Patrick Bet-David
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Does it explain the residual replicating viruses in the colon? So absolutely, this needs to be understood and explored. I don't think there's a coincidence between this, what I call turbo cancers. I get calls after calls of patients that were in remission and then got COVID and now they have cancer.
Does it explain the residual replicating viruses in the colon? So absolutely, this needs to be understood and explored. I don't think there's a coincidence between this, what I call turbo cancers. I get calls after calls of patients that were in remission and then got COVID and now they have cancer.
So I think that this immune being underestimated, the beauty is the BioShield can overcome this immunosuppression. The beauty is that this BioShield can clear this virus from the body. And that's what we in trials do.
So I think that this immune being underestimated, the beauty is the BioShield can overcome this immunosuppression. The beauty is that this BioShield can clear this virus from the body. And that's what we in trials do.
Well, that's a very loaded question and the straightforward answer is not well received. I don't think any, just so you know, I've not taken one penny of big pharma money and I've not taken one penny of government money. All the money that we spent and we spent over billions of dollars in trying to understand this work.
Well, that's a very loaded question and the straightforward answer is not well received. I don't think any, just so you know, I've not taken one penny of big pharma money and I've not taken one penny of government money. All the money that we spent and we spent over billions of dollars in trying to understand this work.
As you know, Charlie, I had the great fortune of living the American dream and selling my company so I can actually work on how we can cure cancer. I don't think curing cancer and avoiding high-dose chemotherapy, high-dose radiation, high-dose checkpoint inhibitors acts in the interests of big pharma. And I think there's incentives that I'm fighting against.
As you know, Charlie, I had the great fortune of living the American dream and selling my company so I can actually work on how we can cure cancer. I don't think curing cancer and avoiding high-dose chemotherapy, high-dose radiation, high-dose checkpoint inhibitors acts in the interests of big pharma. And I think there's incentives that I'm fighting against.
And even large academic medical centers where it's really a great profit center to give high-dose chemotherapy and radiation. So I suppose I just had to face that, understood that.
And even large academic medical centers where it's really a great profit center to give high-dose chemotherapy and radiation. So I suppose I just had to face that, understood that.
And as you may know, many years ago, when you tried to help me solve healthcare, when you were young, Charlie Kirk, and if I had known how successful you would have been on Turning Point, I would never have let you actually out of my sight.
And as you may know, many years ago, when you tried to help me solve healthcare, when you were young, Charlie Kirk, and if I had known how successful you would have been on Turning Point, I would never have let you actually out of my sight.
Charlie, let me tell you a little bit of the story that was so amazing. You remember President Trump got shot in Butler.
Charlie, let me tell you a little bit of the story that was so amazing. You remember President Trump got shot in Butler.
And I watched it. I actually watched it with horror. And a few weeks later, I get a call from a family from that same butler. And that family has this boy, this young boy, 13-year-old, with metastatic pancreatic cancer. I said, oh, my God, I've never heard of a patient with 13 years old. And I said, listen, this patient must be treated where you are. You don't need to travel to Los Angeles.
And I watched it. I actually watched it with horror. And a few weeks later, I get a call from a family from that same butler. And that family has this boy, this young boy, 13-year-old, with metastatic pancreatic cancer. I said, oh, my God, I've never heard of a patient with 13 years old. And I said, listen, this patient must be treated where you are. You don't need to travel to Los Angeles.
Let me speak to your doctors in your area. And their response was the doctors in the area said this patient should be in hospice. There's nothing more we can do. And sadly, I said, well, that's not acceptable. Let him fly out then. I will try and take care of him. And he would fly out either every week or every three weeks with his father.
Let me speak to your doctors in your area. And their response was the doctors in the area said this patient should be in hospice. There's nothing more we can do. And sadly, I said, well, that's not acceptable. Let him fly out then. I will try and take care of him. And he would fly out either every week or every three weeks with his father.
And it was so tragic because by the time I saw him, it was all through his body. And this is driving me nuts as a physician. It's driving me nuts that we can allow that to stand. So all of this that I'm talking about is truly, as a physician and somebody that's trying to find out what's exciting and at the same time frustration, we think we've unlocked the key.
And it was so tragic because by the time I saw him, it was all through his body. And this is driving me nuts as a physician. It's driving me nuts that we can allow that to stand. So all of this that I'm talking about is truly, as a physician and somebody that's trying to find out what's exciting and at the same time frustration, we think we've unlocked the key.