Father-of-two was CURED of cancer after going vegan

A father-of-two who was given weeks to live has revealed he beat stage 4 colorectal cancer after switching to a vegan diet.

Rob Mooberry, now 43, told Daily Mail Online he was hospitalized with a perforated colon in July 2012, and scans revealed he had cancer which had spread to his bowels, lymph nodes and liver. 

Doctors said the Las Vegas bartender would need a colostomy bag put in, followed by an ileostomy, then two bouts of chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

However, after the surgeries and the first round, with his cancer downgraded to stage 3A, he said he couldn’t take it any more and needed some time to detox his body of the chemicals before starting more treatment. 

In November 2012, he started a plant-based diet, alkaline diet – akin to that of Tom Brady – with his vegetarian wife Amanda, now 39, following research that showed sugars and processed foods fueled tumors. 

When it came to his next scan in early 2013, the cancer had shrunk by almost 80 percent. 

Now he is celebrating five years cancer-free, raising 20-month-old twins, and running a small cancer charity on the side of his bar-tending to help other sufferers afford pipe dreams – and his story has gone viral, after it was tweeted by country star Tim McGraw.

Rob Mooberry, now 43, was diagnosed with stage 4 colorectal cancer in 2012 in Las Vegas, where he is a bartender. He switched to a vegan diet after chemo, and the cancer shrunk

Now he is celebrating five years cancer-free, raising 20-month-old twins, and running a small cancer charity on the side of his bar-tending with wife Amanda, 39 (pictured)

Now he is celebrating five years cancer-free, raising 20-month-old twins, and running a small cancer charity on the side of his bar-tending with wife Amanda, 39 (pictured)

Speaking to Daily Mail Online, Rob admitted he was slightly overwhelmed at being tipped as a vegan advocate. ‘I’m not standing on my soap box saying everyone needs to go plant-based and vegan,’ he insisted. ‘But if you’re going to ask me what worked for me, I’ll tell you: this diet beat my cancer.’

When Rob was diagnosed he was shocked, having no family history of cancer and already living a healthy lifestyle of running and a lean protein diet. 

‘I couldn’t believe it,’ he told Daily Mail Online. ‘I was always a healthy person, I didn’t expect it.’ 

He had been experiencing some symptoms for about a year, such as bloating and blood in his stool and a change in bowel movements, but he assumed it was IBS or something he had eaten, and without health insurance, he had decided to put it off.

It was not until July 2012 that he was hospitalized with searing pain in his abdomen. It turned out to be a micro-perforation of his colon, which meant nothing could pass by his colon. 

‘It was very very painful,’ he said. ‘I went into the ER and that’s when I became an in-patient: they found it spread all around.’

Determined to fight the disease, Rob began the grueling regime of operations and chemotherapy and radiation therapy.

‘It was horrible,’ he said. ‘I had to take time off work, I had no energy, I felt sick. That kind of medicine puts so many chemicals in your body.’  

At the time, Rob, who had moved to Las Vegas from Los Angeles a year before, was in the early stages of a new relationship with his now-wife Amanda, a cocktail waitress who worked at the same bar as his, the Cosmopolitan. They had been together for about nine months.

‘She came into the hospital, the doctor took her to one side and said basically that there was about eight percent chance I would live,’ Rob explained. 

Rob lost a lot of weight during his cancer battle (pictured, left, during; right, before). He had been experiencing symptoms for a year, such as bloating and  a change in bowel movements, but he assumed it was IBS, and without health insurance, he had decided to put it off

Rob lost a lot of weight during his cancer battle (pictured, left, during; right, before). He had been experiencing symptoms for a year, such as bloating and a change in bowel movements, but he assumed it was IBS, and without health insurance, he had decided to put it off

The couple got engaged when Rob was diagnosed: 'I think I had a catheter in... it really wasn't very romantic but we didn't have time for the whole "down on one knee thing", I was weak'

The couple got engaged when Rob was diagnosed: ‘I think I had a catheter in… it really wasn’t very romantic but we didn’t have time for the whole “down on one knee thing”, I was weak’

‘She was so upset, my family was so upset. The doctors weren’t really telling me all of this but I knew it was serious, I thought I was going to die.

‘But Amanda just stuck with me. She could have left me, but she stayed. That’s when you know love is true.’  

The couple got engaged there and then (‘I think I had a catheter in… it really wasn’t very romantic but we didn’t have time for the whole “down on one knee thing”, I was weak’). 

Then, two days after his operations, they got married, just before he embarked on chemo and radiation therapy. 

From the moment of his diagnosis, he was eating as clean as he could because ‘I just wanted to be as healthy as possible’, which was made easy by the fact that Amanda has always been a vegetarian. 

After finishing his first load of treatments in November 2012, he decided to take it a step further and go vegan. 

Amanda, who was always vegetarian, supported Rob as he tried his own vegan detox since he couldn't afford any alternative treatments

Amanda, who was always vegetarian, supported Rob as he tried his own vegan detox since he couldn’t afford any alternative treatments

RISING RATES OF COLORECTAL CANCER IN YOUNG WHITE AMERICANS 

Colorectal cancer deaths have rocketed among under 55s – particularly white people – in the US since the mid-2000s.

For decades, the most at-risk demographics were African Americans and over-55s.

However, rates have plummeted in blacks and older people after years of efforts to target diagnosis and deaths in these demographics.

Simultaneously, death rates are rapidly increasing in younger people and white people, according to the figures published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

While experts celebrated the progress to cut black deaths, they admit they are baffled by the sharp rise in rates in whites, considering risk factors (such as obesity) have increased universally, as have preventative measures (such as screening).

Increasingly, researchers are linking the rise to the Western diet. Indeed, a study by the Cleveland Clinic in July compiled evidence that fatty diets stimulate tumor growth by activating a molecular pathway that feeds abnormal cells.

‘At first I wasn’t all raw and vegan, it was just vegetarian,’ he told Daily Mail Online. 

‘To be honest, it was easier for us to just cook one meal rather than two, so being plant-based was straight-forward.

‘But when I finished chemo, the oncologists were saying I would need to do more straight away and I really didn’t want to. I needed to heal. That’s when I knew I needed to do anything to beat this cancer. I was really willing to try anything to save my life. That’s when I went hard-core raw, vegan, superfoods.’

It started with Rob looking up some alternative therapies he could try, including a treatment center in Tijuana, Mexico, which has been popular among American colon cancer patients.

However, it costs thousands of dollars in travel and medical fees. 

Instead, he researched their detox to see if he could try it at home. It consisted of cutting out all acidity and sugars from his diet, including red meat and dairy. 

‘I went back in for my CT scan in early 2013, and everything had changed,’ Rob explains. His cancer had shrunk by 80 percent. Asked if he wanted to continue with treatments, he declined. By 2014, there was no trace of it. 

Now, Rob and Amanda are new parents to one-year-old twins, a boy and a girl, having undergone IVF (‘because the treatment affects your swimmers a bit’).

He said he hopes other patients do not take this as a blanket endorsement for veganism but rather urges people to educate themselves about all their options, and to consider the healthiness of their lifestyle.

Rob’s story comes amid a surge in the rate of young people being diagnosed with colorectal cancers in the United States, while rates drop in the Mediterranean. Some reports have suggested this could be down to the Western diet, which is rich in processed meats, sugars and saturated fats.  



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