Dr. Michelle Scott
With over 40 years of experience in medicine, I am a dedicated physician committed to patient-centered care and innovative treatments. I graduated from Northwestern Medical School and began my career at Rush Prudential, where I managed an extensive outpatient practice and provided hospital rounding for five years. Following the sale of Rush Prudential, I joined Adventist Healthcare, overseeing outpatient services and covering four hospitals. I later transitioned to full-time hospitalist medicine at Northwestern’s Central DuPage Hospital in Illinois.
After relocating to Florida, I continued as a hospitalist, contributing to the establishment of the hospitalist program at Blake Hospital. My experiences in hospital settings revealed systemic challenges, including a focus on profit-driven care that sometimes led to unnecessary procedures and prolonged hospital stays. Advocating for patients’ best interests often put me at odds with hospital management, prompting my shift to urgent care.
The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic further shaped my perspective. I observed inconsistencies in treatment protocols, including restrictions on medications like hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, which showed promise based on clinical experience. Frustrated by what I perceived as misinformation and pharmaceutical influence in medical practice, I founded a website to provide alternative COVID-19 treatment options. Using protocols involving ivermectin and vitamins, I successfully treated thousands of patients, none of whom required hospitalization or succumbed to the virus. I also began addressing vaccine-related concerns, helping patients navigate reported injuries.
This journey led me to holistic medicine, which uses therapies such as ozone therapy, red light, and hyperbaric oxygen treatment. My research uncovered historical evidence of ozone therapy’s efficacy, documented as early as 1929 in publications like Ozone and Its Therapeutic Action, which outlined its use for 114 conditions. It had 40 authors, all of whom were leading figures at major American hospitals. At that time, ozone was a well-known and established healing treatment. Then, in 1933, the American Medical Association, led by Maurice Fishbein, aimed to eliminate all medical treatments that competed with pharmaceutical drug therapy. Later, in the 1940s, the American Medical Association directed the FDA to confiscate ozone generators.
I also advocate for a metabolic approach to cancer. One of the most disturbing findings is that the treatment of cancer results in the destruction of your immune system. I came to learn that cancer is a metabolic disease with corrupt mitochondria; as a result, it is dependent on two fuels: Glucose and glutamine. You can starve cancer of its fuels while using FenBen and Ivermectin, which target cancer cells. Both these medications are toxic to cancer cells but not to the patient. I found that if you remove the fuels that cancer depends on, while boosting the patient’s immune system, and using oxidative therapies. It is toxic to cancer cells and not the patients, and very effective.
These treatments aim to be effective and minimally invasive, prioritizing patient well-being. My mission is to empower patients with evidence-based, holistic solutions and to challenge conventional medical paradigms influenced by pharmaceutical interests. Through my practice, I continue to explore innovative therapies that honor the body’s natural healing potential.