What was claimed

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) and fenbendazole cure multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, eye diseases, hearing issues, and most every ailment in humans and animals by controlling parasites in our food, air, water, and bodies

Our verdict

Inaccurate

Ivermectin is an antiparasitic, and sources note no established clinical role for it in MS; evidence is limited to animal/preclinical studies. <cite index="17-1">Fenbendazole lacks clinical trials to support its use in humans</cite>. <cite index="20-12">Fenbendazole has not been tested for use in humans as a cancer treatment</cite>. <cite index="20-15,20-17">Patients who reported remission typically took fenbendazole alongside FDA-approved treatments, making attribution impossible</cite>.

All 3 AI systems agree10 sources citedChecked Jun 30, 2026

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Key findings

These drugs cure Parkinson's disease

Incorrect90%
1 AI checked

Fenbendazole cures cancer

Incorrect95%
1 AI checked

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) and fenbendazole cure multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, eye diseases, hearing issues, and most every ailment in humans and animals by controlling parasites in our food, air, water, and bodies

Incorrect95%
5 of 9 AIs agree·Perplexity: Can’t verify, Perplexity: Can’t verify, Perplexity: Can’t verify, Perplexity: Misleading

Horse paste is safe for human use

Incorrect98%
1 AI checked

These treatments work by controlling parasites in food, air, water, and bodies

Misleading85%
1 AI checked

Detailed Analysis

The statement is overwhelmingly unsupported and makes broad cure claims that conflict with established medical evidence. Ivermectin is an antiparasitic drug for specific human and animal parasitic infections, and available sources do not support it as a cure for MS, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, hearing loss, or most other ailments.[2] [7] [8]

Why this verdict

  • The statement is overwhelmingly unsupported and makes broad cure claims that conflict with established medical evidence.
  • Ivermectin is an antiparasitic drug for specific human and animal parasitic infections, and available sources do not support it as a cure for MS, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, hearing loss, or most other ailments.[2] [7] [8]

Claims checked

Ivermectin horse paste with wormwood and honey cures cancer.

Incorrect91%
The sources describe ivermectin as an antiparasitic, not an established cancer cure. A preclinical article mentions anti-tumor properties, but that is not evidence of curing cancer in humans.[2] [9]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin horse paste with wormwood and honey cures multiple sclerosis.

Incorrect97%
Ivermectin is an antiparasitic, and sources note no established clinical role for it in MS; evidence is limited to animal/preclinical studies.[4] [5] [6]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin horse paste with wormwood and honey cures most every ailment in humans and animals.

Incorrect98%
Sources support ivermectin only for certain parasitic infections, with safety and efficacy tied to correct dosing and species. They do not support it as a cure-all.[2] [7] [8]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

What other AI think

The claim makes multiple false and dangerous assertions. Ivermectin horse paste is not approved for human use and carries documented safety risks. While some preclinical research exists on ivermectin and fenbendazole, there is no clinical evidence these drugs "cure" the listed diseases in humans. The claim conflates anecdotal reports with proven efficacy and promotes unsafe self-medication with veterinary products.

Why this verdict

  • The claim makes multiple false and dangerous assertions.
  • Ivermectin horse paste is not approved for human use and carries documented safety risks.
  • While some preclinical research exists on ivermectin and fenbendazole, there is no clinical evidence these drugs "cure" the listed diseases in humans.
  • The claim conflates anecdotal reports with proven efficacy and promotes unsafe self-medication with veterinary products.

Claims checked

These drugs cure Parkinson's disease

Incorrect90%
No clinical trials in humans support this claim. Anecdotal stories, though not peer-reviewed, do not constitute scientific evidence. Only unverified testimonials exist, not controlled studies.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) cures multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's, cancer, glaucoma, eye diseases, hearing issues, and most every ailment

Incorrect95%
Ivermectin horse paste is not approved or safe for human use. There are no in-depth studies on ivermectin's effect on MS in humans—only mouse models. Fenbendazole has no proven benefit but several potential risks, and oncologists do not prescribe it. Anecdotal reports do not constitute cures.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Fenbendazole cures cancer

Incorrect95%
Fenbendazole lacks clinical trials to support its use in humans. Fenbendazole has not been tested for use in humans as a cancer treatment. Patients who reported remission typically took fenbendazole alongside FDA-approved treatments, making attribution impossible.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The statement is factually incorrect and medically dangerous. There is no credible clinical evidence that ivermectin horse paste, fenbendazole, wormwood, or honey cure multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, or the broad array of ailments listed, and veterinary products are not approved for these human treatments.

Why this verdict

  • The statement is factually incorrect and medically dangerous.
  • There is no credible clinical evidence that ivermectin horse paste, fenbendazole, wormwood, or honey cure multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, or the broad array of ailments listed, and veterinary products are not approved for these human treatments.

Claims checked

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) and fenbendazole cure multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, eye diseases, hearing issues, and most every ailment in humans and animals by controlling parasites in our food, air, water, and bodies

Incorrect95%
Ivermectin is approved for specific parasitic diseases in humans (and as veterinary products for animals) but not shown to cure MS, Parkinson’s, cancer, glaucoma, or most other listed conditions; fenbendazole is a veterinary dewormer with no proven, approved human cancer or neurodegenerative cures. Using veterinary formulations or unproven herbal mixtures can cause harm and is not supported by clinical trials or regulatory approvals.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

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