Currabubula Garden Party Spreads Treatment Message
Transcription
Currabubula Garden Party Spreads Treatment Message
Rays of Hope shine brightly GUNNEDAH’S Fleur Morgan and Tony and Debbie Bernays supporting the Rays of Hope fund-raiser. Photo: Quirindi Advocate. JENNY Barlow pictured in Korea with Australian doctor Luke Baker, left, a radiologist at Private Prince of Wales Hospital, in Sydney, Australian professors, Michael Jackson and Carl Munoz-Ferrada and Professor TaeSik Jung, of Kosin University Gospel Hospital. Currabubula garden party spreads treatment message thermia treatment machine for a clinic on the eastern seaboard is being manufactured overseas and will hopefully be available as a treatment option midyear – the bookwork to break through government regulations is incredible.” Jenny has recently returned Jenny Barlow has been fightfrom Korea where she attended ing for more than five years to seminars at Seoul and Busan have the treatment introduced with Sydney Professors Michael to Australia and her campaign is Jackson, Carl Munoz-Ferrada starting to pay off with a treatand Dr Luke Baker, a radioloment room offered at the Prince gist at Private Prince of Wales of Wales Private Hospital. Hospital. Around 50 people attended the “We visited a number of hosfunction at Currabubula where pitals, observed treatment using the hosts provided a sumptuous oncothermia equipment and meal and popular country trio, attended advanced scientific lecThose Girls, dished out a fantastures,” Jenny said. tic night of entertainment. “Lectures were given by ProfesThe silent auction of donated sor Andras Szasz, head Biotechgoods and other prizes was a nics at St Istvan, in Budapest great success, with guests openand CEO of Onkotherm, which ing their wallets and hearts for manufactures the oncothermia the campaign. machines.” Included in the guests at the Jenny agreed that it takes function were Tamworth resident courage for the medical fraterTony Moroney and Gunnedah’s nity to question their peers but Tommy Burns, who have both she is proud that two Australian travelled to Germany for hyperProfessors, Michael Jackson and thermia treatment. Carl Munoz-Ferrada, have stood by her. Jenny told the crowd that having hyperthermia/oncothermia “In some ways it is easier for available as an additional treatme to stand up because I am not ment option for cancer in commedical,” Jenny said. “I have gone from having hardly travelled at all to 20 trips overseas and at a world level, I am in contact with 20 doctors by email or phone. “More and more Australians are travelling overseas for this treatment and the cost emotionally and financially is enormous. “There should be no more waiting – enough is enough, the lucky country needs to become smarter.” Jenny’s next fund-raiser will be the Rays of Hope Gold Medal Ball (to win gold over cancer in the Olympic year), at Le Montagu, in Lilyfield, on May 25. Professor Andras Szasz is coming to Australia as guest speaker along with Professors Michael Jackson and Carl MunozFerrada. ❐ For further information and PRINCE of Wales Hospital Director of Oncology, Professor Michael bookings, contact Jenny Barlow Jackson, with a patient receiving hyperthermia treatment in a Korean on 0428 434 471 or email rodbosman@bigpond.com hospital. THE Rays of Hope were shining brightly at a garden party in Currabubula last weekend when Russell and Helen White opened their Springfield Park property to raise funds and spread awareness of hyperthermia treatment for cancer. bination with chemotherapy and radiation is very close. “We have an established system which certainly has results using the three conventional cancer treatments but it’s not good enough considering the money invested,” Jenny said. “It is the combination of heat treatment (hyperthermia) with chemo and radiation that has the results. “European doctors have been treating cancer with hyperthermia/oncothermia for 30-40 years and the treatment is rebated in Holland, Germany and Italy – it is not experimental anymore.” Jenny explained, as she has been doing for the past five years, that radiowave therapy does not harm normal tissue. “It targets the tumour and softens it, making it more susceptible to other treatment like chemotherapy and radiation.” Jenny also voiced the opinon of many doctors she has come into contact with in her travels, that funds for treatment need to be more evenly distributed and the results of clinical trials shared. “There is so much duplication and a global waste of money, we should be combining studies,” Jenny said. “As we speak, the first onco- Jenny Barlow with Tony Moroney, from Tamworth, left, and Pam and Tommy Burns from Gunnedah. Both men have recently returned from hyperthermia treatment in Europe. Photo: Quirindi Advocate. Namoi Valley Independent Thursday, March 1, 2012 5