Ryke Geerd Hamer

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Ryke Geerd Hamer (born May 17, 1935 in Mettmann ; † July 2, 2017 in Sandefjord , Norway ) was a German doctor . Since 1981 he has been promoting the medically ineffective treatment method he invented, which is also associated with considerable risks and dangers, Germanic New Medicine (GNM, also known as "Germanic Medicine" , formerly "New Medicine" ).

Hamer's German license to practice medicine was revoked on April 8, 1986 . He has been detained several times in Germany and France for continuing illegal practice and fraud . Several arrest warrants were pending against him. By 1995, more than 80 deaths of patients treated by Hamer had been investigated by the authorities in Germany and Austria . In 1995, the case of Olivia Pilhar, who was six at the time, caused a stir. Her parents refused to treat cancer in favor of Hamer's methods. Only after the parental rights were withdrawn and after fleeing to Spain could the six-year-old be successfully cured with a recognized medical procedure.

In connection with his teaching, Hamer also represented anti-Semitic positions, which he expressed in the context of conspiracy theories . The Society for the Scientific Investigation of Para Sciences awarded him on 11 October 2016 the abusive price The Golden Brett vorm head .

biography

Ryke Geerd Hamer was born on May 17, 1935 in Mettmann . According to his own account, he grew up in Friesland and graduated from high school in Krefeld in 1953 . In 1953 he began studying human medicine and Protestant theology at the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen ; In 1957 he passed his master's degree in Protestant theology in Erlangen . The medical approbation he received on 10 April 1962. In December 1963 he was with the work "studies of the influence of Adaptinols the dark adaptation of the healthy eye" doctorate . In 1972 he passed the specialist examination to become an internist . He had four children with his wife Sigrid Hamer, a doctor. One of them, the later photo model Birgit Hamer , was the German candidate for Miss Universe in 1976 . Between 1967 and 1976 Sigrid and Geerd Hamer practiced together for the most part in the Heidelberg area. Due to irregularities in the billing of benefits, Hamer in 1976 and his wife in 1978 waived their medical approval . Hamer wanted to market a bone saw he had invented and a scalpel through the Kienzle company, which he had patented worldwide; however, the scalpel was found to be inferior to conventional surgical instruments and caused unnecessary wounds.

Hamer died of a stroke in Norway on July 2, 2017, at the age of 82.

Development of the Germanic New Medicine

In December 1978 Hamer's son Dirk died at the age of 19 after being seriously injured in the groin four months earlier while on holiday in Corsica . It had been handed in as a result of an alleged boat theft, with the sleeping and uninvolved Dirk Hamer being hit. The proceedings of this evening were later only insufficiently clarified in court. The alleged shooter, Viktor Emanuel von Savoyen , was acquitted in the first trial, among other things because, against the advice of the treating doctors, Hamer had his son transferred to the Heidelberg University Hospital in Germany in a critical condition , so that death was no longer flawless attributed solely to the gunshot wound. Savoy was later sentenced to a suspended sentence for illegal possession of weapons. Extrajudicial claims for pain and suffering in the millions almost led to an agreement in September 1978, but were broken off because Hamer exerted pressure with alleged statements made by his daughter, who was sleeping at the time of the crime. The Savoy family transferred 200,000 DM to cover hospital costs.

A few months later, Hamer developed testicular cancer . At his own request, Hamer had this tumor surgically removed. In retrospect, Hamer claimed that he would not have ordered the surgical removal if he had already had his knowledge at the time. As a result, he developed a theory about the development of cancer, which, as he claimed, was repeatedly confirmed in dreams by his late son Dirk. In October 1981, Hamer submitted the concepts developed in this way to the University of Tübingen as a habilitation thesis entitled “The Hamer Syndrome and the Iron Rule of Cancer” . The application for a habilitation was rejected after assessment due to scientific deficiencies in the form and methodology of the work. Hamer tried unsuccessfully to obtain a new review of his habilitation thesis with legal means. The lawsuit was dismissed in June 2010. Hamer had no experience or training as an oncologist .

Hamer soon generalized his theories about cancer development to all diseases. Until the withdrawal of his license to practice medicine he treated in the following years without insurance approved at different locations in Germany and Austria mainly cancer patients. To this end, he founded various private clinics ("Dammersmoor", "Rosenhof"), some of which were illegal because they were not approved. In one of these clinics, according to Stern research, only 7 out of 50 patients survived after one year of “therapy”, and none of the survivors were healthy. Hamer previously claimed at a non-medical practitioner congress in Mainz that 7 of the 50 patients treated had died of “complications during recovery”.

Withdrawal of license to practice medicine, convictions and imprisonment

Hamer's license as a doctor was withdrawn in 1986. The Koblenz Administrative Court held in its judgment of July 19, 1989 that Hamer had become incapable of practicing the medical profession because of a weakness of his mental powers, because of his unreliability and because of his psychopathological personality structure as well as because of his lack of insight. Even so, Hamer continued to practice illegally. In 1992 he was sentenced to six months probation in Cologne after a young man's leg had to be amputated after mishandling. The sentence was later reduced to four months.

In 1997, Hamer was arrested again in Cologne and sentenced to 19 months imprisonment for failure to provide assistance and for violating the Heilpraktikergesetz (Heilpraktikergesetz) , of which he served 12 in the prison in Cologne-Ossendorf . The starting point of the indictment were complaints from relatives after the death of three cancer patients who had been treated according to the new medicine.

From 1990 Hamer had rented rooms in Burgau Castle from the owner, the municipality of Burgau (Styria) , and set up a center for new medicine , which was officially closed in 1995.

Hamer relocated his activities to France and Spain in the 1990s. From September 2004 until his early release in February 2006, Hamer served a three-year prison sentence in France. He had previously been convicted there in absentia for fraud and illegal medical practice and arrested in Spain on the basis of a European arrest warrant and extradited to France.

In Austria, where the Olivia Pilhar case in particular attracted attention, there was an arrest warrant against him. There was also an arrest warrant in Germany, which he evaded by fleeing abroad ( Norway ). In Europe, many deaths from the GNM are now known to the courts; by 1995 alone, over 80 deaths of patients treated by Hamer were investigated by the authorities in Germany and Austria. The medical journalist Krista Federspiel assumes that around 500 people died as a result of the "treatment" of Hamer.

Hamer had been in Norway since 2007. He appeared there as the "Rector" of the "Universitet Sandefjord", a sham university under whose name he ran a small publishing house. His application to be approved in Norway was rejected by the court in Sandefjord in April 2010 .

Ryke Geerd Hamer tried again to regain his license to practice in court. However, this was rejected in February 2017.

Germanic New Medicine

Hamer claimed that the “New Medicine” he discovered knew the causes of every so-called disease and also included therapy. It is based on five empirically found "biological laws of nature" , the so-called "iron rules" , which definitely apply to diseases in humans, animals and plants. He claimed that this was a strict natural science. Hamer's teachings do not meet scientific standards and have not found any professional recognition.

According to Hamer, the trigger of every so-called disease is always a biological conflict , a shock experience that Hamer referred to as DHS (Dirk Hamer Syndrome) . Hamer's own shock after the accidental death of his son Dirk, which Hamer saw as the reason for his later testicular cancer , gave it its name. Hamer postulated the possibility of a diagnosis of this syndrome through circular Hamer foci in the brain using computed tomography .

So-called cancer diseases are in truth sensible special biological programs (“SBS”) and in themselves are already part of the natural healing process that begins after the shocking experience. This healing process - in which bacteria, viruses and fungi are also involved - should only be supported by medication or surgery in exceptional cases. In the treatment, so claimed Hamer, the most important thing is common sense, namely to explain the connections of the "Germanic New Medicine" to the patient and to take away the fear of the disease, and finally to resolve or resolve the conflict Experience . In cancer, for example, this is the prerequisite for natural healing.

Cure promises made by Hamer and his supporters for up to 95% of the cases of so-called cancer diseases have led cancer patients and their relatives who have been influenced to believe in the Germanic New Medicine and, in some cases, categorically reject treatments within the framework of conventional medicine. Around Hamer, a following has formed in various countries, which disseminates the teaching of the GNM intensively in lectures, round tables and on the Internet on various homepages and discussion forums.

Hamer was also one of the AIDS deniers . For him, an AIDS patient had the same symptoms as a “ smegma allergic person” after a “smegma trauma”. Caries was, according to Hamer's theories, a conflict of “not being able to bite” that arises because schoolchildren were intimidated by foreign classmates, and diabetes in left-handed women was the result of a sexual conflict .

The Olivia Pilhar case

Hamer caused a pan-European sensation in the media in 1995 with the fall of the then six-year-old Olivia Pilhar. On May 18, she was diagnosed with Wilms' tumor in the early stages at the State Hospital in Wiener Neustadt . In 90% of the affected patients, this can be cured in the long term with conventional medicine. Olivia was given a 95% chance of recovery. The Pilhars belonged to the Fiat Lux movement, whose founder Erika Hedwig Bertschinger-Eicke referred them to Hamer. Hamer gave the girl's parents hope for a cure through his so-called GNM. The parents therefore refused treatment with chemotherapy and surgery, and their custody was withdrawn. In order to avoid access by the court, they fled with their daughter via Germany and Switzerland to Málaga , the escape was made possible by four Fiat-Lux sect supporters. Hamer presented the painful girl to the press, which turned public opinion against Hamer. Only after negotiations with the parents did they return to Austria 72 days later. Here, the tumor, which had now grown to several kilograms and had grown to the size of a football, was removed from the girl against the will of her parents after the child's custody was withdrawn and successfully treated with radiochemotherapy in the City of Vienna General Hospital . In 1997 the parents were sentenced to eight months suspended prison sentence for negligent bodily harm. Olivia is now considered cured. Hamer himself evaded prosecution in Austria by fleeing to Spain .

In retrospect, various authors (in particular the medical journalist Krista Federspiel ) criticized all those involved; they would have used the case to advance their respective interests and views. The media, in particular, had made profit from the disease by publishing sensational reports and offered Hamer's theories an uncritical platform.

Olivia's father Helmut Pilhar, who is referred to as “Jünger Hamers” by his wife Erika, now markets the GNM full-time and thus makes a living for himself and his family.

A similar case also occurred in 2009/2010 when the parents of a twelve-year-old refused to have their daughter undergo further chemotherapy and turned to Hamer. Due to the delay in therapy, the initially limited cancer metastasized . Hamer denied the presence of metastases and stated in a “final report” on November 8, 2009 that the child was “almost healthy”, that he “really couldn't find any reason why the girl could die”. The girl passed away six weeks later. Hamer then speculated, referring to his conspiracy theories , that it could not be ruled out that the girl and another deceased patient "had a chip implanted unnoticed during his treatment, so that they could both be switched off precisely".

In the same year, a four-year-old girl with diabetes died , whose parents, socialized in right-wing extremist circles ( Artgemeinschaft - Germanic Faith Community, or Wiking Youth ), relying on Hamer's teachings, had neglected to give their daughter medical treatment. The parents were later sentenced to suspended sentences for failure to provide assistance.

Medical assessments

The Germanic New Medicine is in contradiction to the recognized medical knowledge. Hamer's carcinogenesis theory is wrong from a scientific point of view.

The cancer information service of the German Cancer Research Center , the German Cancer Society , the Swiss Study Group for Complementary and Alternative Methods in Cancer, the Bavarian Cancer Society, other scientists as well as medical associations and consumer centers contradict Hamer's claims. They emphasize the total ineffectiveness of his methods, which at best would amount to irresponsible cancer therapy by doing nothing and otherwise be associated with high avoidable risks. The Swiss Study Group for Complementary and Alternative Methods in Cancer (SKAK) also sees no signs of effectiveness of Hamers methods and advises against treatment.

There is no proof of effectiveness. Experts advise against GNM. The Hamer Herd used by radiologists as ring artifacts identified. The case descriptions presented by Hamer and his followers cannot be used from a scientific point of view due to the lack of data. The avoidance of effective conventional treatment methods required by GNM and the false safety that is suggested to patients have negative consequences. The recommendation to avoid painkillers at all has been sharply criticized because it means unnecessary suffering for many cancer patients.

A psycho-oncological study by Manfred Heim to investigate spontaneous remissions lists the GNM as one of the “subjective healing theories” reported by patients. 4 of 63 patients attributed a perceived spontaneous remission to the GNM, less than, for example, belief in God , diets or spiritual healing . According to the study, these subjective theories were not related to conventional medical treatment, actual treatment success or even the confirmed existence of cancer.

Contrary to the assertion widespread by Hamer's supporters that the practice of GNM is prohibited, this is not the case; the doctor's freedom of therapy also includes the use of GNM. Since the Germanic New Medicine contradicts the recognized medical knowledge, this can have legal and general legal consequences for practitioners. Doctors who use this method are threatened with charges of bodily harm due to failure to provide assistance if they discontinue conventional treatment or not begin, and with the withdrawal of their license to practice medicine due to gross malpractice, violation of medical due diligence and willful mishandling.

pendant

Because of its anti-Semitism, pseudomedicine is particularly widespread in the right-wing extremist scene. Among the supporters of Germanic New Medicine is u. a. Peter Fitzek , a self-proclaimed King of Germany . There were also several followers in the micronation of the Principality of Germania .

The French doctor Claude Sabbah developed, based on Hamer's GNM, a concept of "total biology" which postulates traumatic experiences and conflicts as the cause of all diseases and derives appropriate treatments. After a patient he had treated died, Sabbah was sentenced at the end of 2015 to a two-year prison term and a EUR 30,000 fine for " fraudulent labeling" (French: publicité mensongère ).

Anti-semitism and conspiracy theories

Since his arrest, Hamer saw himself being persecuted by what he called “Jewish orthodox medicine”. He claimed that "Jewish lodges" were influencing professors, journalists and lawyers to push through an "unprecedented campaign to suppress knowledge" of "stupid old school medicine" against Hamer's GNM. This campaign is about "the mad struggle of the Talmud - Zionists to want to kill all non-Jews". Germanic medicine, on the other hand, has been allowed only for Jewish patients since 1981 by a decision by " Chief Rabbi " Karol Wojtyla and " Chabad -Messias" Schneerson .

As is well known, the Jewish religion divides everything into benign and malignant, so also in the so-called Jewish medicine . We Gentiles are forced to continue to practice Jewish medicine. [...] 15 million of your fellow citizens from your people have been killed in the last 20 years [by these] [...]. "

- Hamer

Hamer's anti-Semitic conspiracy theories also included his assumption that the vast majority of oncologists in Germany are Jews and that “in Germany no Jew gets chemo” (chemotherapy). In Hamer's opinion, the cannulas during chemotherapy are used to implant “chips” that are provided with “poison chambers” that can be triggered by satellite in order to kill patients in a targeted manner.

These chips are inserted into the front of the cannula. The cannula has a diameter of 0.3 millimeters and you can insert a chip there, of any length, a millimeter or two, depending on the situation. And then he has poison chambers and a patent has even been applied for and they can then be triggered by satellite at will. And then he's dead. "

- Hamer

The vaccination campaign against the H1N1 2009/10 pandemic (“swine flu”) was also used to mark people with chips. In some of his publications, Hamer referred to the “Chief Rabiner Dr. Esra Götz ”, which confirms his theories. It is the account title presumption and sedition sentenced Iwan Götz from the environment of a so-called commissioners Reich government . Based on the conspiracy-theoretical arguments of the Reich Citizens' Movement, Hamer considered the Federal Republic of Germany to be an "allied occupation area" that had no valid constitution or justice. The courts are "companies" whose owners are "lodge masters" who (according to the "lodge constitution") must always belong to the Jewish religion. In 2006 he expressed his willingness to run for president of a future German Reich, and in 2009 presented a draft constitution for a new state of Germania, which should have its own calendar (13 months of 28 days per year) and a health system based on the GNM .

Fonts (self-published)

  • My student girl: the urarchaic magic melody. Amici di Dirk, 2013.
  • Abstract of the New Medicine. 3. Edition. Amici di Dirk - Ediciones de la Nueva Medicina SL, Fuengirola, España 2000, ISBN 84-930091-8-0 .
  • Legacy of a New Medicine Volume 1. 1. Edition. Amici di Dirk Verlagsgesellschaft, 1987, ISBN 3-926755-00-8 .
  • One against all . Amici di Dirk, ISBN 978-84-96127-15-9 .

Awards

  • In 2016 Ryke Geerd Hamer received the negative award Das Goldene Brett for the greatest unscientific humbug of the past twelve months

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Michael Wosatka: " Faith Healer" Ryke Geerd Hamer is dead . In: The standard online . July 4, 2017. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  2. a b c German Cancer Society e. V. - Statement on "Germanic New Medicine" (GNM) ( Memento of the original from February 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (last accessed in February 2010)  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.krebsgesellschaft-mv.de
  3. ^ A b c Swiss Cancer League: Hamers "New Medicine". ( Memento of July 27, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 351 kB)
  4. Koblenz District Court , file number 6B54 / 86 and 9K / 215/87
  5. ↑ The 2016 Golden Board goes to Ryke Geerd Hamer. In: derstandard.at . October 16, 2016, accessed July 6, 2017.
  6. Satire Prize for Doctor Charlatan. In: Spiegel online . October 12, 2016, accessed July 6, 2017.
  7. Hamer: Short version of the new medicine. 2000, p. 189.
  8. Data from the court order of the OVG Koblenz from December 21, 1990, Hamer's own information is dated to 1961 in a discrepancy.
  9. a b c d Teja Fiedler, Cordt Schnippen: "Cancer Doctor" Dr. Geerd Hamer - corpses pave his way . Ed .: Stern . No. 48 , November 24, 1983, pp. 36 .
  10. Dennis Kogel: Probably the most famous German "miracle healer" is dead. In: Vice. July 5, 2017, accessed November 21, 2019 .
  11. a b Teja Fiedler, Cordt Schnippen: "Cancer Doctor" Dr. Geerd Hamer - corpses pave his way . Ed .: Stern . No. 48 , November 24, 1983, pp. 34 .
  12. Facts based on a decision by the European Court of Human Rights in 1996, which Hamer's daughter Birgit Hamer called. worldlii.org ( Memento of the original from August 11, 2014 in the web archive archive.today ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , on: sim.law.uu.nl @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.worldlii.org
  13. Teja Fiedler, Cordt Schnippen: "Cancer Doctor" Dr. Geerd Hamer - corpses pave his way . Ed .: Stern . No. 48 , November 24, 1983, pp. 37 .
  14. http://www.neue-medizin.de/html/ein_vermachtnis.html The legacy of his son Dirk Hamer
  15. Hans-Joachim Lang: Ryke Geerd Hamer continues to argue with the University of Tübingen . In: tagblatt.de . June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
  16. a b c Fight against the strongest. In: Der Spiegel. 32/1995, pp. 154-162.
  17. ^ Judgment of the Koblenz District Court, December 18, 1986. File number 6B54 / 86
  18. ^ Judgment of the administrative court Koblenz, file number 9 K 215/87. Extract from the judgment ( Memento from September 16, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  19. Judgment of the Cologne District Court, January 22, 1992. File number 613 Ls 152/91
  20. Judgment of the Cologne District Court, September 9, 1997. File number 34 Js 178/95
  21. Imprisonment for Hamer. In: Deutsches Ärzteblatt. 94, issue 40, October 3, 1997.
  22. ^ German “miracle healer” sentenced to three years in France. AFP Agence France-Presse GmbH, July 1, 2004.
  23. For reasons of faith against conventional medicine. Schwäbische Zeitung, August 5, 2015, accessed on November 26, 2019 .
  24. Florian Freistetter: "New Germanic Medicine": There are no illnesses, only mental conflicts! Der Standard , February 16, 2016, accessed on November 21, 2019 (Austrian German).
  25. Hamer får ikke som jobbe put. In: Tvedestrandsposten. April 30, 2010.
  26. Frankfurt am Main administrative court rejects the re-granting of the license to practice medicine for the developer of the so-called "Germanic New Medicine". File number: 4 K 3468 / 16.F, press office, February 17, 2017, accessed on July 5, 2017.
  27. ^ A b Peter-Philipp Schmitt: Vaccination opponents and AIDS deniers: crusade against conventional medicine . In: FAZ.NET . March 16, 2010 ( faz.net [accessed May 11, 2020]).
  28. Michael Prang: Alternative medicine: What it does. When it hurts . CH Beck, 2014.
  29. Dr. Hamer to Prof. Dr. Müller - University Children's Hospital Graz. ( Memento from July 10, 2012 in the archive.today web archive ) December 12, 2009
  30. A Dangerous Redeemer. In: Der Spiegel. 37/1997, September 8, 1997.
  31. a b c d e Fight against the strongest . In: Spiegel Online . tape 32 , August 7, 1995, p. 154–162 ( spiegel.de [PDF; accessed November 23, 2019]).
  32. ^ A b Daniela Castner: Victory over motherly love? In: The time . August 4, 1995, ISSN  0044-2070 ( zeit.de [accessed November 26, 2019]).
  33. ^ Jean-Marie Abgrall: Soul Snatchers: The Mechanics of Cults . Algora Publishing, 2007, p. 39.
  34. a b Bengt Pflughaupt: The cancer child who had to flee. . . Abendblatt.de , July 16, 2001, accessed on November 26, 2019 .
  35. Denis Durand de Bousingen: Austrian cancer patient's parents sentenced . In: Lancet (London, England) . tape 348 , no. 9039 , November 23, 1996, pp. 1440 , PMID 11654446 .
  36. Martin Bauer: Between patient protection and patient autonomy: The ethical dilemma of alternative medicine. From: Ethics in medicine in teaching, clinic and research . Ed .: Dominik Gross. Königshausen & Neumann, 2002, ISBN 978-3-8260-2271-5 , p. 256 .
  37. Krista Federspiel: 'Cancer healer' Geerd Ryke Hamer in the mirror of the press and TV or: the iron rule of the media. In: Irmgard Oepen (Ed.): Paramedicine - Analyzes and Comments. 1998, ISBN 3-89473-721-2 .
  38. Andrea Appel, Dietmar Jazbinsek: Olivia and the oncology. About cancer medicine in the media. In: K. Koch, A. Quehl (eds.): Yearbook 1998/99 of the Tumorzentrum Potsdam e. V.
  39. Woman magazine . 4th July 2008.
  40. Anti-Semitic theses in Kronach synagogue. on: hagalil.com , March 23, 2009.
  41. The strange world of Mr. Pilhar , kurier.at, May 21, 2017
  42. ^ Cancer death of a twelve year old. "Faith healer" promised help - and Susanne died after all. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. January 20, 2010.
  43. "Germanic Medicine" familiar - Nazi couple released on probation. In: n-tv. February 11, 2015.
  44. Jutta Hübner : Diagnosis of cancer ... which helps me now. Schattauer Verlag, 2011, p. 77.
  45. ^ Cancer information service of the German Cancer Research Center Heidelberg on the "Therapy according to Hamer" ( Memento from July 8, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  46. Quoted from: Abstruse outsider theory . In: Frankenpost. September 15, 2007.
  47. False promises - the deadly danger of "Germanic New Medicine." ARD: Contrasts , broadcast on November 10, 2005.
  48. ↑ Cure cancer by doing nothing? - The dangerous theses of the "New Medicine." SWR: Report Mainz. November 18, 2002 (web link is no longer available)
  49. Experts warn against the death sect. In: Hamburger Morgenpost. February 8, 2006.
  50. Hamers "New Medicine". Swiss Study Group for Complementary and Alternative Methods in Cancer (SKAK), Documentation No. 01/02, 2001.
  51. ^ Statement by the German Radiological Society / CT examinations of the brain for the detection of "Hamer foci" ( memento of October 5, 2008 in the Internet Archive ); Berlin, August 20, 2008.
  52. ^ Statement by the German Radiological Society on Hamer's assessments in his book Legacy of a New Medicine (Volumes 1 and 2). January 22, 2007, accessed August 2007.
  53. Ben Pfeifer, Joachim Preiß, Clemens Unger: Oncology integrative: conventional and complementary therapy. Elsevier, Urban & Fischer-Verlag, 2006, p. 368.
  54. H. Heimpel et al .: Cancer treatment 2008: Scientifically founded procedures and methods with controversial effectiveness . In: The oncologist . tape 15 , no. 1 , January 1, 2009, ISSN  1433-0415 , p. 85-94 , doi : 10.1007 / s00761-008-1533-8 ( springer.com [accessed December 20, 2018]).
  55. J. Beuth: Side effects of complementary therapies in oncology . In: The gynecologist . tape 40 , no. 11 , November 1, 2007, ISSN  1433-0393 , p. 876-882 , doi : 10.1007 / s00129-007-2056-x ( springer.com [accessed December 20, 2018]).
  56. Manfred E. Heim: Spontaneous remission in cancer diseases. In: Joachim Weis: Psycho-oncology in research and practice. Pp. 248-256.
  57. ^ Germanic medicine. In: look to the right . September 16, 2015, accessed October 4, 2015 ( online ).
  58. publikative.org
  59. The fondateur de la “total biology” condamné à 2 ans ferme à Montpellier. In: France TV3. 4th November 2015.
  60. Germanic against cancer. In: taz.de. January 30, 2006, accessed August 2007.
  61. Hamers letter to David Bilger dated August 31, 2013 . Published on http://universitatsandefjord.com/
  62. Ryke Geerd Hamer: Germanic New Medicine Part 2. In: Forum of New Medicine. Ryke Geerd Hamer, September 18, 2003, archived from the original on June 22, 2008 ; accessed in August 2007 .
  63. ^ Death trap Germanic New Medicine. In: ARD. Report Munich. January 18, 2010.
  64. Ryke Geerd Hamer: "HIV is a completely normal allergy." In: Der Standard. January 14, 2010.
  65. Alma Fathi: The ideological background of the Germanic New Medicine . Parents' initiative to help against emotional dependence and religious extremism, Munich, p. 25f.
  66. Hamers letter to the Hamburg Regional Court of April 11, 2013. Published on http://universitatsandefjord.com/
  67. Similar to the Positivist or International Perpetual Calendar
  68. Michael Utsch: Germanic New Medicine. In: ekd material service. 9/2010, p. 335.
  69. Martin Pfaffenzeller, Julia Köppe: "New Germanic Medicine": satirical award for doctor charlatan. In: Spiegel Online . October 12, 2016.
  70. ↑ The 2016 Golden Board goes to Ryke Geerd Hamer. In: The Standard . October 11, 2016.