He even published his findings, but since polio was ‘incurable’ nobody picked up on it enough to even challenge it with a study. He treated diphtheria, whooping cough, and tetanus, and in the middle of a polio epidemic in North Carolina he was considered to have “cured” 60 out of 60 cases of infantile polio. Jungeblut and Zwerner, Otani, Ormerod, and others, all came away impressed that his work was both accurate and therapeutic. His patient records showed amazing successes, witnessed by hospital personnel, while most outsiders (who refused to review his data) labeled him a quack. They actually have more than that, but getting them legitimately studied may have to wait until the fears over bacterial resistance put our backs hard against a wall with no place else to go.įred Klenner, MD, in Reidsville, NC, was using intravenous ascorbic acid (vitamin C) against viruses, serious bacteria and even toxins such as snakebites as early as the 1930’s. There are four natural anti-bacterial (and anti-viral) agents that have a lot of what many would call “anecdotal evidence” behind them.