Building the first accredited Adventist Naturopathic medical program

Through John Burden College, the Paradise Group is pursuing the establishment of an accredited naturopathic medical program in Canada. The goal is to have a program accredited by the Council of Naturopathic Medical Education so that graduates can become licensed Naturopathic doctors, primarily in Canada.

The Paradise Group sees this as an essential component of fulfilling its vision to establish Adventist healthcare systems across Canada (rural sanitariums - urban clinics). These sanitariums (lifestyle centers) and clinics will need many more mission-minded doctors to provide leadership and clinical services using a natural and lifestyle medicine approach. An accredited Naturopathic medical program will serve to provide the licensed doctors necessary to staff and lead future institutions.

The Vision

Thousands of humble, sacrificial and elite Adventist Naturopathic doctors serving as medical missionary clinician-leaders in every province of Canada and in all the unreached and or underserved places across the world.

The Mission

Establish an accredited Canadian Naturopathic medical program to train young Naturopathic doctors to become:

  1. highly skilled clinicians in the application of natural and lifestyle therapies.

  2. elite humble leaders of clinical teams at Paradise Group lifestyle centers and clinics in Canada.

  3. sacrificial missionaries in foreign mission fields where Adventist healthcare providers and institutions are desperately lacking or absent.

The Rationale

  • Naturopathic medicine is rapidly growing in demand by Canadians. Provincial governments have begun regulating Naturopathic doctors similar to other healthcare professions. In many provinces, an individual requires a license to practice as a Naturopathic doctor. Naturopathic medicine is increasingly recognized as a reputable health profession by healthcare bodies, governments and the public. Naturopathic medicine’s whole-person and natural approach to healing aligns well with the Bible and the counsels of Ellen G White.

  • When Adventist young people leave Canada to train in foreign countries, they often do not come back. This is especially true in healthcare professions where places like Loma Linda draw away many Canadian Adventists who earn their degrees and often do not return to practice in Canada. This brain-drain of young health professionals decreases the number of medical missionaries available to serve the church in Canada. One way to reduce this effect is to have young Adventists train in Canada.

  • During the debate over how to establish the medical program at the College of Medical Evangelists (now Loma Linda), an idea was proposed to have Adventist young people do the first part of their medical training at the Adventist school (Loma Linda) but complete their medical training at a non-Adventist medical program.

    When this proposal was brought to Ellen G White, she emphatically opposed the idea likening it to King Ahaziah seeking “to the God of Ekron.” (Loma Linda Messages p 14). Instead, Ellen White counseled very clearly that Adventists should “have a school of our own.” (Loma Linda Messages p 15)

    It is asinine to expect secular institutions to do a good job producing Adventist missionaries. Thus Ellen White’s counsel is logical. For far too long we foolishly hoped that Adventist young people can enter secular institutions and come out as committed sacrificial Adventist medical missionaries. The lack of mission-minded health professionals who truly grasp the high calling of the Adventist medical missionary and are equipped to practice the uniquely Adventist approach to healthcare, is evidence for the futility of such a hope.

    The time for change has come.

    The Paradise Group seeks to train Adventist young people to become doctors within a fully Adventist context by establishing an Adventist naturopathic medical program.

  • There are various reasons why the Paradise Group is pursuing a licensed Naturopathic medical program rather than a conventional allopathic medical program.

    • It’s far cheaper: The training of medical doctors will require the establishment of hospitals and clinics and many regulatory hurdles. If one is committed to not training our doctors at Ekron (see above), then the church in Canada would need Adventist hospital(s) and Adventist clinic(s) in Canada. This will cost hundreds of millions, if not, billions of dollars.

    • A natural therapies emphases: The Paradise group is establishing Adventist healthcare systems where natural and lifestyle medicine are primary modalities. Naturopathic doctors have greater training in these modalities. Natural therapies and lifestyle medicine is the primary focus of naturopathic medical education. Additional certifications and courses are not necessary after graduation for Naturopathic doctors to start effectively implementing a natural and lifestyle medicine approach to healing. Naturopathic medicine aligns well with Ellen White’s call for Adventists to utilize natural therapies and lifestyle medicine as primary modalities.

  • The Paradise Group has a vision to establish Adventist healthcare systems across Canada. This includes lifestyle centers outside every large city and numerous small lifestyle and natural medicine clinics. Naturopathic doctors currently help lead and staff our existing programs and clinic, but many more doctors will be needed.

Basic Program details

  • 4-year post-undergraduate program including didactic and clinical components. The 3rd and 4th years being heavily focused on supervised clinical training. Training will include the full spectrum of medical sciences and therapeutics in accordance with the rigorous accreditation criteria outlined by the Council of Naturopathic Medical Education.

    — Program overview

  • Training will be primarily provided by both Adventist Naturopathic and Medical doctors committed to whole-person, natural medicine and a missionary perspective to healthcare.

    — Faculty

  • Paradise Health Clinic and its immersion programs (similar to sanitariums) will be the primary teaching clinics. The goal is to also provide opportunities to have senior interns train at satelite locations such as sanitariums in the United States and overseas. Exposure to foreign mission clinics in underserved areas will be built into the curriculum as well.

    — Clinical education

  • Paradise Group is currently exploring opportunities to work with existing institutions like Burman University, local conferences in Canada, the SDACC, and other Adventist lifestyle centers on this initiative.

    — Partnerships

Potential Faculty

The following individuals have expressed initial interest in being full-time, part-time or contract-based members of the faculty:


Nadine Plummer ND

Sasha Coleman ND

Doneisha Dodd ND

Jessica Chon ND

George Cho ND CEP

Edward Dunn MPH PhD

Pekka Maattanen PhD

Daniel Cho MPH


If you want to support the training of the next generation of Adventist-trained Naturopathic doctors, please send us an email.

Budget and Fundraising

Accreditation fees by the Council of Naturopathic Medical Education

  • Eligibility application fee: