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TESTIMONIAL From Dr. Gordon Josephs
From: Dr. Gordon Josephs
To: Implex; Bob DiStefano
Subject: ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT THERAPY AND HIV
My name is Gordon Josephs, MD (H), practicing in Scottsdale,
Arizona. I would like to tell you about an HIV case that I
treated with a simple 2-bulb UVB device (I've since updated
to the 4-bulb PTX).
The patient was a 48 year old man who
had good insurance coverage and was able, therefore, to do
laboratory checks on his viral load and his T
lymphocytes at regular intervals. For several years he tried
orthodox and
many other therapies for his HIV. His viral loads (PCR RNA
Quant) went up
and down between 290,000 and 2,790 during the 3 years prior
to UVB
treatment. His records made clear that when his viral load
went down due
to one or another therapy, his T4 Helper cells always went
up in a
promising fashion.
The patient was given 5 weekly UVB treatments and his
blood tests were
immediately repeated. His viral load fell to 87 and three
months later,
without any treatment fell further to 36. Encouraged, he decided
to take
three more weekly treatments. For the next nine months he
took no
treatments but three viral load tests done at three month
intervals were
reported as below the detectable limits of the labs testing
device.
From the day of the first treatment to 9 months after the
last treatment,
his T helper cells continued to rise.
But one year after his last treatment, the viral load was
rising again
(1634) and his T Helper cells began to fall. Sadly, he lost
his job due to
industry layoffs and was lost to further follow-up.
My conclusions from this one case, however, are as follows
- UVB is powerfully effective against the HIV virus.
- UVB for HIV seems to cause excellent and lasting effects.
- After the initial treatment series, UVB done at occasional
intervals (such as every three or four months) would probably
keep the HIV virus at bay indefinitely.
As a homeopathic, naturopathic, and an osteopathic physician,
I know that a well documented record of one person is not
translatable into a fine study, but I also know that if I
throw a rock out of a window and it goes up instead of down,
I have seen something significant.
Best regards to FFLT and its supporters,
Gordon Josephs, MD (H)
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