
Request: Could someone please compare what you know about Ivermectin dosages with what my dad's new cancer doctor prescribed for him? My mom is nervous to give him this big a dose.
(media.greatawakening.win)
🧐 Research Wanted 🤔

I had saved this to my computer from Dr. Makis:
The "Dr.Makis Ivermectin Cancer Protocols" LOW DOSE (<=0.5mg/kg) • Cancers in remission • Strong family history • genetic predisposition • prophylactic use MEDIUM DOSE (1.0mg/kg) • Starting dose for most Cancers, including mRNA Vaccine Induced Turbo Cancers (lymphoma, breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer, melanoma, testicular/cervical/ovarian, kidney, etc) HIGH DOSE (2.0mg/kg) • Starting dose for aggressive Turbo Cancers, especially Leukemias, pancreatic, brain cancer • aggressiveness of a tumor is often determined on pathology (Ki67 staining of 80%+ for example) • some very aggressive rare types (appendix, gallbladder, cholangiocarcinoma, angiosarcoma & other sarcomas) VERY HIGH DOSE (2.5mg/kg) • Very desperate situations • have only days to live • extreme tumor metastases burden
Passed on to my Mom. She agreed to give him the 80 mg dosage. Thanks!!!! He weighs 77 kg, by the way.
He is unvaxxed and got recurrent prostate cancer in the wall where his prostate had previously been removed. It is slow growing.
Bless you all for your wisdom and motive to help and support our community members.
All the best to you & your mom & dad💖
❤️
Just a word of caution from someone who has an active license and wears a white coat (but is not an infectious disease doctor or oncologist) for a living, you're putting a lot of faith in diagnosis by internet using questionable-at-best evidence to support it.
Of course, you're going to need to choose where to put your faith. As you said, the tumor is slow-growing, as prostate cancers tend to be, but it is a recurrence. That means it was already outside of the containment of a nice convenient surgical excision. It also means it could easily continue to spread. Once it's out of the prostate into another tissue, they call it stage 4 and move from treatment as a goal to "management."
If you believe ivermectin is going to fix it, I can't stop you. I can only tell you the evidence that comes out of properly designed studies with reproducible results is paper thin. Ivermectin's an exceptionally safe drug, but we're talking 5x the regular dose here, without the benefit of testing to see if there are late-breaking toxicities that show up if you take it for 2-3x as long as its regularly prescribed for river blindness.
Meanwhile, there are other, more traditional, and far better tested therapies. They're not fun. I'm aware of that, but they are a known commodity with known risks and benefits.
Personally, I'm not terribly comfortable trusting what I call "internet doctors" to provide my medical advice. If you trust your oncologist, then take his recommendation with confidence, but if you don't, consider a second opinion from a flesh and blood doctor who you do trust. We are in fact talking about a life or death decision (eventually, maybe 10-15 years, best case scenario, but still).
I wish you and your family the best whatever decision you ultimately make.
Just a word of caution from someone who has an active license and wears a white coat 🤡
"I'm not terribly comfortable trusting what I call "internet doctors"🤡 hahahahahahahah but I am comfortable with only prescribing RX and surgery
HAHAHAHA chemo has a 2% efficacy and kills ya but oncologist get 60% of their income from prescribing it great advice from another big medicine/RX whore $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
I very much appreciate this response. Thanks.
My dad has a fantastic oncologist (who also removed my husband's prostate), and he went through rigorous tests. The oncologist said that, because my dad is 86, he may outlive this cancer. So, my dad decided to go the Fenbendazole/Ivermectin route. (Switched to Albendazole, actually.)
My mom found a naturopath who prescribes these meds. She didn't want to risk hurting my dad regarding dosages. So, now my dad has two doctors.
I should have posted his age earlier.
Anyway, I agree with you. Thanks again.
By the way. The skin cancer on his ear disappeared even while he took a lower dose for a while (as my mom was looking for a naturopath). Yay!