Tiger Blood and Goat Milk
Charlie Sheen’s misadventure with a false cure for HIV/AIDS

When basketball legend Magic Johnson announced in 1991 that he had tested positive for HIV, it was a death sentence, and he promptly retired from the Los Angeles Lakers. Fans mourned his coming demise, but to everyone’s astonishment, Magic’s life continued in relative normalcy. A quarter of a century later he is an active entrepreneur, business leader, philanthropist and advocate for HIV/AIDS prevention.
Magic’s story is emblematic of one of the great medical achievements of our time. Although there is still no cure or vaccine for HIV, teams of medical researchers have developed a highly active antiretroviral therapy (the HAART “cocktail”) that significantly slows the progression of the disease by reducing the viral load to an undetectable level. If treatment is started promptly after early detection in young adults, for example, life expectancy returns close to normal.
Perhaps this is why there was far less media frenzy and social mourning after the November 2015 announcement by actor Charlie Sheen that he was HIVpositive. Most assumed HAART would save Sheen’s life, not his “tiger blood” and “Adonis DNA” that he boasted about during his highly publicized 2011 meltdown following his dismissal from the hit TV series Two and a Half Men.
What a surprise, then, to see featured on the popular HBO series Real Time with Bill Maher on January 29, 2016, one Dr. Samir Chachoua, who told Maher and his more than four million viewers that he cured Sheen of HIV through his own drug cocktail of milk from arthritic goats. The treatment is based on Chachoua’s “nemesis theory” that “for every disease there is an antidisease organism capable of destroying it and restoring health.” Goat milk infected with caprine arthritis encephalitis virus, Chachoua says, is HIV’s nemesis. When Sheen went to see him in Mexico (Chachoua is not licensed to practice medicine in the U.S.), very soon after treatment Sheen’s liver tests allegedly returned to normal levels.
Chachoua also boasted that he had eradicated HIV from the small African island nation of Comoros, and when Maher asked him why he wasn’t better known, he said that his cure was buried by the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after he sent clinicians there his vaccine for testing.
Not likely. According to Sheen’s doctor, University of California, Los Angeles, professor Robert Huizenga, Sheen went on the HAART cocktail in July 2011 after his diagnosis, and by December of that year his viral load was undetectable. (“Undetectable” does not mean cured; the virus can be hiding in the body.) Four years later, in search of a permanent cure, Sheen visited Chachoua, who credited his goat-milk nemesis for Sheen’s undetectable HIV load. Sheen went off the antiretroviral medications, and his HIV levels shot back up. Fortunately for him, Sheen came to his senses and started taking his antiretroviral medications.
As for the Cedars-Sinai “cover-up,” in a lawsuit against the medical center Chachoua claimed that it reverse engineered his vaccine and destroyed his samples, but a court document states that he failed “adequately to identify the alleged trade secrets; and has not shown that such secrets are deserving of protection” and that “Chauchoua has failed to introduce admissible evidence supporting an inference that Cedars improperly acquired or revealed any alleged trade secrets.” Further, Cedars-Sinai told the court that once it learned in July 1996 that Chachoua had “improperly used his collaboration with Cedars to promote his products for treating HIV infection” it terminated testing of his virus and “returned all remaining samples … for delivery to Chachoua on September 25, 1996.” Finally, according to the U.C.S.F. Medical Center, of the nearly 800,000 people of Comoros, about 7,900 of them have HIV/ AIDS. Some cure.
After the HBO show, Sheen and his physician appeared on The Dr. Oz Show to denounce Chachoua as, in Sheen’s words, a “grand work of fiction,” for whom “I’m not going to be trading my meds for arthritic goat milk,” because “guys like this are dangerous.” The real nemeses of many potentially deadly diseases for which we do not as yet have cures are those who would capitalize on our fears.
July 6th, 2016 at 7:32 am
Thank you, and those like you, who encourage people to think and research, rather than blindly trust.
July 6th, 2016 at 8:20 am
The consistent problem with Skeptic is its lazy and predictable fascination with low-hanging fruit. Why insist on “debunking” non-problems. No one believes stuff like this. There are plenty of real problems to concern ourselves with.
July 6th, 2016 at 9:33 am
Ken — It’d be grand if it were true that nobody believes stuff like this. Unfortunately, the public has a short memory, and desperate people don’t have to be stupid to try quack alternative treatments, just desperate; intelligence just throws them into the information quagmire. Stupid people who are also desperate don’t need any trigger but fear, and nothing else but money to throw away.
I think it bears repeating.
July 6th, 2016 at 11:45 am
Ken- Charlie Sheen clearly did- and he won’t have been the only one. The world is filled with charlatans willing to strip people of their money, no matter what the consequences. Some people in desperation will seek any cure, rational or not and unfortunately sometime die either early or directly as a result of these quack, pseudoscientific cures.
Skeptic has been silling to step up to the base. Portraying Skeptic as lazy and predictable is clearly incorrect- or are you willing to take up the torch and produce a better site?
July 6th, 2016 at 11:45 am
Ken- Charlie Sheen clearly did- and he won’t have been the only one. The world is filled with charlatans willing to strip people of their money, no matter what the consequences. Some people in desperation will seek any cure, rational or not and unfortunately sometime die either early or directly as a result of these quack, pseudoscientific cures.
Skeptic has been willing to step up to the base. Portraying Skeptic as lazy and predictable is clearly incorrect- or are you willing to take up the torch and produce a better site?
July 6th, 2016 at 3:27 pm
Bill Maher is one skeptic who does not have great critical thinking skills. I haven’t seen him apologize for giving airtime to this pseudo scientist. He also has GMO paranoia and thinks that Jesus is entirely mythical
July 6th, 2016 at 9:50 pm
Mark Pursley – Bill Maher may not be perfect, but at least he thinks that Jesus is entirely mythical.
July 7th, 2016 at 2:16 pm
yeah…I’m a huge fan of Bill Maher but he really screwed up giving this quack air time.
As a truth-teller, Maher needs to rely more on the tools of science to formulate his beliefs…otherwise he is no better than the quacks and preachers that claim knowledge they don’t have.
And I wouldn’t call cancer quacks ‘low-hanging fruit’. I live in a town (Asheville, NC) that has quacks on every corner. I suspect there are many pro-longed illnesses and premature deaths here since most people only have limited income to deal with health issues and many are fooled into spending their hard-earned dollars on woo-woo treatments. O the contrary,there is not enough push-back to the alt-med people that make bogus treatment claims.
July 8th, 2016 at 2:20 pm
One big problem with “alternative” medicine is that medical treatment is so expensive many people is forced into trying this. For sure it is not Sheen’s case, but then again, he seems to have a defective decision making apparatus.
On other matter, Bill Maher is a guy so full of himself that hardly recognizes when he’s wrong. He’s quite funny, though.
July 24th, 2016 at 8:22 am
Maybe you should research your material before discrediting …
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5GIidUlLus
This was filmed in June 2016 around the same time you were preparing your artice!
July 25th, 2016 at 9:37 am
That doctor has it backwards. The correct formula is tiger milk and goat blood, and the blood must be collected from a stone altar under the full moon.