Warning: Please verify medical claims carefully

I wanted to share my recent experience to help others be cautious, especially those dealing with cancer situations. A family member who recently had brain surgery was approached about alternative treatments. Here's what raised concerns:

The situation:

  • Contact was made through someone claiming to be the "doctor's wife" who mentioned church connections (described herself with a Korean church title)
  • The clinic mentioned is real and exists in Hokkaido (northern Japan), but some affiliations claimed couldn't be verified
  • Both Japanese and Korean names were used by the same person, which seemed unusual
  • Claims included work at a major Tokyo medical university and connections to a famous US clinic in Minnesota

Specific red flags I encountered:

  • Treatment cost: $1,000 USD per day for IV vitamin C (I researched and found typical costs in Japan are ¥20,000-30,000 per session – about 10% of what was quoted)
  • A claimed "Mega Vitamin Cancer Alternative Committee" membership – I searched extensively in Japanese (メガビタミン) and found no such organization
  • Claims of joint research with a prestigious American cancer center – when I researched their actual partnerships, I found connections with Japanese institutions but couldn't verify this individual
  • The person claimed to be a victim of fraud themselves (which in hindsight seems like a trust-building tactic?)

What my research found:

  • Specialist oncology certifications couldn't be verified through the Japanese Society of Medical Oncology
  • No academic publications under the names provided, despite claims of research positions

Mixed Korean-Japanese elements that concerned me:

  • Korean church titles (권사) combined with Japanese medical claims
  • Multiple names being used (Korean and Japanese versions)
  • Targeting of Korean-speaking patients in Japan
  • Religious authority possibly being used to build trust

by NewFocus9967