Green and purple Town-Hall Forum flyer for World Cancer Day with the headline “Are we ready for a patient-centric holistic integrative approach!” (includes an upside-down “Cancer Cure Beyond 2026” graphic). Venue: Zoom LIVE. Date: 22 February 2026. Time: 08:30–13:30 (KL/HK/Manila/Singapore, UTC+8); Queensland 10:30am; Panama 7:30pm (21 Feb). QR code and registration link to register free. Program schedule lists speakers and topics: Dr Bill McGraw on frequency medicine (Rife); Dr Chan Wai Ting on liquid biopsy ctDNA monitoring; Prof (Dr) Pradeep M.K. Nair on reversing metabolic abnormalities and tumour microenvironment; Dr Arut Siva on CellSonic shockwaves for non-invasive tissue regeneration; Dr Amir Farid Isahak on ivermectin–fenbendazole protocol; Prof Dr L. Eduardo Cardona-Sanclemente on Ayurvedic constitution; Dr Philip McMillan on mechanisms of disease; panel discussion and public Q&A; closing remarks by Yeoh Joo Lee. Co-organised by CanSurvive Malaysia and CanSurvive Australia, with website and contact details at the bottom.

Town-Hall Forum 2026: The Search Continues for a Cancer Cure Beyond 2026

If you’ve seen the event flyer and noticed the text is upside down… you’re not imagining it. Consider it an invitation to flip the conversation, ask better questions, and look at holistic approaches to cancer care from fresh angles.

On  Sunday 22 February 2026, CanSurvive Australia is co-hosting a FREE Zoom Town-Hall Forum with CanSurvive Malaysia:

“The Search Continues for a Cancer Cure Beyond 2026”

This is a big, international event designed to bring together respected speakers, emerging ideas, and practical discussion around holistic approaches to cancer care, integrative thinking, and patient-centred support.

A global event, by design

This forum will run for approximately 4.5 hours so we can accommodate speakers joining from different parts of the world. That longer format isn’t a “nice-to-have” — it’s the point. If we want a genuinely global conversation about holistic approaches to cancer care, we need to make room for voices across time zones.

We have speakers joining from: India, Panama, Singapore, the United Kingdom and Malaysia.

Event details

Date: Sunday 22 February 2026
Venue: Zoom (live online)
Cost: Free
Queensland time:

  • 10:30am Zoom opens

  • 10:45am program begins

  • Approx. 3:30pm closing (allow around 4.5 hours overall)

If you’re outside Queensland, the program is scheduled as:

  • 08:30–13:30 (KL / HK / Manila / Singapore, UTC +8)

  • 19:30 Panama time (21 Feb 2026, UTC -5)
    (We’ll send Zoom details after registration.)

Why CanSurvive is backing this forum

At CanSurvive, we exist to ensure people challenged by cancer have greater choice in determining their care and treatment. We focus on gaining valuable research and building understanding around holistic, non-invasive cancer treatments and therapies.

That means we support access to:

  • evidence-based research on traditional and complementary care Save

  • support groups

  • educational seminars and workshops

  • an extensive lending library (with mail order service)

  • an online shop

This Town-Hall Forum aligns with that mission. It’s education-first. It’s conversation-first. And it’s built around the idea that people deserve more than one pathway forward.

Key speakers you’ll want to hear

We’ve invited speakers who bring clinical experience, practical insights, and real-world application to the table. Here are three highlights:

Dr. Bill McGraw (Panama): Frequency medicine (Rife)

Dr. Bill McGraw’s depth of knowledge around Rife Technology and its use in discussions on cancer and chronic disease is, in our view, extraordinary. His session will explore one of the biggest challenges to applying frequency medicine in real-world contexts, and what needs to change for the conversation to progress.

Prof. (Dr) Pradeep M.K. Nair (India): Tumour microenvironment insights

This is personal for us: we have met Prof. (Dr) Nair, and his advanced practice in tumour treatment is genuinely valuable. His presentation focuses on reversing metabolic abnormalities and understanding the tumour microenvironment, drawing insights from an integrative oncology centre.

Dr. Arut Siva (Singapore): Non-invasive shockwave technology

We have also met Dr. Arut Siva, and his work sits firmly in the “next generation” category. He will present on the use of CellSonic shockwaves (listed on the event program as a Class 1 FDA-approved medical device) for non-invasive, drug-free tissue regeneration and healing.

What else is on the program?

Because this forum is built around holistic approaches to cancer care, the topics are intentionally broad and interdisciplinary. Sessions include:

  • cancer treatment monitoring using liquid biopsy (ctDNA)

  • an ivermectin–fenbendazole protocol discussion

  • Ayurvedic perspectives on physical and mental constitution

  • mechanisms of disease

  • a live panel discussion and public Q&A exploring the future of holistic, integrative cancer therapies

This isn’t about pushing one single idea. Instead, it’s about expanding understanding, asking better questions, and supporting informed choice.

Who should attend this Town-Hall Forum?

This event is for you if you:

  • want to learn more about holistic approaches to cancer care without fluff

  • are exploring complementary support alongside conventional treatment

  • want to understand emerging ideas and integrative perspectives

  • care about patient-centred, non-invasive options and ongoing research

  • support someone with cancer and want clearer language and direction

If you’ve ever felt like you’re left to join the dots yourself, this forum will help you gather information in one place — with real speakers, real frameworks, and real discussion.

How to register

Registration is free, and spots are available online via Zoom. Scan the QR code to register.

A quick note on expectations

This forum is educational and discussion-based. It is not personal medical advice. However, education matters — and for many people, learning how to evaluate options is a powerful step in itself.

And yes: we promise the Zoom session won’t be upside down — just the way we’re thinking about what’s possible.