Reviewing What the Top Websites Say About the Ivermectin Cancer Dosage
Executive Summary
- In this article, we enter the search term Ivermectin Cancer Dosage to determine how easy it is to find websites that cover this topic, and also to assess the quality of the information on these websites.
Introduction
In this article, we review the cancer dosage for the top-performing sites in search engines related to the search term Ivermectin Cancer Dosage.
Websites Found Through Google’s Search Engine
Website Reviewed #1: Courage Against Cancer
We reviewed the article Comprehensive Dosage Guide of Fenbendazole and Ivermectin for Humans.
Interestingly, the dosage estimates on this website are for ivermectin’s use as an anti-parasitic, not for its use against cancer, despite the website’s name, “Courage Against Cancer.”
Website Reviewed #2: Bezmialem Science
We reviewed the article Ivermectin Induces Oxidative Stress and DNA Damage in Breast Cancer Cells.
>This paper examines the effectiveness of ivermectin against breast cancer cells. However, this is not a reliable source for determining the appropriate ivermectin dosage for cancer.
Both of these results came from Google, as we reviewed different search results on the Platform.
Even though we specifically told Google what we wanted, which was the cancer dosage for ivermectin, we mainly received articles that don’t directly address this topic.
We determined that Google is not the most suitable search engine for finding dosage estimates for Ivermectin in cancer treatment. This means that Google is censoring the results that are out there to keep its users from seeing them.
The Dominance of the Google Search Engine
As a majority of people use Google as a search engine, this means that there is a massive suppression of these websites on the part of Google. This is an increasing problem with Google, where the Company suppresses authentic search results for political reasons or to satisfy its large advertisers.
How Google Suppressed Accurate Information During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Afterwards Never Apologized
Google suppressed large amounts of accurate information and elevated inaccurate information regarding COVID. It continues to do so even after being proven wrong about the information it chose to believe during the COVID pandemic.
After we determined this, we switched to Yahoo to see what those results were.
Websites Found Through Yahoo’s Search Engine
After we determined this, we switched to Yahoo to see what those results were. The Yahoo source results were awful. They frequently recommended ivermectin sources for searches related to cancer, ivermectin, and dosage. I never used Yahoo, and I was just astonished at how incompetent the search results were.
Another problem with Yahoo is that it’s challenging to distinguish between ads and authentic search results.
Here was one of their problematic search results.
Website Reviewed #3: Patient Power
We reviewed the article Ivermectin and Cancer: What the Data Really Shows and What Patients Need to Know First.
Here is one of the quotes from the article.
“I have also spoken to one physician who estimated that between 20% and 25% of his patients may be taking [ivermectin],” Dr. Mullangi says. “A lot of patients are intrigued to hear about new options, but it is not clear to me why antiparasitic drugs have gained such attention as alternative forms of treatment.”
The entire article is essentially recommending people not take ivermectin for cancer, which is very obviously not what the authentic results would be for people who are typing in ivermectin dosage and cancer.
Therefore, Yahoo appears to be performing the same type of censorship and suppression of results that we found with Google.
So we stopped using Yahoo and switched to DuckDuckGo.
Websites Found Through Less Censored Search Engines
For the first time after not being listed very high in the results for either Yahoo or Google, we found our site listed among the top search results. This by itself is indicative that DuckDuckGo is not engaging in the type of censorship that Google and Yahoo are engaging in. However, we’re not here to rate our site. We will then move on to several other sites that DuckDuckGo highly ranks.
Mojeek
Later, we tested a different search engine called Mojeek, and it was the only one that placed us in the top two spots in their search results. Mojeek is recognized as a high-quality search engine that does not censor and provides authentic results for what people are looking for.
Mojeek and Yandex display the search results that would be shown to the public if it were not for the censorship by major search engines. This means that the significant search engines are displaying results to the public that they want to show, due to their own political or economic incentives. Not the search results that users have found to be helpful or the most useful.
Censorship Example
As with other major search engines, Google tailors the search suggestions to steer people away from what they are searching for, towards what the establishment and companies that pay Google want people to search for.
Compare the search suggestions for the Pfizer vaccine on Google and Yandex.
There is no disclosure of this manipulation of search results or, in this case, search suggestions, and all major search engines claim that their algorithms produce such results.
However, unfortunately, Mojeek is a very niche search engine and therefore cannot deliver very much volume to our website.
Getting back to the websites we found from DuckDuckGo’s search results.
Websites Found Through DuckDuckGo’s Search Engine
Website Reviewed #4: The Medical Advisor
We reviewed the article Best Ivermectin Dosage for Humans with Cancer or Different Cancer Types (2025).
This was the first article we came across that listed an estimated dosage of ivermectin for cancer treatment.
However, as I proceeded to review other search results, I found some similar problems that I had encountered with Google and Yahoo, which are sites that contain specific papers and are not a good place to find dosage estimation. Websites that sell ivermectin are then listed as sources for dosage information. These websites included a study from the NIH at PubMed and ScienceDirect.
Website Reviewed #5: Oncology Times
I reviewed the article Use of the Anti-Parasitic Drug Ivermectin to Treat Breast Cancer.
This was yet another article describing the benefits of using Ivermectin versus cancer — in this case, against breast cancer.
See the following quote.
In these studies, 40-60 percent of animals treated with the ivermectin plus anti-PD1 antibody combination completely eradicated their tumors. They were able to fight off the cancer again after it was reintroduced. It’s the two drugs working together that is the magic. Either drug alone has almost zero effect, but together they have a powerful synergistic effect.
Our team then tested the combination across a spectrum of clinically relevant settings. We found that the therapeutic combination also worked in neoadjuvant models (before surgery) and adjuvant models (after surgery). Most importantly, the combination worked against metastatic breast cancer, potentially curing 50 percent of animals.
Based on its novel dual mechanisms of action (anti-cancer and immunomodulatory) in cancer, ivermectin may also potentiate the anti-tumor activity of other FDA-approved ICIs. Ivermectin is safe and inexpensive at roughly $30 a dose, making it attainable for everyone including cancer patients in developing countries.
However, the article did not mention dosage.
It is difficult for me to understand how this article ends up being rated highly by DuckDuckGo when my search terms were ‘Ivermectin Dosage’ and ‘Cancer’.
Website Reviewed #6: Cancer Treatment Research
We reviewed the article The Magic of Ivermectin in Oncology.
This is an extensive article on ivermectin and its use in treating cancer, as well as the recommended dosage for cancer treatment.
Website Reviewed #7: Protocol for Cancer
We reviewed the article Ivermectin for Cancer Treatment in the MSCC Protocol.
This article covered the MSCC protocol, which does have a table of dosages for Ivermectin versus cancer.
In the MSCC Protocol, ivermectin is primarily recognized for its ability to disrupt mitochondrial function in cancer cells, a key mechanism aligned with the protocol’s emphasis on restoring healthy OxPhos and targeting metabolic vulnerabilities. Specifically, ivermectin induces mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis and can selectively generate oxidative stress in cancerous, but not normal, cells (Juarez et al., 2018; Tang et al., 2021).
Ivermectin also affects cancer cell metabolism by inhibiting glycolysis, the energy-generating process that cancer cells rely on in the absence of functional mitochondria. It can interfere with glucose uptake and utilization by modulating enzymes like pyruvate kinase M2 (Li et al., 2020), thereby depriving cancer cells of a critical fuel source and enhancing metabolic stress (Feng et al., 2022).
I cover the review of Bing for this exact search in the conclusion.
Conclusion
There is aggressive censorship against providing websites that answer the question of what the dosage should be for ivermectin versus cancer. The largest search engines (except Bing), in terms of popularity and reach, offered the worst results for this search, illustrating that people interested in this topic who use the major search engines have a significantly lower likelihood of finding the available websites that are suppressed on the search engines.
About the Bing Search Engine
Bing’s results were surprising, as I had expected more censorship and suppression of search results, similar to what I found with Google and Yahoo. Bing directed users to both our site and other sites that specifically answered the question of Ivermectin dosage. However, in other cases, as with other search engines I checked, it directed users to results that did not have ivermectin dosage for cancer.
Bing is a product of Microsoft and is now estimated to have a search engine market share of roughly 13%.
In my estimation, Bing’s market share has begun to increase in recent years because Google’s censorship has become increasingly brazen. Yahoo is estimated to have a market share of less than 3%, while DuckDuckGo has around 1%, and Google has a roughly 80% market share. The concentration of monopoly power by Google in the search engine market is concerning, as Google often provides rigged search results to its users. For example, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Google elevated the worst sources of information on COVID-19 and the vaccines while suppressing the best sources of information on the same topics.
The General Problem of Search Engine-Directed Health and Medical Information
This article focuses on the search results provided for the query ‘ivermectin cancer dosage’. However, search engines like Google, which the majority of the public relies on to find information, are censoring health and medical information and directing users to the major advertisers of Google. This means that Google is providing extremely financially conflicted and biased health and medical information to the public.
Furthermore, many articles are recommended to users of these different search engines that don’t have anything related to the dosage of ivermectin for cancer.
Those Articles That Addressed the Dosage
If we examine the information contained in articles addressing the dosage of ivermectin for cancer. They were all presented in a table format, and they were all unidimensional, meaning that they were based solely on a person’s weight. In the case of Dr. Makis, the dosage is based upon both weight and the severity of the cancer.
Our calculator incorporates significantly more dimensions to achieve a finer-tuned dosage estimation, including additional factors specific to the individual patient.
General Observations About Search Engine Results
What is interesting about this is that, despite the extensive discussion of the sophistication of search engine algorithms, the different search engines I tested did not provide clean search results. That is, each of the search engines delivered results while discussing ivermectin that were not specific to dosage or dosage for cancer.
Some of the different search engines that I tested, including Yandex, provided both the least censored results and the highest percentage of results specific to ivermectin dosage for cancer. Yandex is based in Russia, and although it is the most popular search engine in Russia, its market share outside of Russia is relatively small. However, in my view, Yandex is the least censored of all the search engines. Russia has weaker legal protection for freedom of speech. However, interestingly, Russia’s search engine is freer than Google or other search engines based in the US, a country that has the highest legal protections for freedom of speech. However, the legal protections for freedom of speech in the US prohibit Congress from passing laws that inhibit freedom of speech. But Google is a private company. So, if they wanted to, they could provide pictures of elephants as the search result for ivermectin dosage for cancer. For example, there would be nothing illegal about Pfizer simply paying Google to suppress search results for ivermectin. And Google has no legal responsibility to disclose that it is suppressing results.
As for the combination of little censorship and results that fit closest to the search terms that I input. Mojeek was a top-performing search engine among those that I tested. And perhaps not surprisingly, Mojeek was the only search engine to give us the two top ranks.