Doctors require objective and scientific research to explore new approaches to cancer research and treatment.
ATLANTA – The physician consortium has questioned the rise in cancer cases observed over the past five years, calling for more research to better understand the phenomenon, suggesting that new approaches to treatment are needed to address it.
The discussion took place at the Independent Medical Alliance Conference in Atlanta, Georgia, on the weekend of April 4-6, during a panel discussion hosted by Jan Jekielek, Senior Editor of the Epoch Times and the host of Epocht’s “American Thought Leader.”
“The concern is when we start looking at some of the urban data out there,” Dr. Ray Page, an oncologist who has been practicing for 30 years, said in the discussion. “My personal experience has seen some things happening in my office during the past few years during Covid when vaccines started in my office due to Covid, so in 30 years of practice, it seems interesting.
Page described “strange phenomena” including aggressive cancer and advanced coagulation accidents, as particularly concerned, and said that restoring the immune system to a balanced state is paramount.
“Because it’s the bottom line, there’s nothing more powerful than turning on your innate immune system to kill cancer,” Page said.
One of the leading cancer researchers told hundreds of participants, including many practical health professionals, that traditional treatment methods, such as radiation therapy and chemotherapy, cannot address the underlying causes of cancer cells by eliminating stem cells that can form stem cells.
“So, radiation therapy does not only kill stem cells, it actually strengthens generations,” Dr. Paul Malik, Chief Medical Officer of the Medical Alliance, said in the discussion. “If you don’t deal with the roots, just flip the tree and it will grow again.”
A doctor specializing in pathology said traditional medical literature cannot grasp the enormous and complexity of cancer, saying that around 8 billion people on Earth have an average of 30 to 36 trillion individual cells.
“Because there is mathematics, the textbook thinks you have over 200 cancers. But as a unique individual and everyone on this planet, what is the reality?” Dr. Ryan Cole said during the panel. “The number of cancers is actually immeasurable.”
A colleague on the panel agreed and proposed that a new approach to identifying and managing cancer is needed.
“Cancer is not just one disease, it’s a million disease, a million combinations, and it takes a very subtle way to treat it,” Dr. Lynn Finn said.
She said that studies to investigate the role of lipid nanoparticles (which were exploited as a delivery mechanism for mRNA shots during the pandemic) could shed light on cancer prevalence.

Dr. Paul Malik, Chief Medical Officer of the Independent Medical Alliance, will speak at the Cancer Research and Treatment Committee at the Independent Medical Alliance Conference held in Atlanta, Georgia on April 4, 2025. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times
“We see a late diagnosis of aggressive cancers that are slightly resistant to traditional treatments,” Finn said. “The lipid nanoparticles themselves are highly inflammatory. Cancer is multifaceted, but inflammation is a common thread and universal. Unidentified inflammation in the body is a recipe for disaster.”
All four doctors on the panel recommended a holistic approach to health. This includes avoiding chemicals in your diet and eating “real foods.”

Dr. Ryan Cole, a senior fellow in IMA pathology, spoke at the Cancer Research and Treatment Committee at the Independent Medical Alliance Conference held in Atlanta, Georgia on April 4, 2025. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times
Return to Preventive Principles – The idea that allegedly harmed actions or policies should be avoided until objective and supportive evidence is discovered through rigorous scientific research has been highlighted as an important step the healthcare sector takes when considering new techniques or techniques to treat or prevent disease.
Restoring trust in medical research is a recurring topic of discussion, and experts call for a focus on objective and scientific research.
“The gold standard is a well-controlled, randomized trial, and without those controls and without the right gold standard for research, anyone can say anything they want,” Finn said. “But it costs money and for now there’s a very contradictory interest in clinical research, so you just read what they want you to and the conclusion they want you to come.”