Elaine Hollingsworth

Elaine Hollingsworth was a snake oil peddler and self-described "health crusader" who promoted dangerous and ineffective cancer treatments, “natural” cures, conspiracy theories, and other health-related bullshit primarily through a scammy webshite. She condemned evidence-based medicine because of a "cancer mafia".

Black salve
Hollingsworth promoted a cancer treatment called black salve, also known as cansema. The "treatment" was heavily criticized by real health care providers and government entities. This pissed off Hollingworth's fans and resulted in the development of a comical petition to the Australian government.

The Australian Vaccination Network got into trouble with the Therapeutic Goods Administration for advertising Elaine Hollingsworth's DVD "One Answer to Cancer", and Meryl Dorey, the head of AVN, went into caps mode. The AVN was required to publish a retraction by the TGA. It read as follows:

Woo magnet
Hollingsworth's website is a woo magnet. She is vaccine denier, promoter of fluoride woo, anti-GMO advocate, advocate of alternative thyroid treatments, cancer conspiracy theorist, soy silliness, and to top it all off is a big fan of coffee enemas while at the same time being a platform for shadowy figures like Joseph Mercola, Robert Kennedy, Jr., Mark Sircus , Paul Anthony Taylor, whose background is in the music industry, and is Executive Director of the Dr. Matthias Rath's "Health" Foundation and others from whom she has probably lifted all her ideas. She is a big fan of the "Big Pharma" conspiracy and promotes chemophobia. There is so much stupid in one place that if stupidity took up volume then this site would cause everyone to suffocate. For example, she sells a homeopathic cream for pain relief, with the selling point that it worked for Elaine and "Elaine is extremely fussy".

Her epiphany came "at a lavish Hollywood dinner party, chatting with the famous movie star Gloria Swanson. As Sara was about to tuck into a chocolate mousse, Miss Swanson startled her by saying, 'You aren't going to eat that, are you?' The star explained that chocolate was bad for the liver. There followed a long conversation which changed Sara's life forever."

She was a big fan of anecdotal evidence and alarmist rhetoric instead of scientific evidence. For example, "Maryanne" complains that for a visit to a doctor she photocopied an entire chapter from Elaine's book and told him what to prescribe but was shocked when the doctor "wasn't even nice about it and wouldn't even read your chapter that I photocopied and gave him."

She was an export from the US where she was a Hollywood star, and Australia would have been happy if she and her botox went home. Skeptics in the US would like to apologize. Hollingsworth died in Australia in 2022.

Red flags
Her website reads like a class on critical thinking, choking in logical fallacies:


 * Appeal to nature:
 * "She gives everyone a blueprint for overcoming all illnesses naturally, and living a long, healthy life."
 * "…while teaching them to embrace childhood disease, heal if they get a disease, and build their immune systems naturally."


 * Appeal to tradition:
 * "Get a Peruvian root vegetable that has been used for 10,000 years to promote bone density and make menopause easy, and costs a few cents a day."
 * "We use Black Salve, sometimes called Cansema, that has been used since before the time of Christ, to both diagnose and eliminate skin cancers safely."


 * Plain lies:
 * "Sodium fluoride (in many water supplies) leads to osteoporosis, Alzheimer's Disease and cancer."


 * Appeal to authority:
 * "Coffee Enemas: Even Prince Charles endorses them."


 * Scare tactics:
 * "All soya bean products, especially soya milk, leach calcium from bones, depress the thyroid gland and create havoc in the body."


 * Un-intended Irony:
 * "Said content is not intended as medical advice."


 * Anecdotal evidence:
 * "As this photo taken in 2001 when Elaine was 73 shows, her theories work." ("Shh! Quiet about the botox.")

Even more stupid
Ironically, you will find people with sciencey titles like Oswald H. Rentsch who has an impressive "D.O., A.R.M.T. (Bach), Dip.Hom.Ion. Director, BOWTECH, The Original Bowen Technique" and appeals to science like this: "the physicians quoted are some of the most prestigious endocrinologists in the world." She doesn't explain how to decide which doctors are dangerous and witch which doctors are safe. In her "article" on coffee enemas, she calls on another doctor:

She ran a mail-order business from the Gold Coast with business and former romantic partner Ronald Bradley (who is the registered owner of doctorsaredangerous.com). According to his other website, Ronald Bradley claims he is a doctor himself, which adds to the ironic fractal wrongness.