•
Thomas Allinson (1858–1918), founder of
naturopathy. His views often brought him into conflict with the
Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and the
General Medical Council, particularly his opposition to doctors' frequent use of drugs, his opposition to vaccination and his self-promotion in the press. His views and publication of them led to him being labeled a quack and being struck off by the
General Medical Council for
infamous conduct in a professional respect. •
Lovisa Åhrberg (1801–1881), the first Swedish female doctor. Åhrberg was met with strong resistance from male doctors and was accused of quackery. During the formal examination, she was acquitted of all charges and allowed to practice medicine in Stockholm even though it was forbidden for women in the 1820s. She later received a medal for her work. •
Johanna Brandt (1876–1964), a South African naturopath who advocated the "
Grape Cure" as a cure for cancer. •
John R. Brinkley (1885–1942), a nonphysician and
xenotransplant specialist in Kansas, US, who claimed to have discovered a method of effectively transplanting the testicles of
goats into aging men. After state authorities took steps to shut down his practice, he retaliated by entering politics in 1930 and unsuccessfully running for the office of
Governor of Kansas. •
Hulda Regehr Clark (1928–2009), was a controversial
naturopath, author, and practitioner of
alternative medicine who claimed to be able to cure all diseases and advocated methods that have no scientific validity. •
Max Gerson (1881–1959), was a German-born American physician who developed a dietary-based
alternative cancer treatment that he claimed could cure cancer and most chronic, degenerative diseases. His treatment was called The Gerson Therapy. Most notably, Gerson Therapy was used, unsuccessfully, to treat
Jessica Ainscough and
Garry Winogrand. According to
Quackwatch, Gerson Institute claims of cure are based not on actual documentation of survival, but on "a combination of the doctor's estimate that the departing patient has a 'reasonable chance of surviving', plus feelings that the Institute staff have about the status of people who call in". The
American Cancer Society reports that "[t]here is no reliable scientific evidence that Gerson therapy is effective ..." •
Samuel Hahnemann (1755–1843), founder of
homeopathy. Hahnemann believed that all diseases were caused by "
miasms", which he defined as irregularities in the patient's
vital force. He also said that illnesses could be treated by substances that in a healthy person produced similar symptoms to the illness, in extremely low concentrations, with the therapeutic effect increasing with dilution and repeated shaking. •
Lawrence B. Hamlin (in 1916), was fined under the 1906 US
Pure Food and Drug Act for advertising that his
Wizard Oil could kill cancer. •
L. Ron Hubbard (1911–1986), was the founder of the
Church of Scientology. He was an American
science fiction writer, former
US Navy officer, and creator of
Dianetics. He has been commonly called a quack and a con man by both critics of Scientology and by many psychiatric organizations in part for his often extreme anti-psychiatric beliefs and false claims about technologies such as the
E-meter. •
Linda Hazzard (1867–1938), was a self-declared doctor and fasting specialist, which she advertised as a
panacea for every medical ailment. Up to 40 patients may have died of starvation in her "sanitarium" in
Olalla, Washington, US. Imprisoned for one death in 1912, Hazzard was paroled in 1915 and continued to practice medicine without a license in
New Zealand (1915–1920) and
Washington, US (1920–1935). Died in 1938 while attempting a fasting to cure herself. •
William Donald Kelley (1925–2005), was an
orthodontist and a follower of Max Gerson who developed his own alternative cancer treatment called Nonspecific Metabolic Therapy. This treatment is based on the unsubstantiated belief that "wrong foods [cause] malignancy to grow, while proper foods [allow] natural body defenses to work". It involves, specifically, treatment with pancreatic enzymes, 50 daily vitamins and minerals (including
laetrile), frequent body shampoos, coffee enemas, and a specific diet. According to
Quackwatch, "not only is his therapy ineffective, but people with cancer who take it die more quickly and have a worse quality of life than those having standard treatment, and can develop serious or fatal side-effects. Kelley's most famous patient was actor
Steve McQueen. •
John Harvey Kellogg (1852–1943), was a
medical doctor in
Battle Creek, Michigan, US, who ran a
sanitarium using
holistic methods, with a particular focus on
nutrition,
enemas and
exercise. Kellogg was an advocate of
vegetarianism and invented the
corn flake breakfast cereal with his brother,
Will Keith Kellogg. •
John St. John Long (1798–1834) was an Irish artist who claimed to be able to cure tuberculosis by causing a sore or wound on the back of the patient, out of which the disease would exit. He was tried twice for manslaughter of his patients who died under this treatment. •
Franz Anton Mesmer (1734–1815), was a German physician and astrologist, who invented what he called
magnétisme animal. •
Theodor Morell (1886–1948), a German physician best known as
Adolf Hitler's personal doctor. Morell administered approximately 74 substances, in 28 different mixtures to Hitler, including
heroin,
cocaine,
Doktor Koster's Antigaspills,
potassium bromide,
papaverine,
testosterone, vitamins and animal enzymes. Despite Hitler's dependence on Morell, and his recommendations of him to other Nazi leaders,
Hermann Göring,
Heinrich Himmler,
Albert Speer and others quietly dismissed Morell as a quack. •
Daniel David Palmer (1845–1913), was a
grocery store owner that claimed to have healed a janitor of deafness after adjusting the alignment of his back. He founded the field of
chiropractic based on the principle that all
disease and ailments could be fixed by adjusting the alignment of someone's back. His hypothesis was disregarded by medical professionals at the time and despite a considerable following has yet to be scientifically proven. Palmer established a magnetic healing facility in Davenport, Iowa, styling himself 'doctor'. Not everyone was convinced, as a local paper in 1894 wrote about him: "A crank on magnetism has a crazy notion that he can cure the sick and crippled with his magnetic hands. His victims are the weak-minded, ignorant and superstitious, those foolish people who have been sick for years and have become tired of the regular physician and want health by the short-cut method … he has certainly profited by the ignorance of his victims … His increase in business shows what can be done in Davenport, even by a quack." •
Louis Pasteur (1822–1895), was a French
chemist best known for his remarkable breakthroughs in
microbiology. His experiments confirmed the
germ theory of disease, also reducing mortality from
puerperal fever (childbed), and he created the first
vaccine for
rabies. He is best known to the general public for showing how to stop milk and wine from going sourthis process came to be called
pasteurization. His hypotheses initially met with much hostility, and he was accused of quackery on multiple occasions. However, he is now regarded as one of the three main founders of
microbiology, together with
Ferdinand Cohn and
Robert Koch. •
Linus Pauling (1901–1994), a
Nobel Prize winner in
chemistry, Pauling spent much of his later career arguing for the treatment of somatic and psychological diseases with
orthomolecular medicine. Among his claims were that the
common cold could be cured with massive doses of
vitamin C. Together with Ewan Cameron he wrote the 1979 book
Cancer and Vitamin C, which was again more popular with the public than the medical profession, which continued to regard claims about the effectiveness of vitamin C in treating or preventing cancer as quackery. A biographer has discussed how controversial his views on
megadoses of Vitamin C have been and that he was "still being called a 'fraud' and a 'quack' by opponents of his 'orthomolecular medicine. • Doctor
John Henry Pinkard (1866–1934) was a
Roanoke, Virginia businessman and "Yarb Doctor" or "Herb Doctor" who concocted quack medicines that he sold and distributed in violation of the
Food and Drugs Act and the earlier
Pure Food and Drug Act. He was also known as a "clairvoyant, herb doctor and spiritualist." Some of Pinkard's
Sanguinaria Compound, made from bloodroot or bloodwort, was seized by
federal officials in 1931. "Analysis by this department of a sample of the article showed that it consisted essentially of extracts of plant drugs including sanguinaria, sugar, alcohol, and water. It was alleged in the information that the article was misbranded in that certain statements, designs, and devices regarding the therapeutic and curative effects of the article, appearing on the bottle label, falsely and fraudulently represented that it would be effective as a treatment, remedy, and cure for pneumonia, coughs, weak lungs, asthma, kidney, liver, bladder, or any stomach troubles, and effective as a great blood and nerve tonic." He pleaded guilty and was fined. •
Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957), Austrian-American Psychoanalyst. Claimed that he had discovered a primordial cosmic energy called
Orgone. He developed several devices, including the
Cloudbuster and the
Orgone Accumulator, that he believed could use orgone to manipulate the weather, battle space aliens and cure diseases, including cancer. After an investigation, the
US Food and Drug Administration concluded that they were dealing with a "fraud of the first magnitude". On 10 February 1954, the
US Attorney for Maine filed a complaint seeking a permanent injunction under Sections 301 and 302 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, to prevent interstate shipment of orgone accumulators and to ban some of Reich's writing promoting and advertising the devices. Reich refused to appear in court, arguing that no court was in a position to evaluate his work. Reich was arrested for
contempt of court, and convicted to two years in jail, a
US$10,000 fine, and his Orgone Accumulators and work on Orgone were ordered to be destroyed. On 23 August 1956, six tons of his books, journals, and papers were burned in the 25th Street public incinerator in New York. On 12 March 1957, he was sent to
Danbury Federal Prison, where Richard C. Hubbard, a psychiatrist who admired Reich, examined him, recording
paranoia manifested by delusions of grandiosity, persecution, and ideas of reference. Nine months later, on 18 November 1957, Reich died of a
heart attack while he was in the federal penitentiary in
Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. •
William Herbert Sheldon (1898–1977), who created the theory of
somatotypes corresponding to intelligence. ==Information Age Digital Quackery==