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CANCER PATIENTS WHO OPT FOR ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES ARE TWICE AS LIKELY TO DIE
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The thirsty animal lover chugs down the frothy body waste while incorrectly claiming it can help cure cancer
A STOMACH-churning video shows a woman drinking a cup of her dog’s fresh urine while claiming it has cured her acne.
American animal lover Lynn Lew, whose face is caked in heavy make up during the clip, says that lapping up her mutt’s warm body waste had helped give her skin a natural glow.
In the disgusting footage, she also incorrectly claims that drinking canine body fluids can help cure cancer.
She said: “Many of you have asked me how I always look so good, how my makeup always looks so perfect, or how I always have this natural glow.”
The woman then holds a plastic cup under her dog as the hound cocks its leg against a tree and relieves itself.
After filling up the container with frothy pee, she downs the liquid and even licks the rim of the cup.
She adds: “Until I first drank my dog's pee, I was depressed, I was sad, and I had bad acne.
“Dog pee also has vitamin A in it, vitamin E in it, and it has 10 grams of calcium, and it's also proven to help cure cancer.”
Drinking human or animal body waste, known as urine therapy, was practised in ancient Rome, Greece and Egypt.
However, despite advocates claiming the practise has health properties, experts agree that drinking liquid the body has chosen to expel is potentially harmful.
There are many reasons people may opt to use alternative or natural therapies.
But there is little evidence to suggest they work.
All medical treatments, such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy for cancer, have to go through vigorous testing to prove they work before they are made available to patients.
Alternative therapy is not subject to the same testing.
The lack of regulation also means some alternative therapies could be harmful or cause unwanted side effects.
And choosing alternative therapies, or shunning treatment all together, can prove fatal.
Cancer patients who opt for alternative treatments over chemotherapy are twice as likely to die, according to a recent study from the Yale School of Medicine.
Many alternative treatments, such as homeopathy, are based on the idea the body can heal itself through exposure to highly diluted substances that cause an illness.
But July NHS officials launched a consultation to scrap homeopathic medicines saying they are a “misuse of scares funds”.
Alternative therapies can, however, be used alongside traditional medicine.
For example, many people find peppermint oil or ginger to be a successful remedy for nausea which is a nasty side effect of chemo.
Dr Sarah Jarvis, GP and clinical director of Patient.info , told The Sun Online there is "absolutely no evidence" that urine has health benefits.
"Urine is your body’s way of getting rid of unwanted waste products, including toxins and medicines," she said.
"It sends them out because your body doesn’t need it.
"Urine is a dog’s way of getting rid of unwanted body waste products too, and you have no idea what they’ve had their noses in.
"They could have been snuffling in pesticides or eating foods contaminated by drugs or hormones."
Joy McCarthy, a holistic nutritionist, told Allure that dog urine could contain toxins or even poisons such as herbicides used for treating gardens lawns.
She said: “Herbicides have been detected in dog's urine, likely from herbicide-treated lawns, antibiotics, and hormones, so I really don't know that it's the safest choice.”
The US army also advises troops to not drink their own urine in survival situations, even if they are dehydrated, due to the liquid potentially containing “harmful body waste.”
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Now Reading Haley Bennett On Her Powerful New Movie, Swallow
Warning: This story contains spoilers for Swallow , in theaters March 6.
This interview was originally published during the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival.
Every film festival has at least one movie that causes an audience member to faint. Sundance had V/H/S in 2012 , TIFF had Raw in 2017 . For the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival, that film was Swallow . According to Indiewire , a woman blacked out during a screening during one particularly fraught scene.
Having spent the film’s 94 minute run-time in various states of discomfort, I can empathize.
Carlo Mirabella-Davis’ feminist psychological horror film stars Haley Bennett (who also produced) as Hunter, a housewife who develops pica — an eating disorder that causes someone to crave non-food items — after learning that she’s pregnant. What starts with her loudly chewing ice during dinner with her in-laws quickly devolves into her ingesting increasingly physically harmful objects: a marble, a thimble, a paperclip, a thumbtack, a battery, a nail.
As I said, not for the faint of heart.
Still, the film’s shocking premise is counterbalanced by its quiet, almost ethereal vibe, a product of Kate Arizmendi's beautiful cinematography. In a way, the movie begins at the end of the traditional fairy tale: the beautiful blonde princess has married the handsome son of a businessman, and they’re poised to live happily ever after.
Bennett gives an arresting, calibrated performance, playing Hunter as a modern Stepford wife. Her days are spent waiting for husband Richie (Austin Stowell) to come home from work, decorating their palatial upstate New York home, and playing Candy Crush. Some days, her mother-in-law (Elizabeth Marvel) breaks up the monotony with a visit. But when Hunter discovers she’s pregnant, that placid, marble veneer starts to crack. Suddenly, the only thing that proves she still has some control over her body is the sensation of cold metal in her mouth.
As she tells a concerned Richie at one point in the film: “I wanted to, so I did it.”
On the eve of the film’s festival premiere, Refinery29 sat down with director Carlos Mirabella-Davis, Haley Bennett and Austin Stowell, to break down one of the festival’s most controversial and powerful films.
Refinery29: How did you come up with the premise for the movie?
Carlo Mirabella-Davis: “The film was inspired by my grandmother Edith, who was a home-maker in the 1950s in an unhappy marriage, and who developed rituals of control. Like obsessive hand washing. And she was institutionalized by her husband, and I always felt that she was being punished for her sensitivity, for not living up to the expectations of what society felt what a wife and mother should be. And it impacted our family a lot; I just want to make a film about that. And then I was also drawn to pica because I had seen a photograph somewhere of all the contents of someone’s stomach laid out. I have my own sort of OCD rituals and rituals of control, and so I wanted to make a film about someone who had these private rebellions against the status quo, and the patriarchy. “
Haley Bennett: “You should go see the film after dinner rather than before dinner.” [Laughs]
Watching the film, I felt that Hunter sees her pica as this secret that keeps her in control of her own body in the face of constant pressure to act a certain way — especially as a pregnant woman.
H.B.: “She got pregnant because she thought that's what she should do. She thought Oh, well this is the obvious next step, and it'll make everyone really happy, and they'll love me so much if I get pregnant and have a baby. And you don't think about the consequences of what it actually means to have another being inhabit your space especially if you're in an unhappy relationship.”
C.M.D.: “And that the family sees her as a vessel.”
Austin, your character Richie is so interesting, because he’s not really a bad guy. He’s just a man who’s been raised a certain way, and can’t get past that to empathize with his wife. What was it like to play that?
Austin Stowell: “For me, it was about his assumption of happiness — and not just his happiness, but others’ happiness. Richie wanted to have his cake and eat it too, and he saw Hunter as the side of him that he's not allowed to be: The artist, the creative. I think he believes that he is in love with her. It's just that his conceptions of love are quantitative instead of qualitative. He means really well; it’s just that it would never occur to him that he has to give something more.”
C.M.D.: “Richie's an interesting character to write. I thought a lot about Don Jr. in a way. The film's a lot about g
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