André Gernez


André Gernez was a French non-conventional physician.
Gernez explained diseases such as cancer or neurodegenerations through a theory of mitosis and differentiation. He indeed considered that in tissue, only limited populations of cells are able to divide. He even compares the tissue to a colony of bees, in which only the Queen ensures reproduction. In contrast, most of the other bees are sterile workers.
In 1979, his work has been awarded by the World Union for Protection of Life.

Hypothesis

Gernez looked for volunteers to create a universal blood bank by immune adoption because he believed that for a few months after birth, it would be possible to prevent allergy and help organ transplant transforming blood type into group AB, and that organic foods and growth hormone regulation actively prevent against degenerative diseases. On 25 January 2006, Radio Canada announced that the Hospital for Sick Children of Toronto transplanted hearts to babies aged from 0 to 14 months successfully.
As tumor cell colony of less than cells remains indetectable for imagery, the yearly procedure proposed by Gernez for preventing cancer consists of three essential parts:
  1. apply a low calorie regime during a fasting period, as recommended by most religions;
  2. eat more fruits, vegetables, less meat, consume products rich in magnesium, vitamins C, E, selenium;
  3. kill tumor cells by giving for a few days an anti-mitotic, such as colchicine.
According to Gernez, the process would be simple, quick and free: one spray for immune adoption to use on children one to three months after birth. This technology would be practiced in the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and in Asia with barefoot doctors.
In 1989 Gernez created an association, Organic Union International, in favor of self-medication with doctors Jacques Lacaze and Jean-Pierre Willem.
He died aged 90 in 2014.

Awards