A Second Opinion on Harry Hoxsey

Can a notorious folk-healer’s herbal tonic treat cancer?

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Larry Dossey, M.D.


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A recent study funded by the National Institutes of Health found noteworthy cases of survival among cancer patients using what is known as the Hoxsey herbal treatment. Named after charismatic folk healer Harry Hoxsey, the therapy had been widely used in this country until it was outlawed 40 years ago. Like many other such "unorthodox" cancer treatments, the Hoxsey method was condemned without being medically assessed.

The new report could pave the way for what Harry Hoxsey always wanted: a fair scientific test. The report also signals a reversal in organized medicine’s 100-year civil war against other methods of healing. Alternative therapies are now riding a crest of scientific validation, popular demand, and commercial promise. There is no question that conventional cancer therapies are effective in certain cases, but the face of cancer treatment could change dramatically if alternative therapies are accepted by mainstream medicine.

According to family legend, Hoxsey’s great-grandfather, a Quaker farmer in southern Illinois, devised the remedies after watching a horse cure itself of cancer by grazing on plants that weren’t part of its normal diet. Based on this "horse sense," he developed three formulas: an internal herbal tonic and two external salves. Hoxsey’s father was the first to try the remedies on people, reputedly with good results. Young Harry began assisting him from the age of 8, inheriting the formulas when his father died seven years later. On his deathbed, the elder Hoxsey made the boy promise he’d treat the poor for free, and treat all people without prejudice. He also prophetically warned against the "high priests of medicine" who would hound him mercilessly for taking money out of their pockets.

As late as 1900, American medicine embraced a variety of healing traditions. Doctors were poorly paid and held in low esteem until the rise of a medical-industrial complex fueled by surgery, radiation, drugs, and the new hospital system. The American Medical Association helped doctors consolidate their control over the health care system and targeted other practitioners as quacks.

Hoxsey’s fame spread quickly after the 1924 opening of his first Hoxsey Cancer Clinic in Taylorville, Illinois, but his father’s prophecy soon came true. After an alleged conflict with members of the AMA over the rights to his formulas, Hoxsey was dubbed the worst cancer quack of the century and eventually would be arrested more times than anyone in medical history.

Hoxsey fit the quack image perfectly. Brandishing his famed tonic bottle, this ex-coal miner with an eighth-grade education fulfilled the stereotype of the snake-oil salesman. Promoting a "secret remedy" reputedly discovered by a horse certainly didn’t win him any credibility.

An alliance of medical politicians and business interests systematically blocked Hoxsey from the scientific test that would have settled the dispute. After striking oil in Texas, Hoxsey poured money into expanding his network of clinics and financing endless court battles. By the mid-1950s, his Dallas-based operation was the world’s largest private cancer center, with 12,000 patients and clinics in 17 states.

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