DWQA Questions › Tag: oncogenic virusesFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesA news report states: “A study by researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital reveals that the incidence of early onset cancers—including breast, colon, esophagus, kidney, liver, and pancreas—has dramatically increased around the world, with the rise beginning around 1990. In an effort to understand why many more people under 50 are being diagnosed with cancer, scientists conducted extensive analyses of available data, including information on early life exposures that might have contributed to the trend. Results are published in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology. They observed something called the birth cohort effect. This effect shows that each successive group of people born at a later time—e.g., a decade later—have a higher risk of developing cancer later in life, likely due to risk factors they were exposed to at a young age.” Has this steady increase in cancer among people born in each passing decade been caused by exposing these generations to cancer-causing viruses more systematically, or is there another explanation?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda116 views0 answers0 votesWas the reason that [name withheld] had several cancer remissions from divine healing, but eventually succumbed to a reoccurrence of cancer due to the fact that our protocols at that time were not focused on virus removal effectively enough? What can you tell us?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Karma100 views0 answers0 votesTo what extent is the reoccurrence of cancerous tumors after aggressive treatment due to latent cancer-causing viruses restarting malignant transformation to form a new tumor, rather than failure of the chemotherapy, often in conjunction with surgery and/or radiation, to eliminate all malignant cells from the first bout of illness?ClosedNicola asked 8 months ago • Healing Modalities73 views0 answers0 votes