|
Canada-0-Associations कंपनी निर्देशिकाएँ
|
कंपनी समाचार :
- What can we learn from Steve Jobs about complementary and . . .
Jobs was one of two founders of Apple computers and is credited for revolutionizing personal computing At the time of his diagnosis in 2003, Jobs did what most cancer patients do: he made a decision on how to approach his treatment based on the best evidence available to him at the time
- Steve Jobs Regretted Delaying Cancer Surgery 9 Months . . .
Oct 20, 2011 #151; -- Steve Jobs, the visionary Apple co-founder who died earlier this month at 56, admitted to biographer Walter Isaacson that for nine months he refused to undergo surgery for
- Why Steve Jobs Refused Surgery That Could Have Saved Him . . .
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs delayed potentially life-saving treatment for pancreatic cancer for nine months and hid the seriousness of his condition from those around him, biographer Walter
- “And one more thing” about Steve Jobs’ battle with cancer
Isaacson contrasts the fragmented approach to Jobs’ care at Stanford to what is described as a far more integrated approach at Methodist Hospital in Memphis, where Jobs underwent his transplant and where Dr James Eason was portrayed as having “managed Steve and forced him to do things…that were good for him ”
- Steve Jobs Cancer Journey - TIME
Steve Jobs, who died Oct 5, was no different, though he tried one thing most people don’t–having his entire genome and that of his cancer decoded This can expose the tumor’s genetic
- Alternative Medicine The Death of Steve Jobs - Psychology Today
Despite pleading from his distressed family, friends and physicians, Steve chose to delay surgery and chemotherapy for 9 months When dealing with aggressive cancers, a delay of this magnitude can
- Did Alternative Medicine Kill Steve Jobs? - Live Science
After Steve Jobs was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer in 2003, he allegedly delayed surgery to remove the tumor — the recommended treatment — for nine months During that
- Did Steve Jobs Get Good Cancer Treatment? - Ask Dr. Weil
I, too, have read that Steve Jobs postponed recommended surgery and conventional treatment for his cancer Jobs had a neuroendocrine tumor, a relatively rare type of pancreatic cancer, sometimes curable by early surgery (it is not as deadly or aggressive as the most common form of pancreatic cancer)
|
|