Xuewu Liu, lacking medical training, is charging cancer patients $20,000 for an unproven AI-driven treatment involving chlorine dioxide injections. A patient reports adverse effects, claiming her tumor has grown faster since the procedure. Experts assert that Liu's actions may violate US regulations. He is working with a former pharmaceutical executive to introduce his treatment to the US, believing that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s appointment as health secretary could facilitate this process. The FDA's removal of warnings about chlorine dioxide emboldened support for such treatments, impacting public perception and acceptance.
Xuewu Liu, a Chinese inventor with no medical credentials, charges cancer patients $20,000 for access to an AI-driven treatment involving chlorine dioxide, a toxic bleach.
Experts claim Liu's marketing of the treatment may violate US regulations, especially as one patient reports her tumor has grown faster since treatment, fearing it spread her cancer.
Liu is collaborating with a Texas-based former pharmaceutical executive to introduce his treatment in the US, citing the potential support from Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s health secretary appointment.
Kennedy's movement promotes unproven treatments, and the FDA's recent removal of warnings about chlorine dioxide has encouraged its proponents, impacting Liu's treatment prospects.
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