Alfred Theodore William Simeons, MD, was among the most gifted medical researchers of the twentieth century. Born in London in 1900, he graduated summa cum laude in medicine from Heidelberg University.After postgraduate studies in Germany and Switzerland, he took up an appointment at a large hospital in Dresden where he began to study tropical diseases. He joined the School of Tropical Medicine in Hamburg, became fascinated by the subject, then spent two years in Africa. There he invented a method for identifying the various strains of malarial parasites in the blood which became known as Simeons' Stain. It is still used today for the same purpose. Simeons also discovered the injectable antimalarial drug atebrin, which is still used to treat the disease. Simeons' contributions to medicine were so significant that the Queen decorated him with the Red Cross Order of Merit for his achievements.
Not until January 1954 did Simeons tell the medical world about his unique method for the treatment of obesity in a paper published in The Lancet. His report triggered a tsunami of controversy, misinformation and confusion which, even now – more than half a century on – continues to rage. Since more than 200,000 people worldwide have experienced the gifts of Cura Romana and come to sing its praises.
Leslie Kenton has taken the Cura Romana program and further developed it in the last three years, working with men and women throughout the world whom she has mentored on the program. The Consolidation aspect of Leslie Kenton's Cura Romana® is unique.
As Leon Hammer MD says:
In this book, Kenton has moved Simeons' work in a new direction by making these remarkable discoveries available to a great many people rather than only to those economically fortunate enough to afford to partake of it in clinics. By following the thread from the injectable to the oral, and finally to the Essential Spray, she has engaged knowledgeable experts to assist her in developing the practical protocol with which this book is concerned."