this isn't the first reports we heard of this, heck of a prostate cancer turn around story starts at 3:40... other forms of cancer that Ivermectin does well against starts at 11:45....
this isn't the first reports we heard of this, heck of a prostate cancer turn around story starts at 3:40... other forms of cancer that Ivermectin does well against starts at 11:45....
The minister of Truth demands you remove this post. Ivermectin is not a profitable drug as its patent is too old to monopolize then monetize.
The only recognized treatment for cancer is biopsy (10k) then radiation (15k) and chemotherapy (25k) and various expensive long term on patent drugs with terrible success profiles.
Actually cutting the cancer out works best.
I've had prostate cancer since 2018. I've had no treatment since 2021 but its not gone from my body and sooner or later I'm not going to be able to avoid some form of follow-up treatment. This coming week I have an appointment with my oncologist and I'm going to ask for ivermectin.
Thank you very much for posting this.
in the video above, they state that they have a hard time for oncologists to actually prescribe it ( probably forbidden ) but in the state of Tennessee supposedly you can get Ivermectin over the counter... then there is always Mexico where it is also over the counter... good luck...
edit: yes ivermectin is over the counter in Tennessee https://thehill.com/homenews/state-w...of-ivermectin/
For best results there are additional supplements to consider along with fenbendazole
https://makismd.substack.com/
https://twitter.com/MotivateIntent/status/1855040491810963502
One of my relatives died of cancer in the late 90s. She had the same thing as Chad Brown -- sarcoma. It's a very deadly cancer and there's basically no way out of it.
After traditional medicine failed her, she went to Mexico to get unapproved/experimental treatments. All of those failed, as well, and she had an extremely painful and awful final few months before passing away. Hurt me to watch.
It can be difficult to get off-label medication (meaning medication meant for something else). I have chronic tension headaches -- a hereditary condition passed down from my mom. Aspirin usually works for them, but sometimes it fails, to where I found that Vicodin works to get rid of it. I've found nothing else which works as well as Vicodin for the really tough tension headaches. I cannot get it prescribed for that purpose, no matter what. It's very frustrating. This is despite the fact that I only need a small amount, as I take only about 1 pill every 2-3 weeks, on average. Definitely not a situation where they have to worry about addiction. They simply will not acknowledge Vicodin's usefulness for headaches, even though many on the internet like me swear that it's useful. (I estimate about half the population can have their headaches helped by Vicodin, and the other half it doesn't work.)
I realize that this is different, as ivermectin is not an addictive medication like Vicodin. However, I can understand the frustration when you have cancer, want to try it, and won't get the prescription.
The 2017 Right to Try Act, a Trump-era law passed to allow people with terminal diseases try unapproved drugs, still requires that the drug have had a Phase 1 testing completion, and that it's not off-label (meaning ivermectin wouldn't qualify for cancer).
I was happy to see the Right To Try Act, but it doesn't go far enough. People with terminal diseases should basically be allowed to try anything they want, as their death is coming soon anyway, so they are risking little. But it would also be nice to start giving doctors more leeway to prescribe off-label drugs when there is at least some evidence that it might be effective, even in non-life-threatening cases like my tension headaches. Off-label drugs are allowed, but in general it's frowned upon, and doctors are discouraged from doing it. Only well-established off-label drugs are typically prescribed, such as Ozempic for weight loss.
If I were in country978's position, I would definitely look into something like ivermectin.
Ivermectin is a strict and firm no at the University of Massachusetts. They will not entertain a request to prescribe. I felt like it would've been easier to walk out with a full script for the month of perc 30's.
Not surprising, University's get funding from big pharma. That's why they implemented mandatory experimental vaccines to healthy young people that derived zero benefit from them.
There are lots of Doctor's in the States that are willing to prescribe ivermectin/fenbendazole, even some online.
yeah Ivermectin is like a very big taboo, cause nobody makes any money from it, this is just an idea but is there anyway you can get to Tennessee? pick it up yourself over the counter, and while you are there maybe walk up to pharmacy desk, ask for some local doctors info that would prescribe it maybe after a quick office visit, maybe then you could take the prescription back home in your home state to keep getting refills, i guess the Tennessee doctor would probably have to give you some sort of electronic prescription to get your refills in your home state... or probably with a little digging you can find an online doctors outfit that would prescribe it to you without ever traveling...
https://hpspipe.com/about/
I have no idea if the above link is legit or not, but just did a quick google search and this site supposedly sells ivermectin OTC
can’t you also get it at like tractor supply (the “horse paste”)
country, please keep us updated. I’m especially interested as my dad was recently diagnosed with prostate cancer - after having kidney cancer and having a kidney removed two years ago
not really sure what’s caused both cancers but it’s surely, 100%, definitely not the novel, untested Covid vaccine we were forced to take
Hi Lew!!!
The "nobody makes money from it so they don't acknowledge its usefulness" sounds like a conspiracy theory, but that phenomenon is very real.
Look up Vitamin D and COVID. There has been a theory since 2020 that daily Vitamin D supplements led to milder COVID symptoms, but nobody wanted to study it, despite some promising initial findings.
Why? I'm guessing because there's almost no money in selling a lot of Vitamin D.
Both of my bouts with COVID were surprisingly mild. The second was worse than the first, but keep in mind that both were mild enough to where I confused them for a cold, until several days in. Even the worst point was never as bad as some of my very bad colds I've had. The only shitty thing I experienced with COVID was that persistent cough after the July 2024 infection, though that has mostly gone away. I take Vitamin D 5000 IU every day, and I think it's not a coincidence that both of my bouts of it weren't bad.
Regarding Ivermectin, as I mentioned earlier in the thread, the medical industry is very slow to authorize/acknowledge off-label use of existing drugs. That's something we really need reformed, especially when it comes to cancer, but also in low-risk situations. For example, if I tell a doctor that Vicodin works for my headaches, but I only need it once every 20 days on average, they should have no problem giving me 30 pills every 6 months.
I don't think you can get the pills at Tractor Supply, at least not here in MA. In fact, the wife sent me to Walgreen yesterday so I asked the pharmacist if they even dispense it there. I was told they could get it but pretty much never dispense it and would have to order it. They had to ask me how to spell it.
I did find a nice pharmacist in Johnson City, TN when I called around yesterday. He told me they have all the pills I could want over the counter for $1 each but that a TN resident needs to purchase. The guy spent like half an hour on the phone with me and when I told him how much I appreciated his time he told me he was just trying to do what Jesus would expect him to do.
The other side of beating prostate cancer is diet. I have to stop eating sugar and white flour and processed foods as all of this is fuel for cancer. This is where it gets hard for me. I love sweets, pizza, pasta and all the other bad stuff. I have to see a nutritionist soon. My doctor has been encouraging me to begin another hormone regiment for about 2 years now.
I've been resisting this as the hormones are miserable and make me sick. However, the psa tests show that I need to do something and soon. I agreed to a hormone injection at my next visit in 3 months so that means I have 3 months to change my diet, acquire the ivermectin and bring down the psa if I want to avoid it. I will keep you posted for sure.
I'm likely headed to Tennessee after the holidays. Best of luck to your dad. I'm sure he's probably older than me (54) and so the treatment is probably a little different for him but I've been through basically everything modern medicine can throw at me with the exception of chemo and immunotherapy.
i am nearly 99% certain they sell this OTC in mexico. so hop on a cruise and go enjoy yourself, pick up your medicine, gamble, drink, eat...
In the US you can order it online without a prescription.
https://twitter.com/myedpillus/status/1856362571692978255
I actually have ivermectin cream for what was suspected to be rosacea. No idea what it truly was as it came and went. But I stopped using it after a week following a bad outbreak. Apparently it often makes things worse before it gets better.
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