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Ultraviolet blood irradiation treats a wide range of conditions; it somehow reactivates the body’s innate ability to regulate and heal itself

Natural light is a crucial nutrient many of us lack.

Ultraviolet blood irradiation treats a wide range of conditions; it somehow reactivates the body’s innate ability to regulate and heal itself

When ultraviolet (“UV”) light enters the bloodstream, it can unlock phenomenal health benefits.

In the 1930s, ultraviolet blood irradiation (“UVBI”) emerged as a revolutionary treatment. Hospitals across America adopted it, and it produced miraculous results for patients, demonstrating remarkable efficacy against a wide range of conditions (e.g., infections, autoimmunity, cardiovascular disease and pregnancy issues).

Unable to monopolise the therapy, the American Medical Association (“AMA”) published a flawed study that discredited UVBI, leading to its decline in the US. However, Russia and Germany continued to recognise its value, conducting decades of research proving UVBI’s utility for various challenging medical conditions.

In America, UVBI is primarily used by integrative practitioners to treat complex illnesses that do not respond to other therapies such as Lyme disease, chronic fatigue syndrome, spike protein injuries and chronic migraines.

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The Century of Evidence Putting Light Inside the Body Is a Miraculous Therapy

By A Midwestern Doctor as published by Dr. Joseph Mercola on 15 August 2024

In my writings, I have argued that we are often denied vital knowledge, treatments, and care to protect the interests of the medical-industrial complex. In my eyes, the story of ultraviolet blood irradiation provides one of the clearest examples of this corruption.

The Importance of Sunlight

Many believe that sunlight, especially its ultraviolet (“UV”) component, is dangerous. This view emerged from an abhorrent 1980s public relations campaign by dermatologists to promote highly lucrative skin cancer treatments.

In contrast, a 20-year study of 29,518 Swedish women found that those who avoided sunlight were 130% more likely to die than those who received regular sunlight and were also more likely to develop significant medical conditions, including cancer.1 Likewise, in the first part of this series, I highlighted the pivotal role of natural light in:

  • Cancer and infections
  • Circulation
  • Behavioural disorders
  • Animal health, fertility, and agricultural productivity
  • Regulating growth cycles and the circadian rhythm

Unfortunately, natural light is rarely found indoors (e.g., standard glass blocks it), and since the eyes are the primary site of light absorption, those who wear glasses or contacts (like those with darker skin) are particularly vulnerable to light deficiency illnesses. In turn, remarkable results have been obtained from putting light directly into the body.2

The History of Ultraviolet Blood Irradiation

One of the oldest “proven” therapies in medicine was having people bathe in sunlight. For example, it was one of the few things that actually had success in treating the 1918 influenza,3 and (prior to antibiotics), tuberculosis.4

Before long, the medical field realised sunlight’s ultraviolet component was a sterilising agent (along with UVC – a type of UV light that is blocked by the ozone layer), and a variety of sanitising UV devices were developed (e.g., most recently, exposing air to UV light was demonstrated to be an effective way to prevent covid-19 transmission).5

In 1927, Emmett Knott, not a doctor, experimented with sterilising blood using UV light to combat septicaemia. Initially unsuccessful, his approach involved irradiating the entire blood volume of infected dogs. A fortunate accident in 1928, where Knott under-dosed a dog, led to a dramatic recovery, demonstrating that a small amount of blood needed irradiation for the treatment to be effective.6

Knott’s first human trial in 1933 saved a woman dying from septicemia.7 He then refined his method and, starting in 1937, successfully promoted UVBI across the US. By the 1940s, doctors found UVBI highly effective against challenging conditions like sepsis, pneumonia, nephritis, asthma, polio, botulism, rheumatic fever and viral hepatitis.8

This was miraculous and by the early 1950s, UVBI was used in around 50 American hospitals.9 Doctors in 50 papers covering over 3,000 patients reported consistent but unbelievable results, even in severe infection cases where antibiotics failed.10

The literature of the time documented many notable cases such as a man with multiple severe conditions, including brain and lung clots, pneumonia and paralysis. UVBI led to his near-instant recovery, and he eventually regained his health completely. Likewise, prominent media outlets like The New York Times,11 Time Magazine,12 and The American Weekly13 featured articles on its success.

Market Monopolisation

At this point, the American Medical Association (“AMA”) got involved, and as they had done to many other promising therapies, attempted to extort Knott by offering to prove UVBI worked in return for the rights to it.14 Knott refused and the AMA conducted a biased study15 that was designed to fail. Despite its data saying otherwise, it concluded:

Hospitals, relying on the “authoritative” study’s misleading conclusion, abandoned UVBI in favour of antibiotics. Fortunately, UVBI found new life overseas (e.g., in Russia and Germany) as it offered a much more economical way to practice medicine.

Note: The suppression of UVBI mirrors the fate of other lifesaving therapies which were blacklisted through rigged clinical trials like intravenous (“IV”) vitamin C for sepsis, ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine for covid-19, and numerous promising cancer treatments (all of which I discussed further HERE).

Physiologic Effects of UVBI

Once ultraviolet light contacts the bloodstream, the following rapidly occurs:

Note: This normalisation helps explain why UVBI is highly effective against both infections and autoimmune conditions.

These effects, in turn, help to explain how UV can cause patients on the brink of death to stabilise rapidly, something almost never seen in critical care medicine (and which I’ve argued is a property of UVBI improving the systemic zeta potential – something we believe is critical for health).

Additionally, delayed effects (e.g., the body mounting an immune response against an infection or a general sense of wellness) are often seen days to weeks after a UVBI treatment.

The rapid systemic response to irradiating a small portion of the blood in turn suggests that blood is able to conduct light. This is supported by numerous observations such as the profound health effects of insufficient sunlight reaching the eyes.16 Mechanistically this conduction is possible due to the energy-transferring properties of haemoglobin.17

How Is Blood Irradiated?

Classically, UVBI involves removing a small amount of blood (40 to 60ml), diluting it, and then infusing it back into the body while passing it through UV light.

Note: One argument for blood conducting light is that externally illuminating blood connected to the circulation will create a systemic shift long before the small amount of irradiated blood can reach the IV and enter the circulation.

In the early 1980s, German and Russian researchers realised light could also be put into the body through a laser either applied externally through the skin, or internally through an illuminated catheter. Laser blood irradiation (“LBI”) has similar effects to extracorporeal UVBI,18 with LBI having a faster onset but typically requiring more treatments, while UVBI has stronger bactericidal, anti-inflammatory and circulatory effects.19

UVBI Research

UVBI researchers have identified over 200 journal articles on the use of UVBI20 and LBI published between 1934 and 2020. In almost all cases, an 80% to 100% success rate was seen with UVBI (with the lower rates typically correlating to the worst cases that were otherwise expected to be fatal).

In addition to efficacy, these studies have consistently found a complete absence of side effects from UVBI (and LBI). The existing evidence demonstrates UVBI’s efficacy for severe ailments such as:

Conclusion

This wide range of benefits hence suggests that UVBI is somehow able to reactivate the body’s innate ability to regulate and heal itself (e.g., by turning off the cell danger response or restoring blood circulation). UVBI’s therapeutic efficacy in turn goes hand in hand with so many benefits resulting from sufficient natural light exposure and the repeated observation that those with a deficiency of natural light had the best response to UVBI.

Fortunately, the remarkable results of UVBI have kept it in use across the world, and more and more people are becoming aware of its utility. For instance, one of the most controversial moments of Trump’s presidency was his asking about putting a disinfecting light inside the body to treat covid-19.52 While the media did all it could to portray this as Trump suggesting “we should inject ourselves with bleach,” many understood what was actually being discussed.

For example, both Joe Rogan and Jimmy Dore were fully aware of the remarkable properties of UV blood irradiation, its utility for conditions like covid-19, and the medical cartel’s routine suppression of competing therapies.

While covid-19 was an immense tragedy, the one blessing we had from it was that the abhorrent conduct we witnessed throughout the pandemic was so brazen that it woke the public up to their playbook. As the months go by, more and more are learning about the forgotten sides of medicine.

Author’s note: This is an abridged version of a longer article about UVBI which goes into greater detail on the mechanisms behind UVBI, summarises the vast body of published literature on UVBI (e.g., for other conditions such as cancer and mitigating the effects of chemotherapy) and provides resources for those interested in accessing the most effective forms of this therapy. That article and its additional references can be read HERE.

About the Author

A Midwestern Doctor is a pseudonym for a board-certified physician in the American Midwest.  He publishes articles on a Substack page titled ‘The Forgotten Side of Medicine’ which you can subscribe to and follow HERE.

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