• Alan Wong

    Executive Producer

    Alan Wong oversees a team of video producers who create video content for BU's online editorial publications and social media channels. He has produced more than 300 videos for Boston University, shuffling through a number of countries in the process: Australia, Argentina, Peru, Ireland, China, and Cambodia. He has also bored audiences in Atlanta and Boston giving talks on video for higher ed. Profile

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There are 36 comments on Points of Departure: Coming Back from Cancer

  1. Bailey, I was so touched by your story! Congratulations on being cancer free. I appreciate it if you can share the food regimen you are on. You are an inspiration. Best, Afaf

  2. I believe the diet you are on is truly a method for healing. When my grandfather was dying a friend introduced him to a very similar diet (not sure if it’s the exact diet but it sure sounds like it). It really, really helped to bring him back from the brink. Unfortunately, it was a little too late when he started the diet. But, the turnaround he had and the time he did live I totally 100% attribute to the diet. I hope your studies and future are filled with success and good health.

  3. Thank you so so much!!

    Afaf, Gar Hildenbrand (researcher) has a website with a ton of information on the diet and immunotherapy – http://garhildenbrand.com/overview.html – also, his phone number is on there! He is a gem and would happily answer any/all questions that you may have!

    If you’d like to know more about the hospital I went to, CHIPSA, their website is http://chipsa.com/index.html.

    Or, feel free to send me an email at baileyo@bu.edu
    Thank you! :)

  4. Wow, Bailey. Thank you for sharing your story and your letter. Your strength and insight is something that everyone can learn from. Good luck finishing up here at BU, and keep taking advantage of all of life’s opportunities.

  5. Thank you BU Today for telling this story moving story of courage and resilience, and thank you Bailey for having the courage to read your letter to all of us. You are a true survivor and I wish you well in the path you choose after graduation. You clearly have the skills to do great things.

  6. Bailey O’Brien’s recovery is excellent news – whatever it was or is that lead to it. Independent of this awe-inspiring and newsworthy article I am a little concerned that people may overgeneralize the insinuated successful treatment with “alternative medicine” – especially in a newsletter of a renown university that takes pride in its commitment to science and knowledge.

    I am fully aware that I sound like a downer or hypercritical but as a BU alumnus and as someone who has pledged his career to better healthcare I cringe when questionable therapies and medications (of all sorts) get touted as a miracle cure. To the best of my knowledge there is little or no evidence that the Gerson diet has any impact on health or specifically cancer. Not saying that it doesn’t – just that there are no viable studies as of yet and evidence has been mostly anecdotal.

    I can appreciate that people in dire situations are willing to try everything. I would probably as well. But there is a risk that people in other circumstances who would benefit from more mainstream and proven therapies might lose time on trying “alternatives” first. I’ve seen this more than once and articles like this may exacerbate this common problem.

    Again, I’m trying to put things into perspective and I couldn’t be happier for Ms. O’Brien’s win over this dreaded disease.

    1. Fantastic story, congratulations on your success!

      As for the concerns of the concerned alum, I have also spent years in the healthcare industry, and it’s been long enough to know that some things will never been proven enough to be legitimate treatments in the US, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t things that do indeed work and are worth trying when you are out of options. I applaud Bailey and her family for staying strong and exhausting every single option when the recommended solutions failed.

  7. Bailey O’Brien is the most extraordinary and courageous person I’ve had the privilege and pleasure to know. I too, like the “concerned alum” wrote, am concerned about alternative treatments. However, as a US trained and practiced health care practioner and someone who now devotes her work to analyzing safety data for clinical trials in a leading pharmaceutical company I was acutely aware of what Bailey’s “alternatives” were in our present treatment of oncology. As a stage IV unresectable melanoma patient with metastasis the options available to her were, as she said, none. I congratulate her parents for the courage they demonstrated in seeking out something for their daughter. This year that she has fought valiantly for is a gift to every person who has the pleasure of sharing in her life. I wish her many more years.

  8. Hi Bailey,

    Thank you so much for sharing your story. I am so happy that you are doing so well! Your career path will allow you to help many, many people, and I’m sure it will be very rewarding. I agree with you that not many people appreciate the importance of nutrition, and think that food is just food. I am glad your story will help to change people’s minds about the foods that they eat, and the larger reality of the problems with our food supply and the way we approach nutrition in this country. Thank you again!

  9. Bailey,
    Your story is one of hope and belief. Our bodies are capable of so much if we fuel them I the right ways. Be well Bailey. I hope that you can continue to stay well and inspire others with your story! Enjoy ever day!

  10. Bailey followed mainstream and was on proven therapies. Having gone the extra mile to help her condition is something she should be praised for. The food regimen she was on is a proven therapy “Let thy Food be thy Medicine and thy Medicine be thy Food.” Hippocrates. The Hippocratic Oath is one of the oldest binding documents in history. Let’s all embrace what nature provides! Namaste…

  11. Bailey, the diet you’re on, sounds like it’s a raw vegan diet, is this accurate? I have another friend who is also on a vegan diet to help curb her own cancer. Hmm I do wish more people knew about risk of cancer and how that ties into veganism. You’re awesome Bailey and it’s good to hear such a positive story (especially right in the midst of exams, ha).

  12. Congrats Bailey!

    I am also in the health care field and I am aware of CHIPSA’s program.

    What’s important to clarify here is that the main part of the program is actually the administration of “Colie’s toxins”, a multiple-dose vaccine of inactivated bacteria. The diet is simply a minor part of the program that helps the patient cleanse himself/herself during and after the administration of the toxins.

  13. Wow.. I’m astonished by this story and so relieved by the good news. Congratulations, and all the best after graduation. Very inspiring!

  14. What a courageous young woman. So happy that you had such good results with your treatment. But, I would definitely say that your attitude toward life and overcoming obstacles was also most beneficial. It is wonderful to read these stories from brave young people such as yourself. Gives great hope for the future. Our world will be in good hands.

  15. I just wanted to say – Bailey, you truly have a remarkable story but the thing I love most is that when someone talks to you, it’s not about the past but about the future. You serve as an inspiration to all of us, so thank you so much for that.

  16. Great story – thanks for sharing. The verifiable truth…… traditional therapy does not work for most cancers. The success rates of Chemo radiation and Immunotherapy are abysmal. I do not believe there is a single documented case of chemotherapy or radiation curing any stage IV cancer (other than testicular and some lymphomas). If there was a possible cure with traditional medicine, we would not have such a fear of cancer. We must put pressure on our government and insurance companies to cover these “alternative” therapies. Billions of dollars a year spent on cancer research that result in more useless pharmaceuticals and after 60 years since America announced “The War on Cancer” we are not any closer to the cure. These resources should be invested in clinically proven methods, that save lives. Cancer patients are forced to seek out alternatives after they have exhausted their resources ( financial, physical and emotional) on useless treatments. Oncologist quote statistics that are misleading and the very least deceptive. If they provided the actual data, no one would agree to such torcher. Alternative treatment is the answer. These harmful alternative practitioners (quakes) are saving lives.

  17. I am so happy for you, bailey. Will you please share the diet with me? My Son has also suffered with cancer. He can benefit from what has worked for you. Thank you so much.

  18. Dear Bailey, Great letter! You really are a natural in front of a camera. It is hard for me to express how happy I am for you. Your Aunt Linda has been keeping us all up-to-date on your health and college career, and you have become a daughter to us all at Rivesville School. My family and I have prayed diligently for you and will continue to do so. To God be the glory, and to you a great life!

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