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Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Doctor denies Schuller's claims of Parkinson's cure
The neurosurgeon who the televangelist said had found a cure called it a 
'misunderstanding.'
By JENNIFER MUIR
The Orange County Register
A Pennsylvania neurosurgeon on Tuesday denied he has found a cure for 
Parkinson's disease, as Rev. Robert H. Schuller claimed from the pulpit 
during a recent sermon, calling the televangelist's announcement a 
"misunderstanding."

A spokesman for Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, where Dr. Peter 
Jannetta is the vice chairman of the Department of Neurosurgery and director 
of the hospital's Center for Cranial Nerve Disorders, said he and Jannetta 
"regret any disappointment" the misunderstanding has caused for Schuller's 
viewers.

"Unfortunately, despite his well-intentions and heartfelt effort to offer 
hope to people who suffer from Parkinson's disease, Pastor Robert Schuller 
on Sunday referenced research being conducted by Dr. Jannetta that is in its 
earliest stages and of no immediate known benefit to those with this 
difficult disease," said hospital spokesman Dan Laurent on behalf of 
Jannetta.

He said Jannetta would not comment further.

Schuller said a friend had made the groundbreaking medical discovery during 
his internationally televised "Hour of Power" service at the Crystal 
Cathedral on Oct.12, and he promised viewers the friend, later identified as 
Jannetta, would soon fly in from Pittsburgh "to share with us how God helped 
him to discover a cure."

More than 1.5 million people across the U.S. suffer from the debilitating 
disease, which is caused by the degeneration of dopamine cells in the brain. 
The discovery of a cure would amount to a major medical breakthrough.

The sermon sparked a backlash among those who suffer from the neurological 
disease and surprise among medical professionals, who had never heard of 
such a discovery.

Several sufferers called the Crystal Cathedral hoping to learn more, others 
to express anger over a false cure.

The director of the National Parkinson Foundation's Arizona chapter, Rayilyn 
Brown, wrote to Schuller demanding a clarification. After learning of 
Jannetta's comments on Tuesday, Brown said the televangelist should 
apologize publicly.

"When a person of power and influence makes such claims people listen and it 
tends to marginalize the issue," Brown said. "People see no need to work for 
cures when Schuller says one has been found. That is what will be 
remembered, not that it was a misunderstanding on his part."

It is unclear just how the misunderstanding occurred.

Schuller could not be reached for comment. And a representative for the 
pastor last week referred further questions about the medical claims to 
Jannetta.

But during the service, Schuller promised congregants that the 
"triple-checked" findings soon would be published in the London-based 
medical journal Lancet. A representative for Lancet declined to comment, 
citing a confidential peer review process.

Contact the writer: (714) 796-7813 or [log in to unmask]


Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
[log in to unmask]

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