist at the University. Sorry about not having a link, dumb I know, but nevermind. Whoops, maybe this might work below? Good old Google as a learning tool...LOL
Silver packs a punch as chemotherapy drug https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21328505-800-silver-packs-a-punch-as-chemotherapy-drug/ N.From: Deborah Gerard <devorah...@yahoo.com> Sent: Thursday, 28 November 2019 11:32 AM To: silver-list@eskimo.com <silver-list@eskimo.com> Subject: Re: CS>Basil cell carcinoma Good news about your wife. I would love to read about Silver being in Chemo I have never heard that one before. On Wednesday, November 27, 2019, 05:54:42 PM EST, Neville Munn <one.red...@hotmail.com> wrote: Well, heres one. Wife, picking a spot on the top of the nose for weeks. When I discovered it, there was a small hole, redness around the area, I knew what it was straight away. Administered EIS on bandage and placed on nose. Unfortunately, Australia is so bloody hot in summer she could sweat and unable to keep the bandage on, so, that meat was continually being eaten away. That small hole was eventually spreading in size, due to meat being eaten away. Also unfortunately, being a layman, I don't keep documentation of treatment or photos, but, in a week or so the redness disappeared, the hole stopped spreading and flesh turned white, clear fresh meat. 8 weeks later, no change, the flesh had stabilised 8 weeks earlier and remained clear of any sign of cancer. Skin specialist diagnosed Basil blah blah, took a Biopsy, twice. I asked I wanted to know if the cancer cells were still alive, dying, or dead. Hmmm, stupid me, they couldn't tell me, mainly because when they put the skin under a microscope, they stain it, hence whatever cells were there, are killed anyway, so that was a waste of time for me, trying to ascertain if my EIS had killed it. I told him, in my opinion, I had killed it 8 weeks earlier. Told him I had been treating it, he enquired as to how I had treated it, no response from me, but, he kept pressing me for an answer, so I told him, no further discussion of course, but, perhaps he knew something I didn't? Perhaps he will file this case away for himself? Who knows, I don't care anyway, I got my evidence. I absolutely believe my EIS had killed it, before a skin graft was undertaken 8 weeks later. If I could have kept that bandage on the site without continually coming off, it would have been killed much earlier (opinion). What bugs me the most is they won't hear anything about silver! The Establishment has done a damn good job regarding silver over years. And yet, I believe they use silver in Chemo? N.