Anthony Sattilaro

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Born1931
Died1989 (aged 5758)
OccupationPhysician
KnownforPromoter of macrobiotics as a cancer cure
Anthony Sattilaro
Born1931
Died1989 (aged 5758)
OccupationPhysician
Known forPromoter of macrobiotics as a cancer cure
Medical career
InstitutionsMethodist Hospital
Notable worksRecalled by Life

Anthony J. Sattilaro (1931–1989) was an American physician and vegetarianism activist best known for promoting macrobiotics as a cancer cure. His views were criticized by medical experts as quackery.

Sattilaro was the chief executive officer of Methodist Hospital in South Philadelphia. He was diagnosed at the age 49 with prostate cancer with multiple bone metastases.[1] In his book Recalled from Life (1982), he described how macrobiotics had cured his prostate cancer.[2] He stated that a follow-up examination revealed complete resolution of metastatic bone lesions.[1] Sattilaro went on publicity tours and he appeared in magazines and talk shows. In Living Well Naturally (1984), he made the claim that a macrobiotic diet had put his prostate cancer into permanent remission.[3]

In 1989, he died from prostate cancer that his books claimed he had been cured of.[3][4][5] According to William T. Jarvis "he eventually died of his disease, but this fact was not mentioned in the macrobiotic press."[6]

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