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Cancer experts warn of coffee enemas and juice diets amid rise in misinformation

4 days ago
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Cancer patients are snubbing proven treatments in favour of quackery such as coffee enemas and raw juice diets amid an “alarming” increase in misinformation on the web, doctors have said.Some were dying needlessly or seeing tumours spread as a result, oncologists said.They raised their concerns at the world’s largest cancer conference in Chicago, the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (Asco).Dr Fumiko Chino, a cancer researcher and assistant professor at MD Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston, Texas, co-authored a paper presented in Chicago that said cancer misinformation had “acutely worsened in the past decade”.With more people being diagnosed amid a growing and ageing global population, misleading or false information about cancer had become a significant public health concern, the study said.

While most people trusted doctors, the paper found, more than half of those surveyed said experts seemed to contradict one another.One in 20 had no trust in scientists to provide cancer information.“We’re losing the battle for communication.We need to regain that battlefield,” Chino said.Dr Julie Gralow, Asco’s chief medical officer, said: “Several patients of mine wanted an all-natural treatment approach after I had explained my treatment recommendations.

They go online and search for something natural and they find a clinic in Mexico which promises an all natural treatment for cancer, which includes caffeine colonics, vitamin C infusions and other things,”Instead of scolding patients for shunning surgery, radiotherapy or chemotherapy, Gralow said she tried to win their trust by still offering support,“In several cases, they came back after three months and didn’t feel any better,And then they stayed in our clinic and eventually we could gently ease them into more evidence-based treatments,” she said,“A few times, they didn’t come back.

And then I would learn within nine months they tragically had died.”Liz O’Riordan, a retired breast surgeon who was diagnosed with breast cancer, shares evidence-based information with her thousands of followers on social media.She said: “There is a huge amount of cancer misinformation online.Every day I get messages from scared women who want to know if they need to stop eating dairy, soy, flaxseeds.Do they need to stop wearing underwired bras, using deodorants? Is it true that juicing can cure cancer? What about miracle supplement cures like mushrooms and CBD?”O’Riordan wants more doctors to engage with patients online.

“But this is hard as it takes a lot of time to script, film, edit and publish content as well as the effort needed to grow a community to get your voice heard above the noise … And when you don’t have a million followers, it’s impossible to get traction,” she said.“What we’re saying isn’t sexy or exciting – we can’t promise a cure.The drugs we give have side-effects and some people still die.”Speaking at Asco, Dr Richard Simcock, the chief medical officer of Macmillan Cancer Support, said misinformation was “very worrying” as it had “exponentially increased the problem” of misconceptions about cancer.“I have recently seen two young women who have declined all proven medical treatments for cancer and are instead pursuing unproven and radical diets, promoted on social media,” he said.

“A person is perfectly entitled to decline that therapy but when they do that on the basis of information which is frankly untrue or badly interpreted, it makes me very sad.It’s clear that we have work to do to build back trust in evidence-based medicine.”Prof Stephen Powis, the national medical director of NHS England, said: “Social media can provide a supportive community for people faced with a cancer diagnosis but at the same time, we’re also seeing an alarmingly high level of misinformation on some of these platforms.“I would urge people to be sceptical of any ‘miracle cures’ you may see on social media around cancer and use trusted, credible sources like the NHS website or your care team to verify anything you are unsure of – because these fairytales aren’t just misleading, they can be harmful.”
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The ones we love: all 16 of REM’s albums – ranked!

The REM album that REM appeared to hate: guitarist Peter Buck called it unlistenable, “a bunch of people so bored with the material that they can’t stand it any more”. In truth, the songs aren’t bad, but there’s something lifeless about Around the Sun: its best tracks sound infinitely better on the 2007 REM Live album.“I guess a three-legged dog is still a dog,” mused frontman Michael Stipe after drummer Bill Berry’s 1997 departure from REM. “It just has to learn to run differently.” Thus Up was heavy on synths and drum machines, muted, crepuscular – and a relative commercial failure

about 19 hours ago
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‘My biggest fear’: the artist spending three days banged up in a jail cell

Cell 72 will put a detained man on show for three full days and nights to confront spectators with the grim reality of confinement. Is the project exploitative or a chance to change society? A filthy mattress lies in the corner of an otherwise barren room. The only adornments here, screwed to the wall, are a metal table and a payphone. But this is no ordinary prison. Rather, it’s a north London gallery which has been temporarily converted into a humid, fetid cell

about 20 hours ago
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Footballer, Bachelor star … fantasy writer? The TikTok furore over Luke Bateman’s book deal

Hello Caitlin. I hear people on TikTok are up in arms over a Queensland farmer/Canberra Raiders player/Bachelor star scoring a book deal. Who is this modern day Renaissance man?Julia, a colleague described Luke Bateman’s four years with the Raiders as the one of an “honest toiler, who always played above his weight”, and to be frank, it’s a fairly apt description for the guy.The Toowoomba countryman grew up as the typical sports-playing boy. On his now famous TikTok account, he has spoken earnestly about reading books in a toilet cubicle as a child so his peers wouldn’t witness his sensitive side

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘We are living in the golden age of stupid’

Late-night hosts looked at the latest mistakes made by the Trump administration while expressing fear at the president’s sinister new portrait.On Jimmy Kimmel Live! the host spoke about how “stupid” is the through-line of both that night’s show and the moment.He said that we are “living in the golden age of stupid right now” while talking about those who refuse to believe scientific fact and the rise in measles down to fewer vaccinations.“The only thing we learned from Covid is how to make sourdough bread,” he joked and said that “people who do their own research always do it wrong”.This week has also seen Donald Trump continuing to war with Harvard and with the writer Michael Wolff after he claimed that the reason behind all of this was that the president didn’t get accepted when he applied years ago

2 days ago
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He’s been hanged, stabbed and cut in galleries – now artist Carlos Martiel is being buried alive

In 2022 in a Los Angeles gallery, Carlos Martiel placed a noose around his neck and suspended his nude body from a rope tied to the ceiling. The piece was titled Cuerpo, Spanish for “body”, and the photographs and footage alone are shocking, mournful and distressing, as volunteers take turns holding his body aloft to prevent the real risk of asphyxiation.In conceiving the work, the Cuba-born, New York-based Afro-Latinx artist viewed hundreds of photographs of public lynchings from across the US – a brutal history of normalised extrajudicial violence that has moved artists from Billie Holiday to film-maker Steve McQueen. Those lynchings were also a kind of public performance: of terror, dehumanisation and white supremacy.“I couldn’t put into words everything I thought and felt during the development of the work; it was a very profound and intense experience for me,” Martiel says, over email

2 days ago
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‘Tudor high drama’: English Heritage looks for descendants of abbey rebels

They included a brewer, a tailor and a shoemaker – a hardy bunch of craftspeople prepared to stand up to the might of the Tudor regime to try to save their local monastery.Exactly five centuries on, English Heritage is appealing for people who think they may be descendants of those who took part in the uprising against Cardinal Thomas Wolsey’s closure of Bayham Abbey to come forward.The idea is to get some of them together for a commemorative event this summer to mark the Bayham Abbey uprising, which took place on 4 June 1525 and is seen as a precursor to the turbulent years of religious reform that followed.Michael Carter, an English Heritage historian, described the Bayham Abbey uprising as a moment of “Tudor high drama”.He said: “It is a fascinating precursor to Henry VIII’s religious reforms – a harbinger not only of the dissolution of the monasteries 10 years later but also of the Pilgrimage of Grace, a major revolt against the reforms in the north of England in 1536 and 1537

2 days ago
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UK house prices drop in May; markets brace for US jobs report – business live

about 2 hours ago
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UK house prices fall by more than expected amid economic uncertainty

about 2 hours ago
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Australians may soon be able to download iPhone apps from outside Apple App Store under federal proposal

about 8 hours ago
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Amazon promises fake reviews crackdown after investigation by UK watchdog

about 11 hours ago
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Chess: Carlsen targets last classical hurrah at Stavanger after defeat against Gukesh

about 3 hours ago
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Indiana Pacers 111-110 Oklahoma City Thunder: NBA finals Game 1 – as it happened

about 6 hours ago