What was claimed

I cured my ovarian cancer (and moles, reversed grey hair) using soursop tea, bitter apricot seeds, black seed oil, castor oil tampons, trace minerals and borax thanks to Barbara O'Neill.

Our verdict

Inaccurate

Reliable cancer sources state soursop/graviola has no clinical evidence showing it can treat or cure cancer in humans. The statement presents multiple unproven remedies as a cure for ovarian cancer. Apricot seeds do not cure cancer. No clinical trial has ever shown that eating apricot kernels or taking their extract has any benefit for cancer patients. A relatively small handful of bitter kernels can reach lethal doses of cyanide, and documented cases show severe outcomes including metabolic acidosis, dangerously low blood pressure, seizures, and coma.

All 3 AI systems agree10 sources citedChecked Jul 5, 2026

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Key findings

Castor oil tampons or castor oil packs can treat or cure cancer.

Incorrect90%
1 AI checked

Borax (or boric acid) can cure cancer and is safe to ingest or use as a cancer treatment.

Incorrect94%
All 2 AIs agree

I cured my ovarian cancer using soursop tea, bitter apricot seeds, black seed oil, castor oil tampons, trace minerals and borax.

Incorrect94%
5 of 6 AIs agree·Perplexity: Can’t verify

Bitter apricot seeds (amygdalin/laetrile) are an effective and safe cancer treatment.

Incorrect97%
All 2 AIs agree

The person credits Barbara O'Neill for these methods.

Can’t verify43%
2 of 3 AIs agree·ChatGPT: Verified

These treatments removed moles and reversed grey hair.

Can’t verify47%
All 4 AIs agree

Detailed Analysis

The response makes strong treatment and cure claims for ovarian cancer that are not supported by reliable human evidence. Major cancer centers and cancer organizations say soursop/graviola has no proven benefit for cancer in humans, and the FDA has warned against marketing it as a cancer treatment.[1] [4] [7] [8] The claims about reversing grey hair and curing moles are also unsupported here, while borax and castor oil tampon use are not established cancer treatments.

Why this verdict

  • The response makes strong treatment and cure claims for ovarian cancer that are not supported by reliable human evidence.
  • Major cancer centers and cancer organizations say soursop/graviola has no proven benefit for cancer in humans, and the FDA has warned against marketing it as a cancer treatment.[1] [4] [7] [8] The claims about reversing grey hair and curing moles are also unsupported here, while borax and castor oil tampon use are not established cancer treatments.

Claims checked

I cured my ovarian cancer using soursop tea, bitter apricot seeds, black seed oil, castor oil tampons, trace minerals and borax.

Incorrect98%
Reliable cancer sources state soursop/graviola has no clinical evidence showing it can treat or cure cancer in humans.[1] [4] [7] [8] The statement presents multiple unproven remedies as a cure for ovarian cancer.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Soursop tea can cure cancer in humans.

Incorrect98%
Sources from cancer centers and reviews say laboratory findings do not translate into proven human treatment, and there are no valid human trials showing it cures cancer.[1] [4] [7] [8]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Barbara O'Neill helped me achieve these results.

Can’t verify35%
The provided sources do not verify any role by Barbara O'Neill in these outcomes. This specific attribution cannot be confirmed from the available evidence.

What other AI think

The statement makes multiple dangerous health claims that are contradicted by medical evidence. Soursop tea and bitter apricot seeds have no proven efficacy for cancer treatment in humans, while apricot seeds carry serious cyanide poisoning risks. Borax is not approved for human consumption and poses significant toxicity risks. These claims promote potentially harmful alternative treatments.

Why this verdict

  • The statement makes multiple dangerous health claims that are contradicted by medical evidence.
  • Soursop tea and bitter apricot seeds have no proven efficacy for cancer treatment in humans, while apricot seeds carry serious cyanide poisoning risks.
  • Borax is not approved for human consumption and poses significant toxicity risks.
  • These claims promote potentially harmful alternative treatments.

Claims checked

Soursop tea cured ovarian cancer

Incorrect95%
There is no strong evidence suggesting soursop can treat cancer in humans. Studies have only been carried out on mice in laboratories, not on humans, and clinical trials in humans are needed to establish the efficacy and safety of soursop leaf tea in treating these diseases.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Borax treatment is safe and effective

Incorrect97%
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned borax as a food additive. Borax is not a food-grade substance and the US FDA has not approved it for human consumption as a food or beverage. If ingestion occurs, both serious poisoning and organ damage can result, and ingesting borax can lead to reproductive issues.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Bitter apricot seeds cured ovarian cancer

Incorrect98%
Apricot seeds do not cure cancer. No clinical trial has ever shown that eating apricot kernels or taking their extract has any benefit for cancer patients. A relatively small handful of bitter kernels can reach lethal doses of cyanide, and documented cases show severe outcomes including metabolic acidosis, dangerously low blood pressure, seizures, and coma.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The respondent's central medical claims (that those substances cured ovarian cancer) contradict established medical evidence. Multiple listed remedies lack reliable clinical proof of curing cancer and some are known to be toxic or discredited. This is dangerous misinformation because it could lead people to delay effective cancer treatment.

Why this verdict

  • The respondent's central medical claims (that those substances cured ovarian cancer) contradict established medical evidence.
  • Multiple listed remedies lack reliable clinical proof of curing cancer and some are known to be toxic or discredited.
  • This is dangerous misinformation because it could lead people to delay effective cancer treatment.

Claims checked

Black seed oil (Nigella sativa) cured cancer.

Incorrect88%
Laboratory and small early human studies exist, but there is no high-quality, large-scale clinical evidence that black seed oil cures cancer in humans.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Castor oil tampons or castor oil packs can treat or cure cancer.

Incorrect90%
Clinical guidance and reviews find no evidence that topical castor oil applications can prevent or cure cancer; claims are anecdotal and unsupported.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Borax (or boric acid) can cure cancer and is safe to ingest or use as a cancer treatment.

Incorrect90%
There is no reliable evidence that borax cures cancer, and medical sources warn that ingesting or misusing boron compounds can cause toxicity and serious harm.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

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