FDA approved Mebendazole (for use in humans) is only $550 per DOSE.
Fenbendazole (all are IVM like products), due to it's non-rigourous FDA approval process can be purchased for roughly 43 cents per dose.
In India, during Cov-19, it was being included in a 4 pack of therapy (along with Vitamins C & D, and Zinc) for roughly 25 cents per package.
It's always comforting to know that money never has anything to do with our wonderful medical system.
Now that we know that IVM is an amazing therapy option in treating cancer (cancers seemingly feed off of parasites to gain entry/establish) the entire Cancer Industrial Complex is going crazy (biting their wallets).
Even the pHARMa companies have been buying up all the IVM producing businesses around the globe to try and shut the program/option down.
Got to love our world.
Much thanks to @BoydenGrayPLLC for your excellent counsel. @drpaulmarik1 @RobertApter1 @Covid19Critical. Blessings
PS: My dog has been ravaged with a splenic mass (tumor/neoplasm afflicting therefore entire lymphatic system). 6 months now on Fenbendazole/IVM and he's still clicking along. He's no spring chicken either at over 13 years of age.
I had a dog that had that (hemangiosarcoma) years ago. Unfortunately, those drugs weren’t mentioned in treatments when I researched. Ended up doing a splenectomy. She survived three more months.
I’ll have to remember this in case it happens to our current or future dogs.
This may sound crazy, but I agree with the argument that using the animal versions may be safer, since they’re sold for use with expensive stock, like race horses.
If you look at pictures of ‘health’ products being produced in places like India and China, it’s quite startling. There are some in this lengthy post if you scroll down.
No. The injectable version. I don’t inject it of course, just use a syringe to remove a dose that I then expel into some juice. I got my dosage from Ann Barnhardt at Barnhardt.biz. The website has an ivermectin section.
She doesn’t recommend the sheep dip; just the paste or the injectable.
Hmm…curious as to why she wouldn’t recommend it as it’s designed for oral use & has no additives, just iver, very diluted, with water & doses calibrated by weight, so easy. I had read that one should avoid the injectable form! Ah, well! It’s noce to have a forum where people tell their experiences & share info.
No link handy, but you can look it up under that odd name. I looked up a few injectables & was concerned bc they contained propylene glycol. Please check the ingredients in yours, WS. Hope it’s free of that kind of stuff. W/ sh dp, the dosage, by wt is pretty much the same as for sheep, & it’s just Iver & water, very diluted. …But it does come in a plastic container. I keep it in the fridge. I found recommended use for it by checking a few diff places on line. It needs to be used with fat — as w/ a meal or Coconut oil in coffee or something. (If sick, for a medium sized woman @ 2 tsp — some say two doses a day apart, while others say for 5 days in a row….🤷🏻♀️)
….there are ag products that are applied, but it is SD is used orally.
Yes. The jelly in the horse syringe can be divided into nine sections, which gives you nine days of a dose for a 125 pound person. Ivermectin works. Dr. Pierre Corey wrote a book about it.
But I think you’ll find the vet version to be much more economical and just as effective, when properly dosed.
The other outrage is how very overpriced the people version became.
FDA approved Mebendazole (for use in humans) is only $550 per DOSE.
Fenbendazole (all are IVM like products), due to it's non-rigourous FDA approval process can be purchased for roughly 43 cents per dose.
In India, during Cov-19, it was being included in a 4 pack of therapy (along with Vitamins C & D, and Zinc) for roughly 25 cents per package.
It's always comforting to know that money never has anything to do with our wonderful medical system.
Now that we know that IVM is an amazing therapy option in treating cancer (cancers seemingly feed off of parasites to gain entry/establish) the entire Cancer Industrial Complex is going crazy (biting their wallets).
Even the pHARMa companies have been buying up all the IVM producing businesses around the globe to try and shut the program/option down.
Got to love our world.
Much thanks to @BoydenGrayPLLC for your excellent counsel. @drpaulmarik1 @RobertApter1 @Covid19Critical. Blessings
PS: My dog has been ravaged with a splenic mass (tumor/neoplasm afflicting therefore entire lymphatic system). 6 months now on Fenbendazole/IVM and he's still clicking along. He's no spring chicken either at over 13 years of age.
I had a dog that had that (hemangiosarcoma) years ago. Unfortunately, those drugs weren’t mentioned in treatments when I researched. Ended up doing a splenectomy. She survived three more months.
I’ll have to remember this in case it happens to our current or future dogs.
There's a protocol listed on the www.fenbendazole.substack.com website for prophylactic considerations.
2 weeks of Fenbendazole (1gm dose 2x per day for 6 days with one day off, and then repeat in 2nd week) and then you're done for the year.
Rumor has it that if this protocol is established annually you're pet likely will never have to deal with cancer.
Best
You can get it directly from India on Indiamart. That's where it comes from anyway. I got 500 12mg tabs for $100.
This may sound crazy, but I agree with the argument that using the animal versions may be safer, since they’re sold for use with expensive stock, like race horses.
If you look at pictures of ‘health’ products being produced in places like India and China, it’s quite startling. There are some in this lengthy post if you scroll down.
https://chemtrails.substack.com/p/vitamin-d-is-rat-poison-the-fraudulent?r=38a8y&utm_medium=ios&utm_campaign=post
And for less than a hundred dollars, I’ve been taking the liquid ivermectin prophylacticly for a couple of years now.
Sheep dip? Just Iver & H2O. That’s what I’ve got.
No. The injectable version. I don’t inject it of course, just use a syringe to remove a dose that I then expel into some juice. I got my dosage from Ann Barnhardt at Barnhardt.biz. The website has an ivermectin section.
She doesn’t recommend the sheep dip; just the paste or the injectable.
Hmm…curious as to why she wouldn’t recommend it as it’s designed for oral use & has no additives, just iver, very diluted, with water & doses calibrated by weight, so easy. I had read that one should avoid the injectable form! Ah, well! It’s noce to have a forum where people tell their experiences & share info.
Figures. That sounds odd, though, that sheep dip is for oral use? I thought that would be a skin application/bath sort of thing.
Do you have a link for information about it?
No link handy, but you can look it up under that odd name. I looked up a few injectables & was concerned bc they contained propylene glycol. Please check the ingredients in yours, WS. Hope it’s free of that kind of stuff. W/ sh dp, the dosage, by wt is pretty much the same as for sheep, & it’s just Iver & water, very diluted. …But it does come in a plastic container. I keep it in the fridge. I found recommended use for it by checking a few diff places on line. It needs to be used with fat — as w/ a meal or Coconut oil in coffee or something. (If sick, for a medium sized woman @ 2 tsp — some say two doses a day apart, while others say for 5 days in a row….🤷🏻♀️)
….there are ag products that are applied, but it is SD is used orally.
I checked labels (again) and only ingredient listed is ivermectin.
Well, that sounds good!
Yes. The jelly in the horse syringe can be divided into nine sections, which gives you nine days of a dose for a 125 pound person. Ivermectin works. Dr. Pierre Corey wrote a book about it.