What was claimed

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) and fenbendazole cure cancer, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, glaucoma, hearing issues, eye diseases, brain diseases, and most human ailments. Use pea-size doses to kill 'mother-worms' and parasites that cause tumors.

Our verdict

Inaccurate

<cite index="3-1">There is currently no evidence in cancer patients that ivermectin decreases cancer growth.</cite> <cite index="6-1,6-6">Ivermectin has not gone through rigorous clinical trials needed to ensure it is safe as a cancer treatment in humans, and available research findings are not enough to know if ivermectin could be effective as an anticancer drug in people.</cite> <cite index="1-1">One paper reporting major improvements in three cancer patients taking fenbendazole was later retracted because of concerns about the reliability of the data.</cite>. Major medical sources do not support ivermectin as a cure for these diseases. For cancer specifically, ACS and other oncology sources say it has no proven clinical benefit in humans and is not recommended as treatment.

All 3 AI systems agree9 sources citedChecked Jun 30, 2026

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Key findings

Using 'pea-size' doses of these products will kill 'mother-worms' and parasites that cause tumors.

Incorrect93%
2 of 3 AIs agree·ChatGPT: Misleading

Ivermectin and fenbendazole cure cancer

Incorrect95%
1 AI checked

Ivermectin horse paste, with wormwood and honey, cures cancer, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, glaucoma, hearing issues, eye diseases, brain diseases, and most human ailments.

Incorrect95%
5 of 6 AIs agree·Claude: Can’t verify

These drugs cure multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease

Misleading85%
1 AI checked

Parasites cause tumors and most human ailments

Misleading90%
1 AI checked

Detailed Analysis

The response makes broad cure claims that are not supported by clinical evidence. Reliable cancer organizations say ivermectin is not approved for cancer, no clinical guidelines recommend it, and human evidence is lacking; fenbendazole is also not established as a cancer treatment.[4] [6] [7] The statement about pea-size doses, “mother-worms,” and parasites causing tumors is unsupported and appears medically misleading.[4] [7]

Why this verdict

  • The response makes broad cure claims that are not supported by clinical evidence.
  • Reliable cancer organizations say ivermectin is not approved for cancer, no clinical guidelines recommend it, and human evidence is lacking; fenbendazole is also not established as a cancer treatment.[4] [6] [7] The statement about pea-size doses, “mother-worms,” and parasites causing tumors is unsupported and appears medically misleading.[4] [7]

Claims checked

Pea-size doses are effective for killing 'mother-worms' and parasites that cause tumors.

Incorrect95%
There is no credible medical basis for 'mother-worms' as a cancer cause or for pea-size dosing to treat tumors. The cited cancer sources describe antiparasitics as unproven for cancer and warn that effective experimental doses are often far higher than safe human doses.[4] [5] [7]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Fenbendazole cures cancer and many other human diseases.

Incorrect97%
The American Cancer Society says fenbendazole is unproven for cancer treatment, and no clinical guidelines recommend it. Evidence is limited to early lab or animal work, not confirmed human benefit.[4] [7] [8]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin horse paste, with wormwood and honey, cures cancer, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, glaucoma, hearing issues, eye diseases, brain diseases, and most human ailments.

Incorrect98%
Major medical sources do not support ivermectin as a cure for these diseases. For cancer specifically, ACS and other oncology sources say it has no proven clinical benefit in humans and is not recommended as treatment.[4] [6] [7]

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

What other AI think

The claim makes multiple false and misleading assertions. While some preclinical research exists on ivermectin and fenbendazole, neither drug has been proven to cure cancer or the listed diseases in humans. The claim about parasites causing "most human ailments" is dramatically overstated, and the dosing advice is dangerous.

Why this verdict

  • The claim makes multiple false and misleading assertions.
  • While some preclinical research exists on ivermectin and fenbendazole, neither drug has been proven to cure cancer or the listed diseases in humans.
  • The claim about parasites causing "most human ailments" is dramatically overstated, and the dosing advice is dangerous.

Claims checked

Use pea-size doses to kill 'mother-worms' and parasites

Incorrect90%
High doses can cause serious neurological side effects, and it may interact with cancer treatments. The concept of "mother-worms" is not recognized in parasitology. Self-dosing with uncontrolled amounts is medically dangerous and contradicts professional medical guidance.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin and fenbendazole cure cancer

Incorrect95%
There is currently no evidence in cancer patients that ivermectin decreases cancer growth. Ivermectin has not gone through rigorous clinical trials needed to ensure it is safe as a cancer treatment in humans, and available research findings are not enough to know if ivermectin could be effective as an anticancer drug in people. One paper reporting major improvements in three cancer patients taking fenbendazole was later retracted because of concerns about the reliability of the data.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

These drugs cure multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's disease

Misleading85%
While some preclinical studies and anecdotal reports exist, a new study shows ivermectin reduces symptoms in an MS mouse model, but this is animal research, not human clinical evidence. No approved clinical trials have demonstrated these drugs cure these diseases in humans. The claim presents speculative research as established fact.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

The statement makes broad, definitive medical claims that are unsupported by high-quality human evidence. Using veterinary formulations or unapproved dosing is known to be dangerous and has caused harm in real cases.

Why this verdict

  • The statement makes broad, definitive medical claims that are unsupported by high-quality human evidence.
  • Using veterinary formulations or unapproved dosing is known to be dangerous and has caused harm in real cases.

Claims checked

Fenbendazole cures cancer and most human ailments.

Incorrect92%
Fenbendazole shows some anticancer activity in lab and animal studies, but there are no established, reliable human clinical trials proving it cures cancer, and regulators do not approve it for this use.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Combining ivermectin horse paste with wormwood and honey is a safe and effective human treatment.

Incorrect94%
Veterinary ivermectin formulations are not tested or approved for humans and mixing with unregulated substances adds unknown risks; agencies have reported hospitalizations from self‑medication.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

Ivermectin horse paste (with wormwood & honey) cures cancer, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, glaucoma, hearing issues, eye diseases, brain diseases, and most human ailments.

Incorrect95%
There is no high-quality clinical evidence that ivermectin (especially veterinary formulations) cures those diseases; health authorities and reviews state evidence is insufficient and warn against off‑label use.

This claim may mislead readers without added context.

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