We spoke on the phone for a long time, again and again. Unfortunately—because of the virus, the distance, and my own pain—we couldn’t meet in person for months. But during those calls, he spoke for hours about his vocation and about healing.
I listened like a little girl to fairy tales—about dragons and heroes who get into unbelievable adventures, and who can cross difficult obstacles thanks to their passion, courage, and curiosity.
I was amazed by his faith, and by how—even at a mature age—he still doesn’t stop. He is endlessly curious, unafraid of openness, and he researches and searches continuously. He searches for how he can help more, heal better, and keep developing.
After those long conversations, we finally managed to arrange a personal meeting—and fittingly, we met in a hospital corridor, wearing masks, in what is the central stage of his life. My first impression of him was humility and curiosity.
Talking with him swept me along. I could barely keep up. I have to say: he shattered every preconceived idea I had about doctors—of course, in the best possible sense.
He has a constant need to grow. He doesn’t settle for answers—he looks for new possibilities. Even after countless international lectures, publications, and major recognitions, he keeps learning, learning, learning.
And beyond giving me many wonderful answers, he also showed me something else: the people who move the world are those who move with the current of science, with new technologies, and who deeply believe that recovery and healing are a shared work.
Dr. András Nagy truly is a hero in the fairy tale called life—someone who places his own life in the service of others. His achievements are remarkable, but perhaps even more important: he is deeply human. Alongside extraordinary results in cancer surgery, he also searches for new possibilities that can help us heal. It’s no coincidence that the MORA® therapy method caught his attention.
Human-centered therapy, supported by human-centered healers, can walk one of the most beautiful paths—for all of us. Please receive my interview with him with love.
As a doctor, where did you first encounter the MORA® therapy method?
Dr. Nagy: During colorectal screenings. We carried out one of the country’s largest screening programs in Kiskunhalas. We reported the results multiple times, including on professional forums.
I’ve performed a huge number of colon surgeries over the past decades, and I followed these cases continuously—not only together with oncologists, but personally as well. In many cases, we monitored them for more than ten years.
During follow-ups I met one or two patients who came from another doctor and told me that a colleague had checked their problem with a certain device.
The usual follow-up is physical examination, lab tests, X-ray, ultrasound, CT. But this new method caught my interest because of its accuracy and simplicity, so I started looking into it—and that’s how I came to the MORA® device.
What did you observe, and how does this system work?
The whole thing works on the principle that every organ—and in fact every substance, every living organism—has a biomagnetic resonance. There is a normal, healthy vibration, so the normal level can be defined, and deviations from it can also be identified.
During the assessment, where a deviation is found, it is also treated. If I can prove this with research, it could be excellent for screening in clinical medicine as well.
If I know there is an abnormality, I investigate it—because as a surgeon I can only operate if I know exactly where it is, how large it is, what its surroundings look like, what the histology is—everything—because the surgery has to be planned and performed based on that. This allows further checking and refinement.
What research has been done so far?
We started from the idea of doing a series of studies. In Hungary, we looked at lung, breast, colorectal, prostate, and gynecological tumors—because these are the areas commonly screened.
With this device, the assessment produces results within about an hour, and it can indicate where an abnormality is. It’s a simple screening method: painless, no side effects.
Medical screening, however (a woman, for example, goes through four screenings) may or may not happen—because it’s complicated, not always pleasant, and people don’t have time to go four times.
First, we began screening all five areas—both symptomatic and symptom-free individuals—and we presented this in lectures and papers. But I asked to focus only on the colon, because that is what interested me most.
For colorectal screening, colonoscopy is essential, because it shows everything—whether there is an abnormality or not. We included more than sixty people in the MORA® test, and all sixty-four were identified correctly as having no abnormality. It was perfectly accurate.
Then we did another study: pre-surgery, when there was already a diagnosis and we knew there was an abnormality. We tested 19 people with the MORA® device as well—and all 19 were identified correctly.
We also did this: when someone came to gastroenterology with complaints for a colonoscopy, we examined them first with the MORA® device. We looked at 63 such cases. In those 63 patients, there were only two or three findings—yet the rest were identified correctly, and the method provided an accurate assessment.
Statistically, 92–93% accuracy without pain—and colonoscopy is around that level too. But even in those 2–3 patients, they found an abnormality in another area that needed investigation—so essentially there was no “negative hit.”
Dr. András Nagy, Chief Physician
We examined three groups:
- people who had already had a colonoscopy for some reason and definitely had no abnormalities (negative control),
- people we knew definitely had an abnormality (positive control),
- people we only knew had some abdominal complaint.
The examiners never knew whom they were testing. Yet both the negative and positive cases were identified with 100% accuracy. In the unknown symptomatic cases, only those 2–3 findings appeared, and those also had to be investigated due to another condition.
After this, we concluded we should start diagnostic use and follow-up with the MORA® device. A colleague of mine—who graduated with me—runs a nursing home, and they purchased such a device. They screened 114 patients with full accuracy.
Do you personally work with the device now?
I don’t work with it directly now; I leave it to those who understand it better. Also, I direct the studies, and very often only I know the true diagnoses—while the examiners do not. That keeps results fair and correct.
Why do you refer patients for it?
It’s very good for screening, because it shows all deviations. You can screen women for lungs, breast, gynecology, and colon; men can be screened similarly, adding the prostate.
If the result is positive, then we investigate further and get a more precise picture. So it could serve as a preliminary screening form.
You could place a device on a screening bus, go out to a village, and in a few days examine almost everyone concerned. They wouldn’t have to travel into the city four separate times for these screenings.
Could this method also help during the current pandemic situation?
Some people go through COVID without noticing and can infect others even more than those with strong symptoms.
At the moment, the PCR test is the safest, but it is not 100% either. COVID is similar to the influenza virus—you can catch it again, because it changes. And it’s not certain that once you’ve had it, you will never get it again.
A third point—so far mainly described in American and Chinese publications—is that if the infection passes without symptoms, there may be later complications. The essence is that in the lungs, where carbon dioxide–oxygen exchange takes place, there is a membrane, and this can be damaged. That’s why severe patients need ventilation in time.
We still don’t know exactly what will happen two or three years later for those who have had it. Later it may affect the heart, kidneys, liver—we suspect this, but we don’t yet know precisely. The device also shows the presence of COVID in the body.
To clarify: through your work, an official study was produced. Was it published?
Yes. I presented it at an international medical conference. This is the first publication that appeared—also in English—with all results included.
This device is recognized in the European Union (German-made), and China, Ukraine, and Russia also have their own versions and use them.
I have already presented these results at a surgeons’ congress and at an oncology congress as well.
In your view, why are there so many cancer patients in Hungary?
There are many reasons. One is that people do not attend screenings—although a tumor discovered early can truly be cured. I have a patient who has lived for 40 years after surgery for malignant disease.
Another issue is that tumors do not hurt. With the smallest pain, people run to the doctor—even at 2 a.m. with influenza. But because a tumor doesn’t hurt, people seek help only when they already have symptoms. By then, they may be in a stage where we can’t always help.
So they don’t go to screenings, no matter how much we explain it.
It’s similar with coronavirus: people think it isn’t real. But it’s not only about catching it; even after you go through it, there can be serious consequences later. And we must protect our environment as well.
And returning to your question: the emotional factor also matters. I’ve experienced countless times that when I tell someone, “this is a tumor and it must be operated on,” or that a stoma is needed, the person collapses emotionally. For the next half hour they don’t even know whether they’re a boy or a girl. It’s a tragic state—huge stress.
We realized that we must include a psychologist in the oncology team, because I can say anything, they won’t absorb it under that emotional load. We must treat the person as a whole—body and soul.
We need to seek other solutions in healing as well. For this, the MORA® method is perfectly suitable—as a gentle and precise support.
Thank you for the conversation!
A cikksorozat további részeit az alábbi linken olvashatja: Az emberközeli módszer: MORA®