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Funding sought for healing energy study

From:
Date: 1/8/2001
Time: 12:06:39 PM
Remote Name: 207.144.212.65

Comments

In its Fall 2000, 14(3) issue, The Journal of Scientific Exploration published a study by William F. Bengston and David Krinsley, entitled "The Effect of the "laying on of hands" on transplanted breast cancer in mice" (see abstract below).

Due to the remarkable rate and consistency of the effect under investigation, a replicating study is being planned, with the intent of confirming these results and testing for factors that may modulate the hypothesized bionenergy field. Assistance is also being sought in designing a breast cancer vaccine based on the serum obtained from the cured subjects.

For further information on this project, please contact William Bengston (e-mail: wbengston@sjcny.edu) or M. Sue Benford (e-mail: MSBENFORD@aol.com)

Source: Journal of Scientific Exploration. 2000;14(3):353-364

"The effect of the "laying on of hands" on transplanted breast cancer in mice"

William F. Bengston, David Krinsley

Abstract: After witnessing numerous cases of cancer remission associated with a healer who used "laying on of hands" in New York, one of us (W.B.) "apprenticed" in techniques alleged to reproduce the healing effect. We obtained five experimental mice with mammary adenocarcinoma (code: H2712; host strain: C3H/HeJ; strain of origin: c3H/HeHu), which had a predicted 100% fatality between 14 and 27 days subsequent to injection. Bengston treated these mice for 1 hour per day for 1 month. The tumors developed a "blackened area," then they ulcerated, imploded, and closed, and the mice lived their normal life spans. Control mice sent to another city died within the predicted time frame. Three replication using skeptical volunteers (including D.K.) and laboratories at Queens College and St. Joseph's College produced an overall cure rate of 87.9% in 33 experimental mice. An additional informal test by Krinsley at Arizona State resulted in the same patterns. Histological studies indicated viable cancer cells through all stages of remission. Reinjections of cancer into the mice in remission in Arizona and New York did not take, suggesting a stimulated immunological response to the treatment. Our tentative conclusions: Belief in laying on of hands is not necessary in order to produce the effect; there is a stimulated immune response to treatment, which is reproducible and predictable; and the mice retain an immunity to the same cancer after remission. Future work should involve testing on various diseases and conventional immunological studies of treatment effects on experimental animals. ******************************************************************************

Last changed: April 02, 2001