Holistic Breast Cancer Treatments

Breast Cancer is a very stressful diagnosis and your integrative cancer treatment team understands this. We work with you to design a customized holistic plan to ensure you have the most effective alternative treatments for your specific cancer.

Hope City Center’s approach to breast cancer is integrative in that it not only targets cancer itself, but it also addresses the many underlying reasons why people get cancer. It is based on decades of research as to what causes cancer, what propagates cancer, and what prevents the body’s ability to destroy cancer. Our program addresses each one of these areas and provides non-toxic therapies that can help you eliminate your cancer.

Early & Advanced Detection of Breast Cancer

Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer in the United States, with about 235,000 diagnosed in 2014, according to the National Cancer Institute.[i] Typically, conventional doctors will recommend that women do a yearly mammogram after age 35, which is an x-ray exam of the breast that’s used to detect cancer.

Breast cancer develops from a cancerous cell that presents in the lining of a duct or lobule in one of the breasts. A malignant tumor is a group of cancer cells that can grow into surrounding tissues or spread to distant areas of the body.

A good way to find out whether you are really at risk for breast cancer or already have it is through thermography testing, which is an excellent alternative to mammograms. Thermography uses infrared imaging technology to detect and measure heat and vascular patterns within the breast that can indicate cancer. Good thermography devices, if used properly, can detect 86% of non-palpable breast cancers (breast cancers that you can’t see or feel yet).

As well, thermography can detect abnormal findings in the breast, up to ten years before a cancerous tumor can be detected on a mammogram. It can also be used to track your progress on a treatment regimen and is completely safe, non-contact, pain and radiation-free.

[i] “Common Cancer Types.” National Cancer Institute. Accessed Nov. 20, 2014: https://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/commoncancers