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China Offers Unproven Medical Treatments

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Paralyzed after a diving accident almost a year ago, 15-year-old Celine Lyon receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specialize in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Paralyzed after a diving accident almost a year ago, 15-year-old Celine Lyon receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specialize in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan - AP)
Kazakstan's Serik Ananchiev, 27, right receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specialize in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Kazakstan's Serik Ananchiev, 27, right receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specialize in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan - AP)
Kazakstan's Serik Ananchiev, 27, left paralysed in a car accident and Zhao Jionghao, 2 at right receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specializes in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Kazakstan's Serik Ananchiev, 27, left paralysed in a car accident and Zhao Jionghao, 2 at right receiving treatment at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specializes in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan - AP)
Angela Im at right looks over as her husband, William T. Gillespie , left talks about her treatment to repair damage to her brain stem caused initially by lupus at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specializes in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
Angela Im at right looks over as her husband, William T. Gillespie , left talks about her treatment to repair damage to her brain stem caused initially by lupus at the Tiantan Puhua Hospital in Beijing, China, Thursday, May 24, 2007. Tiantan Puhua, a joint venture between Asia's largest neurological hospital and American Pacific Medical Group, specializes in using stem cells injections to treat diseases ranging from stroke and spinal cord injuries to cerebral palsy and ataxia. Since opening its treatment to foreigners last year, the hospital has been attracting increasing interest from overseas patients, the latest breed of medical tourists.(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan) (Ng Han Guan - AP)
Chris Hrabik, 21, works on his customized 1993 Nissan 240SX as his wheelchair sits near by Thursday, Aug. 2, 2007, in Oak Ridge, Mo. More than a year after his return from China where he received stem cell therapy, Hrabik says he has nearly complete use of his left hand and improvement in the right, reversing paralysis caused by a car accident near his 18th birthday. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)
Chris Hrabik, 21, works on his customized 1993 Nissan 240SX as his wheelchair sits near by Thursday, Aug. 2, 2007, in Oak Ridge, Mo. More than a year after his return from China where he received stem cell therapy, Hrabik says he has nearly complete use of his left hand and improvement in the right, reversing paralysis caused by a car accident near his 18th birthday. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson) (Jeff Roberson - AP)
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By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN and ALAN SCHER ZAGIER
The Associated Press
Saturday, January 5, 2008; 1:11 PM

BEIJING -- They're paralyzed from diving accidents and car crashes, disabled by Parkinson's, or blind. With few options available at home in America, they search the Internet for experimental treatments _ and often land on Web sites promoting stem cell treatments in China.

They mortgage their houses and their hometowns hold fundraisers as they scrape together the tens of thousands of dollars needed for travel and the hope for a miracle cure.

A number of these medical tourists claim some success when they return home:

Jim Savage, a Houston man with paralysis from a spinal cord injury, says he can move his right arm. Penny Thomas of Hawaii says her Parkinson's tremors are mostly gone. The parents of 6-year-old Rylea Barlett of Missouri, born with an optical defect, say she can see.

But documentation is mostly lacking, and Western doctors warn that patients are serving as guinea pigs in a country that isn't doing the rigorous lab and human tests that are needed to prove a treatment is safe and effective.

Noting the lack of evidence, three Western doctors, undertook their own limited study. It involved seven patients with spinal cord injuries who chose to get fetal brain tissue injections at one hospital in China. The study reported "no clinically useful improvements" _ even though most patients believed they were better. Five developed complications such as meningitis.

Experts in the West have theories about why some people think they've improved when the evidence is thin. Some are often getting intensive physical therapy, along with the mysterious injections; the placebo effect may also be a factor.

John Steeves, a professor at the University of British Columbia who heads an international group that monitors spinal cord treatments, has another theory. Some patients may be influenced by the amount of money they paid and the help they got from those who donated or helped raise money.

"Needless to say, when they come back, what are they going to report to their friends and neighbors? That it didn't work?" said Steeves. "Nobody wants to hear that."

He and other experts have written a booklet advising patients who are considering such treatments.

Western doctors discourage their patients from seeking such treatments. They note that it's impossible to gauge the safety and effectiveness of the treatments, or even know what's in the injections put into brains and spinal cords.

Patients and their families say they accept those risks. They simply don't have time to wait for more conclusive evidence. For many, the trip to China is a journey of hope.


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