Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Erik Enby

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Erik Enby

Erik Enby medianewsvoicese201409ErikEnbypng

Erik enby cancer r svamp


Erik Ossian Hugo Enby (born in 1937) is a former Swedish medical doctor and specialist in the field of geriatrics who has become known for his controversial research on the cause of diseases.

Contents

Erik enby f redrag h llviken april 2014


Biography

Enby was born 12 May 1937 in Karlskrona, Blekinge County. His father was a sea-captain in the merchant navy, and his mother a graduate of the Royal College of Music. In his youth, Enby studied the Classics, natural-science subjects and music. In 1962, he began to study medicine in Heidelberg. In 1967, Enby returned to Sweden and continued his medical education. In 1973 he was authorized as a licensed physician by the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare, but his license was revoked in 2007.

From 1973 to 1974 Enby worked at a dermatology clinic in Gothenburg. In 1974 he began clinical studies, and he then became interested in alternative medicine. He gathered more knowledge and information in this field through specialist literature and on study tours in the United States and Germany.

In 1977 Enby opened a private medical practice to explore new forms of therapy. As it turned out, there were many opportunities to help patients who could not find a remedy for their illnesses in the established medical care, and his grew. In addition, he had his work at the University Clinic for Geriatrics at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Gothenburg, where he was in charge of a ward with various policlinical duties. In 1980 he became a specialist in the field of geriatrics including internal medicine. Eventually, he also became a general practitioner. He retired from Sahlgrenska University Hospital in 2004.

In 1979-1980 Enby became interested in the definitions of “health”, “illness” and “death”. His idea is that an illness must be a special condition arising in the tissues. These ideas made it impossible for him to participate whole-heartedly in the research work at the clinic where he was employed, because he found that the research he was interested in lay in a different direction. After a while he developed his method of research, and for decades spent all his leisure time working on his theory. He explains what he means by "health", "illness" and "death" with the aid of microbe-like formations he has found in patients' blood. His analyses are based on blood microscopy work carried out by the professor in zoology, Gunther Enderlein, towards the end of his life. In addition to his own research, Enby managed to continue his work at the hospital.

In 2007 Enby's medical license was revoked because of his pseudoscientificic methods of treating cancer patients, as it is illegal in Sweden to treat certain serious illnesses using methods that have no scientific basis.

Enby's research

Enby is primarily known for his work with blood and his theories about the origins of diseases. Since the late 1970s, Enby has carried out independent research on the nature of illness and the phenomenon of chronic illness. His research is based on the idea that illness is caused by pleomorphic microbiological growth. Could the symptom picture of different illnesses be traced back to a common denominator? He claims that his work confirms that most of the chronically ill have growing structures in blood and solid tissues, not described earlier in modern medical research. The medical community has not accepted his results since he has not been able to provide evidence for his case.

The Ethical Committee of the University of Gothenburg approved Enby's research in 1983, and he is officially allowed to take blood tests to go ahead with his research.

Works by Enby

  • Enby, Erik O. H. (1976). Gerontologie in Schweden in the periodical in Gerontologie in aller Welt, p. 69-73. ISSN 0044-281 X.
  • Enby, Erik O. H. (1983). Redovisning av fynd vid mikroskopering av levande blod fran tva patienter med Morbus Hodgkin och tre patienter med maligna tumorsjukdomar. (Report on the findings from the microscopic examination of fresh blood from two patients with Hodgkin’s Disease and three patients with malignant tumours). Goteborg. Edition C&L Forlag. ISBN 91-970480-1-1.
  • Enby, Erik O. H. (1984). Mikrobliknande bildningar i blod vid kroniska sjukdomar. (Microbe-like formations in the blood of chronically diseased individuals). Svensk Tidskrift for Biologisk Medicin, Swedish Journal of Biological Medicine. No 1. p 22-26.
  • Enby, Erik O. H. (1986). Some principles of Somatic Ecology. Journal of Alternative Medicine. Vol 4. No 3. p 7-9, 23.
  • Enby Erik O. H. (1989). Die Prasenz zyklischer mikrobischer Prozesse Nachgewiesen im Blut von chronisch erkrankten Patienten. (The presence of cyclical microbial processes indicated in the blood of patients with chronic diseases). Hoya. Semmelweis-Verlag.
  • Enby, Erik O. H., Gosch P. & Sheehan M. (1990).”Hidden Killers, The Revolutionary Medical Discoveries of Prof. Dr. G. Enderlein”, presented at the AIDS conference in San Francisco. Sheehan Communications, Saratoga, California.
  • Enby, Erik O. H., Gosch P. & Sheehan M. (1990). "Die revolutionaren medizinischen Entdeckungen von Professor Dr. Gunther Enderlein" Semmelweis-Institut, Hoya, Deutschland. ISBN 3-925524-08-8.
  • Enby, Erik O. H. (1994), The Decay Process As the Cause of Disease and Death and Microbial Formations in the Blood of Chronically Diseased in “Proceedings of the 1st World Congress on Cancer”. Independent Medical Research, Sydney, Australia. ISBN 0-646-25093-0.
  • 1994 A video of vital cancerous tissue was demonstrated at the World Congress in Gynecology & Obstetrics - FIGO - in Montreal, Canada.
  • Enby, Erik O. H.(1997). Blodforandringar hos kroniskt sjuka samt en teori om totala och partiella sarenheter. (Blood changes with chronic illness - and a theory about total and partial wound units). 2000-Talets Vetenskap. Nr 2. s 11-15.
  • References

    Erik Enby Wikipedia


    Similar Topics