Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Apr 28
Dr Mohsen Ali struck off for dishonest cancer treatments at unregistered clinic
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Apr 28

Dr Mohsen Ali struck off for dishonest cancer treatments at unregistered clinic

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Apr 28
  • Ali charged two cancer patients up to £15,000 each for bogus cures involving garlic oil and vitamin C at a squalid Leicester property.
  • The Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service found Ali reused intravenous bags, failed to obtain informed consent, and exposed patients to serious infection risks with unproven therapies.
  • Ali's medical licence was withdrawn in 2015, but he continued treating patients, falsely claiming high cure rates and disparaging NHS and conventional cancer treatments. One patient died after ending his treatments.
Besides being struck off, what criminal charges does this bogus cancer doctor face?
A patient died after his 'cure.' What legal recourse do victims' families have?
How did a doctor with a withdrawn licence evade detection for years?
Do billion-dollar cancer drug prices create a market for these deadly scams?
If garlic kills cancer cells in labs, why are garlic 'cures' useless in patients?
New clinical trial rules begin tomorrow. Can they prevent future medical fraud?