Talk:BDORT
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Greetings. I have amended and added to the introduction, but I do not know how to add in the linked reference. Can someone please assist, thank you? The peer reviewed journal is: http://www.thejsho.com/ The reference is to this published article listed now on this website in last month's issue, 'Complete Reversal of Stage IV Squamous Cell Carcinoma. Vol. 3 No.10, Jan. 2011' 202.63.58.223 (talk) 11:54, 2 February 2011 (UTC)
- I would love to add content from journals that meet our MEDRS guidelines. This content is obviously covered by MEDRS. Because it needs to be discussed, I have moved it here:
- A clinical application of the BDORT that was used to successfully achieve 100% remission of an advanced stage cancer that is generally considered incurable and fatal by mainstream medicine has been independently published by an international peer-reviewed medical-scientific journal. The clinical result was confirmed by before and after PET and CT scans [one reference to add].
- The article in question:
- Richard Malter, James Woessner, Alan Loader, Helen Tyrrell, "Complete Reversal of Stage IV Squamous Cell Carcinoma. BDORT determined dosages of organic flaxseed oil in vegan capsules, for pro-immune system effect for the HBV infection." Journal of the Science of Healing Outcomes, Vol. 3 No.10, Jan. 2011
- Unfortunately the link provided for the article doesn't help us see its content, so no evaluation can be made. A link to a PUBMED copy of the article or abstract would normally be sufficient, but since this journal doesn't seem to be listed at PUBMED, we're unable to determine if it's a RS in any sense, and the nature of the journal doesn't bode well. It's a journal designed for believers in pseudoscientific ideas who need a vehicle to publish their views. Anyone can create such a publication and claim it's "peer-reviewed". Such peer-review isn't worth much when it's people with the same POV doing the reviewing of their friend's work. It does have two well-known pushers of pseudoscience on the editorial board, Andrew Weil and Wayne Jonas, which doesn't help to boost confidence in the journal (on the contrary!), except to those uninformed about their views. Especially Jonas is known to back some of the most pseudoscientific homeopathy research ever performed (and debunked).
- The lead author is Richard Malter, whose COI advocacy activities and use of sockpuppets to push BDORT here have led to bans from Wikipedia. So we also have a possible COI situation here since this IP originates from Malter's location.
- That itself isn't the most important issue. The quality of the source is the major problem. It simply isn't allowable per MEDRS. If it has recently been added to PUBMED, please let me know, because I'm not finding it.
- The very fact that this research is being done and claiming scientific legitimacy is another proof that BDORT more than qualifies for being classed as pseudoscientific. If it were only claimed as a metaphysical or religious belief and unaccompanied by treatment of patients it might not qualify for such a description. This weird blending of beliefs with scientific terminology, and then actual treatment of patients, is at best very dubious and at worst potentially dangerous.
- It would appear that the only legitimate use for this reference is as a proof of the pseudoscientific nature of BDORT. The reference is a smoking gun. -- Brangifer (talk) 18:58, 2 February 2011 (UTC)
- I am aware opinions about CAM, are strong on both sides, and there are many valid arguments; and I respect yours.
- Like you say, the point to focus on here is if this is a reliable source. In fact, the journal is a peer-reviewed one, that is explicitly endorsed as such, by an internationally eminent and awarded mainstream qualified scientific-medical Board of Editors: http://www.thejsho.com/editboard.aspx ,including a Nobel Prize winner for physics, and numerous Professors of medicine, and science, at leading and major universities and other academic institutions, both in the USA and worldwide. The journal was begun partly and edited by Professor Rustom Roy [1923-2010] http://rustumroy.com/ ,another internationally recognised very eminent scientist - who please note also refers on his web page to this journal as "A new peer-review journal". Also, please note and take the time to review carefully, that the aims of the journal, http://www.thejsho.com/aims.aspx ,are explicitly to follow scientific principles and rigorous standards for acceptance for publication. These individuals' mainstream recognition and current standing as eminent people in the international scientific and medical community is unquestionable. Among them are in fact some of the awarded and recognised leading scientists in the world. To decide that this journal is unreliable, would be to say that the integrity and scientific credibility of these individuals, who have formed an editorial board on this journal, is doubtful!; obviously this is impossible - without saying that the universities and scientific establishments at which these people hold Professorships are unreliable (Universities in Stanford, Pennsylvania, California, St. Petersburg, etc), that the Nobel Prize for Science in Physics is not really a mainstream credible award, etc etc. Finally, this Editorial Board has in fact reviewed, and published, this article. And the title of the article clearly describes its subject and content and result.
- I also note that the guidelines state that Do not reject a high-quality type of study because you personally disagree with the study's inclusion criteria, references, funding sources, or conclusions.
- So perhaps I could ask you to kindly review your opinion on this?202.63.58.223 (talk) 02:26, 6 February 2011 (UTC)
- You write: "To decide that this journal is unreliable, would be to say that the integrity and scientific credibility of these individuals, who have formed an editorial board on this journal, is doubtful!;" but that is exactly the case here. These are not highly respected mainstream scientists. They are fringe scientists who have created a journal to push their fringe agenda and I doubt this journal comes anywhere close to MEDRS for stating things as fact. All it can be used for is stating opinion. Other more reliable MEDRS would need to be used to state things as fact.
- You still have not provided us with a way for us to judge the quality of the journal. We can't access it. -- Brangifer (talk) 08:29, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
- A Nobel laureate in science, and professors of science and medicine at leading universities in the USA, an emeritus director at Max PlancK, are not fringe scientists. They are in fact highly respected eminent scientists. This is a fact as far as the words "mainstream" and "scientist" are used in the world today. I do not understand how you form another opinion(?)202.63.58.223 (talk) 05:38, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
Looking for consensus on JSHO reference
[edit]Hello Brangifer (and others). As you have made no reply yet, I am assuming in the meanwhile that given the above discussion you might not have objections to this reference, but not sure. I think you are still around from the article history page where you are still making edits(?) So I leave this for another 1 week for more discussion time, and if no more discussion or objections after a week we can consider there is a consensus to use the JSHO reference as a reliable source and we can add in the text I did originally (see above please). I hope everyone thinks that is reasonable time frame.202.63.58.223 (talk) 00:26, 13 February 2011 (UTC)
- I first saw this now and have amended your comments above by removing your heading and adding the proper indents. You shouldn't have started a new section, but just added your comment to the existing thread. I have also replied above. -- Brangifer (talk) 08:29, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
CONSENSUS on JSHO ?
[edit]Since there has been no further comment or objection, and this has been left for about 2 weeks, I guess there is a consensus. Future editors, please see the discussion above about this reference. I will add in the information to the article accordingly.202.63.58.223 (talk) 13:00, 25 February 2011 (UTC)
- Mr Malter – It would be helpful if you respected your having been banned from this entry rather than attempt to reshape it for self-promotional pseudo-scientific purposes in your professional interest. TheChartreusePirate (talk) 23:25, 27 February 2011 (UTC)
- TheChartreusePirate, I am not Richard Malter. You may be surprised to hear that there are more people in Victoria, Australia. I am reverting to my previous edit as you haven't given any reason for not doing so according to wikipedia guidelines. 202.63.58.223 (talk) 03:16, 28 February 2011 (UTC)
- I have replied above. There is no consensus to use what seems like a self-published pseudoscience journal for the statement of pseudoscientific opinions as fact. We can only use higher quality journals to do that. See my comment above.
- If you still wish to press the issue, I suggest you take this up at WP:RS/N, but after you get blocked for block evasion that might be hard to do. -- Brangifer (talk) 08:50, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
Having not left an opinion is 2 or so weeks, I naturally assumed you had no further reply; I hope you can see that, and am sorry if I misunderstood you. You repeat your opinions that are obviously strong and that I respect as aforesaid. Thank you for your suggestion.202.63.58.223 (talk) 01:42, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
- I understand. -- Brangifer (talk) 02:42, 2 March 2011 (UTC)
RS/N consensus on JSHO = "Not a MEDRS"
[edit]That consensus can be read at Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard#JSHO_a_reliable_source.3F. -- Brangifer (talk) 20:20, 3 March 2011 (UTC)
AITSE
[edit]I've added to the entry to reflect the fact that AITSE has characterized BDORT/Omura explicitly and at length as pseudoscientific quackery, with appropriate cite reference external link. AtomikWeasel (talk) 20:52, 27 November 2012 (UTC)
Yoshiaki Omura
[edit]This whole discussion is so off I hardly know where to start. Having interviewed and been helped medically by Dr. Omura, and attended one of his training conferences (attended mostly by doctors and dentists from outside the USA), I would advise to make the Yoshiaki Omura page live (you'll look back later and wish that you did, as medicine advances) and if you want, say one sentence about the BDORT test. He had done SO much else. His biggest discovery was the affect cilantro has on mercury removal, but it has to be done in a precise way, different from what most of the internet gabbles about.
He has a double degree in medicine and electrical engineering. In 1972, Dr. Omura became the first physician to give combined manual and electro-puncture in the so-called first (and second) successful operation using acupuncture for anesthesia in the United States, which took place at the University Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology of Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York City. He worked with Dr. Frank Warren and Dr. Pang Man, under the supervision of Professor Louis Orkin, Chairman of the Department.
He was: Director of Medical Research for the Heart Disease Research Foundation, Brooklyn, New York; Professor at the Department of Pharmacology, University of Health Sciences/Chicago Medical School, North Chicago, Illinois; Research Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, Manhattan College, Riverdale, Bronx, New York; and Attending Physician, Department of Neuro-Science, Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, New York.
He worked in cancer wards for most of his training, watched too many patients die (usually a couple or so years later), and decided to investigate everything else that might possibly work. He healed numerous people, sent to him by other doctors when they had no idea what was going on. Most of these cases are reported in detail in the Journal, which it looks like no one has bothered to look at.
His ideas were adopted big-time in Japan, but of course all that is reported in Japanese. The main value of BDORT is in predicting problems way before other forms of testing. I could go on. The interview I did with him I turned into a small book, but publishers would not take it due to my having no formal medical credentials. He has a long history and one great idea after another. I see he recently 2000 got an award from the Japanese Traditional Medicine Conference. Wikipedia is so annoying, that's why I stopped helping edit. Also sorry if I'm not posting precisely perfectly on a Help page; I find it overwhelmingly confusing how to do it correctly. Hawa-Ave (talk) 20:24, 31 May 2025 (UTC)