Mortgage rates cannot, in fact, be predicted

Health Weight Loss ALA Indonesia




Healthy a la East Indonesia
Breast Cancer Alternative Medicine – A Medical Travel to Lombok Indonesia

Our Motto:
Every disease has cure, only two things we cannot cure, they are become aging and death. Get cured safely without initiating new disease is every body's right.

Martin Kocj said in his book: Das Lehrbuch des Lebens …..dass die geistigen Krafte im Menschen sehr wohl imstande sind, nicht nur psychien, sondern auch die organischen Funtionen des menschlichen Organismus entscheiden zu beeinflussen ……that the spirit power can influence not only the psychological aspects but also the physical functions of the human being.

The island is blessed with natural beauty and rich forest diversity, pristine white sandy beaches, tropical fishes, and at particular with the birth of a natural medicine man in which he has been enstrusted and blessed by the Lord to receive the curative miracle to help healing the breast cancer and coronary hearth disease by using the herbs, diet, and the mind-body connection.

The old generation of East Indonesia, especially in Lombok and Sumbawa has been used to help healing various acute and chronic diseases such as breast cancer by using the medicinal herbs collected from the forest wilderness empirically. Since the science and knowledge revolution in Indonesia, those medicinal herbs and plants have been researched and studied intensively for the purpose of knowledge to extracting the medicinal and curative composes to help the traditional gentle approach practitioners in getting more perspective and scientific background.

Since than, a natural approach based-on science has become a new method to help healing the victim of the breast cancer and the coronary hearth disease especially from the grass root who cannot pursue to molecular breast imaging (MBI), chemotherapy, biopsy, surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy.


Cancer rates in Asia set to rise dramatically
Margie Mason
Associated Press/Singapore and The Jakarta Post - Sunday April 22, 2007

The number of cancer cases in Asia is set to rise dramatically by 2020 due to largely to longer life spans and changing lifestyles, threatening a health crisis as poorer countries in the region struggle to afford care.
A fast-growing population coupled with people living longer and undergoing extreme changes to diet and lifestyle will place a major burden on developing countries that cannot afford screening, vaccines and expensive treatment, experts said at the start of a two-day conference in Singapore. “Many believe that cancer is somehow only a problem of affluent and aging societies. That’s not true, of course,” said Richard Horton, editor and publisher of the Lancet medical journal, which is sponsoring the conference. Other believe “cancer is somehow inevitable, that one is predisposed to it genetically. Again, that’s not true. Forty percent of cancers can be prevented by simple changes in lifestyle.”

Cancer of lungs, stomach and liver are the biggest problems in Asia followed the breast and colon cancers. The total number of new cancer cases in the region is projected to balloon from 4.5 million in 2002 to 7.1 million in 2020 if nothing changes. Lung cancer is the biggest problem in Asia, with 600,000 new cases reported annually. Smoking is considered a major contributor. In several Asian nations, more than 60 percent of the male population smokes, said Dr. Donald Max Parkin, a research fellow at the University of Oxford ’s Clinical Trial Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit. “ Asia is the epicenter of the smoking epidemic at the moment,” Parkin Said.

Stomach cancer is also on the rise in Asia , but the risk can be greatly reduced by regular exercise and having a healthy diet that is low in salt and fatty food. Large population of Asians have moved from the countryside to cities where their lives haves become more sedentary and their eating habits have changed, with people consuming les vegetables and more meat and fried foods.

Preventing hepatitis B through vaccination also helps lower the chances of developing liver cancer, also major problem for the region, Parkin said. Worldwide, there are 11 million new cancer cases reported annually and 7 million people die from disease each year, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer.