What was claimed

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green created a cancer-killing laser that cures cancer but 'they' don't want her to trend because she's Black (implying suppression of a ready cure)

Our verdict

Inaccurate

The treatment is not ready for widespread use. It has only been tested in mice and is currently in the fundraising phase for human clinical trials. Dr. Dr. Green and her foundation explicitly state that they are still preparing for and funding human clinical trials and pursuing FDA approval, indicating the therapy has not yet been validated as a cure in humans. No authoritative medical or regulatory sources describe her work as an established human cure for cancer.

1 of 3 AI systems agree9 sources citedChecked Jun 29, 2026

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Key findings

The treatment is a ready cure that is being withheld

Incorrect93%
1 AI checked

Her technology is a ready cure for cancer in humans

Incorrect93%
1 AI checked

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green created a cancer-killing laser that cures cancer.

Misleading91%
All 3 AIs agree

‘They’ don't want her to trend because she's Black (implying suppression of a ready cure).

Can’t verify60%
2 of 3 AIs agree·Claude: Incorrect

Detailed Analysis

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green has developed a promising laser-activated nanoparticle therapy that eliminates tumors in mice, but it is not a proven general cure for cancer in humans. There is no credible evidence that a ready human cure is being suppressed because she is Black; the main barrier described in sources is funding and the need for clinical trials and regulatory approval.

Why this verdict

  • Dr.
  • Hadiyah-Nicole Green has developed a promising laser-activated nanoparticle therapy that eliminates tumors in mice, but it is not a proven general cure for cancer in humans.
  • There is no credible evidence that a ready human cure is being suppressed because she is Black; the main barrier described in sources is funding and the need for clinical trials and regulatory approval.

Claims checked

Her technology is a ready cure for cancer in humans

Incorrect93%
Dr. Green and her foundation explicitly state that they are still preparing for and funding human clinical trials and pursuing FDA approval, indicating the therapy has not yet been validated as a cure in humans.[1] [2] [5] No authoritative medical or regulatory sources describe her work as an established human cure for cancer.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green created a cancer-killing laser that cures cancer

Misleading88%
Sources state she developed a laser-activated nanoparticle therapy that completely eliminates tumors in laboratory mice after a single 10‑minute treatment over 15 days, with no observable side effects.[1] [2] [4] [6] However, this has only been demonstrated in mice, not in humans, and her own foundation notes they are still raising funds to start human clinical trials.[2] [5] Calling it a general cancer cure, without specifying it is preclinical and in animals, is misleading.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

‘They’ don't want her to trend because she's Black, implying suppression of her cure

Can’t verify60%
This claim alleges intentional suppression and motive but provides no specific actors, evidence, or documented actions to substantiate it. Public sources instead show that her work has received media coverage and recognition, and that the primary challenge discussed is securing funding for trials, not documented racial suppression of a proven cure.[2] [3] [5] [8]

What other AI think

The claim conflates preliminary research with a proven cure and promotes a conspiracy theory without evidence. Dr. Green's work shows promise in mice models, but human trials are still in early stages. The assertion that her work is being suppressed due to her race is unfounded—her research has received significant media coverage, federal funding, and institutional support.

Why this verdict

  • The claim conflates preliminary research with a proven cure and promotes a conspiracy theory without evidence.
  • Dr.
  • Green's work shows promise in mice models, but human trials are still in early stages.
  • The assertion that her work is being suppressed due to her race is unfounded—her research has received significant media coverage, federal funding, and institutional support.

Claims checked

'They' don't want her to trend because she's Black (implying suppression of a ready cure)

Incorrect92%
There is no evidence of suppression. Dr. Green's work has received substantial media coverage from major outlets including ABC News, NBC News, New York Times, Forbes, The History Channel, PBS, and NPR. She has received $1.1-1.2 million in federal grants from the VA, holds academic positions at Morehouse School of Medicine, and founded a nonprofit foundation. Her research is actively being advanced through official channels.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The treatment is a ready cure that is being withheld

Incorrect93%
The treatment is not ready for widespread use. It has only been tested in mice and is currently in the fundraising phase for human clinical trials. Dr. Green herself is actively raising funds and seeking FDA approval, indicating the treatment is not yet available as a cure. The claim of suppression contradicts the transparent, ongoing development process.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green created a cancer-killing laser that cures cancer

Misleading95%
Dr. Green developed a laser-activated nanoparticle treatment that has shown promising results in mice, achieving complete tumor elimination. However, the treatment has not been proven to cure cancer in humans. Clinical trials are still in early phases, and the treatment remains experimental. Calling it a proven 'cure' misrepresents the current state of the research.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The response mixes a real line of research with an overstated claim. The nanoparticle + laser therapy exists and showed tumor clearance in animal studies, but it is not an established cure for cancer in humans. The allegation of deliberate suppression because she is Black lacks verifiable evidence.

Why this verdict

  • The response mixes a real line of research with an overstated claim.
  • The nanoparticle + laser therapy exists and showed tumor clearance in animal studies, but it is not an established cure for cancer in humans.
  • The allegation of deliberate suppression because she is Black lacks verifiable evidence.

Claims checked

Dr. Hadiyah-Nicole Green created a cancer-killing laser that cures cancer.

Misleading90%
Dr. Green developed laser-activated nanoparticle therapy (LANT) that produced tumor regression in mice, but there is no peer-reviewed, regulatory-approved human cure for all cancers; calling it a proven 'cure for cancer' is an overstatement.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

‘They’ don't want her to trend because she's Black (implying suppression of a ready cure).

Can’t verify60%
There is no clear, documented evidence showing an organized suppression campaign targeting her work for racial reasons; social media attention and media coverage are variable and do not prove deliberate suppression.

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