Home remedies,
passed down from one generation to the next generation and applied without any scientific understanding or testing
behind why it may or may not be effective, is called folk medicine. Folk medicine can not be discredited simply because
it has not undergone any scientific study, but when it comes to curing cancer, folk medicine can become a
life-threatening practice if it delays more scientifically proven cancer treatments. Integrative medicine, an emerging
field of cancer treatment, incorporates both traditional folk medicine with modern scientifically proven cancer
therapies, and I believe this is a holistic approach that may have, in certain circumstances, maximum benefit for a
cancer patient. Before you consider trying a cancer treatment based on folk medicine, it is wise to talk it over with your physician, to make sure the interactions of one treatment do not interfere or adversely affect another treatment. According to some folk medicine practitioners, cancer is caused by the human intestinal fluke. If you kill this parasite, the cancer stops. The hulls of black walnuts are recommended as the remedy for killing this internal parasite. According to the American Cancer Society, no scientific evidence is available to suggest that hulls from black walnuts remove parasites from the intestinal tract or that they are effective in treating cancer. However, early evidence from laboratory research does suggest that juglone, a compound in black walnut, may possibly reduce cancer risk. No controlled scientific human studies have been done on the effective benefit of the cancer prevention properties of black walnuts. This does not mean it does not work, it simply means no one has scientific proof it does work.










