A physician relinquishes her license after accusations surfaced that she did not disclose information about a man who sells a flesh-eating paste to cancer patients.
Georgia's medical board reveals that Otolaryngologist, Dr. Lois March, must stop practicing by Dec. 1.
Dan Raber, the pastor-turned-healer, sold the "TumorX Paste," made of bloodroot and claimed that it cured cancer.
The board said March provided pain medication to patients who used it, seven of whom had breast cancer. The board contends that she should have known that bloodroot "mutilated their breasts and caused excruciating pain."
March's attorney, Hunter Allen, says that the doctor doesn't endorse the use of bloodroot and urged some patients to seek conventional cancer treatment instead.
However, for the patients that refused to refrain from the harsh treatments, she prescribed pain medicine for them. Her lawyer slates the issue as being one of poor judgement ,not of illegal activity.
"In retrospect, this not good judgment on her part, but Dr. March never knowingly engaged in any wrongdoing," Allen says.
















