Helminthic therapy documentary resources
The following documents are hosted on this site. Most are not readily available elsewhere.
Documents
- A Survey of Self-Treatment with Helminths: Practices and Outcomes (Used in the Cheng, et al, socio-medical study of 2015.)
- CDC Hookworm Diagnostic Algorithm (Shows "no treatment" recommended for light hookworm infections.)
Articles
- A New Approach to Therapy of Ulcerative Colitis and Crohn’s disease - Ovamed (now Tanawisa)
- An Interview with William Parker - Donna Beales
- Can parasites be good for you? - David Pritchard
- Could these parasitic worms be good for your health? - Cate Montana
- Herbert Smith and Helminthic Therapy - John Scott
- Lawrence Johnson and the chiggers - Moises Velasquez-Manoff
- Total Food Allergy/Intolerance - John Scott
- Why a parasite cleanse can make you worse - Karen Vaughan
Letters
- A response to "Could Worms Cure Coeliac Disease? With Immunology Researcher Dr Paul Giacomin" - John Scott
- Autoimmune disease and parasitic infections in Nigerians - B M Greenwood
- IgE, parasites, and allergy - J A Turton
- Not infection with parasitic worms, but rather colonization with therapeutic helminths - William Parker
- Patients self-treat with parasitic worms - Stephen Flowers and Michael Hopkins
Papers
- A prescription for clinical immunology: the pills are available and ready for testing. A review - Parker et al
- Association Between Parasite Infection and Immune Responses in Multiple Sclerosis - Correale and Farez
- Evolution of the hygiene hypothesis into biota alteration theory: What are the paradigms and where are the clinical applications? - Villeneuve et al
- Helminth Therapy - From the Parasite Perspective - Sobotková et al
- Intestinal worms eating neuropsychiatric disorders? Apparently so - Kou and Parker
- Mucosal and systemic immune modulation by Trichuris trichiura in a self-infected individual - Dige et al
- Overcoming Evolutionary Mismatch by Self-Treatment with Helminths: Current Practices and Experience - Cheng et al
- Policy and regulations in light of the human body as a ‘superorganism’ containing multiple, intertwined symbiotic relationships - Bono-Lunn et al
- Potential Transmission of Pathogens Between Human Hosts by the Hookworm, Necator Americanus - Calvert
- Practices and outcomes of self-treatment with helminths based on physicians observations - Liu et al
- Production of Hymenolepis diminuta in the Laboratory- An Old Research Tool with New Clinical Applications - Zhang et al
- Quantitative investigation of the crowding effect of Hymenolepis diminuta in Rattus norvegicus (Lab exercise in HDC culture) - Brant and Hanelt
- Reconstitution of the human biome as the most reasonable solution for epidemics of allergic and autoimmune diseases - Bilbo et al