Fenbendazole Can Cure Cancer presents Case Reports of people who have treated their own cancers along with other articles to help understand how fenbendazole works. Previous articles covering other cancers are in the Archives link.
We’ve all been there. You hear about someone with cancer or you encounter someone who is clearly sick, most likely struggling with cancer. You want to tell them all about fenbendazole but are reluctant because of a myriad of reasons. Maybe you don’t know them well enough, maybe you know them too well, maybe you don’t want to be a butt-in-ski, maybe you feel it’s not your place, maybe you feel their sickness is too personal and they’ll be offended somehow if you notice they are sick. A lot of people hesitate because they’re concerned it might appear that they are trying to sell them something. There are literally dozens of reasons to talk yourself out of intervening. The question is, are any of these reasons justification enough to keep what you know about fenbendazole to yourself? When you have the opportunity to save someone’s life, you should consider seizing that opportunity!
We get many messages here that are summed up by the following sentiment, I wish I had known about fenbendazole when so-and-so had cancer. Everyone reading this has had someone close to them suffer and die from cancer, if you haven’t, consider yourself lucky because you’re in a very, very small minority. The feelings of regret that we all felt when we learned about fenbendazole can be converted into feelings of great optimism by knowing that we can now help ourselves and our loved ones heal themselves. We can’t “unknow” about fenbendazole, and because of that, once you know that fenbendazole can, in many instances, help eradicate cancer, that knowledge is both a blessing, and a curse. The curse is the task of spreading the word and the obligation some feel to help as many as possible.
Not to come off as preachy, but everyone deals with this curse in their own way. Some make sure that friends and family are aware, some approach strangers, some lurk by cancer clinic waiting rooms. The following heartfelt message came in to us recently that embodied the caring that helps spread awareness of fenbendazole and how it can save a life.
August 19, 2023
Hi there Ben Fen,
I found you last year.
I had made a comment in another Substack about a young mothers home who I was working at (electrician) and she was in late stage cancer. You commented that I should recommend Fenbendazole. While I do not personally know this woman, my foreman at the time did and happened to be a family friend. I was leaving that company (refused the Covid vax) and was already considered to be a tin foil hat wearing lunatic for my Covid vax stance, so I approached my foreman the next day with your suggestion. He thanked me and said he’d pass everything on to the family which he did. This was about a year ago.
Sadly my former foreman has passed from a heart attack, suddenly and unexpected but at the funeral I saw a woman that resembled the terminally ill woman who was dying last year. I asked a few folks and sure enough it was her. I regret to tell you that I didn’t further approach them or pester them since it was a very sad event but after asking around, it was her. I can’t give you a name or diagnosis but from what I know from my late foreman, she bought FenBen on Amazon and started a treatment. I’ve no connection to these people whatsoever but I believe your one comment that day put things in motion and you’ve helped save this young woman’s life and secured many more years for her family and children. God bless you for that.
I’m writing you today because I forgot to reach out and bring you this news earlier. While I suppose it’s not a rock solid, confirmed miracle for FenBen and you’ve no reason to believe a stranger, but you helped save them and I thank you as I’m sure they do as well.
Unfortunately this afternoon I found out my best friend’s father has a mass on his lungs. I found your email while reading one of your pieces on Substack. I have forwarded him this Substack and everything else I’ve saved in my files on fenben. I’ve even sent him your piece on how to approach family and doctors concerning this treatment. I will certainly keep you informed in the comments as to how this plays out.
I also found out a close friend’s wife had a biopsy last week and things aren’t looking good. Another friend’s mother passed from an extremely fast cancer. So fast indeed, no one knew she was sick. This is all within this last week too.
I will be spending the evening disseminating your Substack and every study I have on the matter to my two friends in the hopes their family members will take this seriously. I am concerned however that they may reject this information because we live in the Xxxx area and this place is propagandized against any and all alternative medicine, regardless of the science behind it. We may be #1 in hospitals but in my opinion, we’re #1 in applying only the allowed standard of care. After living thru Covid here and being persona non grata just about everywhere for taking ivermectin and other vitamins/supplements, I think convincing them to try fenBen opposed to the traditional chemo may be difficult. Especially since these cancers are early and so far haven’t metastasized.
Thank you again. Your Substack is extremely bittersweet for myself since I’ve lost so many loved ones to cancer. There are people in particular I grieve and wonder what could have been if I’d only known about FenBen. I regularly encounter customers now while working who all have new cancers, strokes, heart attacks etc. I always pass your info on. I’m not sure how many have taken it to heart and how many simply blow it off but thank you for what you’re doing.
Ben Fen <fenbendazole77@gmail.com>
Sat, Aug 19, 7:59 PM (15 hours ago)
to Pleasedo…
Thank you for your very kind and heartfelt message. It is truly appreciated. Yes, it is very frustrating. Just today I went to a memorial service for an acquaintance and hesitated to ask the cause of death. Small cell lung cancer. Fenbendazole would have saved him but the word hadn’t reached him. Tragically, I do know that people very close to him did know about fenben but, for whatever reason, obviously did not inform him. I do feel gut-punched and guilty whenever this happens but hopefully, through caring people like you, one day all these people can be saved.
Keep up the good work. I’m very proud of you for helping those around you and I’m sure we will cross paths one day soon.
Best wishes,
Ben
This is all it takes to be someone’s hero. Working through someone else, this reader got the word to a woman he thought could benefit, and it looks like she did. He didn’t appear to even know her name yet appears to be instrumental in saving her life.
You don’t have to have all the answers about fenbendazole if you decide to approach someone. No one does. We’re learning from each other on-the-fly and trying to learn as much as we can as quickly as we can.
One approach to telling those who could benefit from fenbendazole that seems very reasonable and non-threatening is to simply inform them about this Substack. Let them read the Case Reports and supporting science for themselves and make up their own mind. They can write in questions they have just like anyone else can do. The address to find this on the web is https://fenbendazole.substack.com
Fenbendazole vs. Mebendazole vs. Albendazole vs. Flubendazole: The benzimidazoles are very similar chemically and they have very similar mechanisms of action with respect to disrupting microtubule function, specifically defined as binding to the colchicine-sensitive site of the beta subunit of helminithic (parasite) tubulin thereby disrupting binding of that beta unit with the alpha unit of tubulin which blocks intracellular transport and glucose absorption (Guerini et al., 2019). If someone asks you how fenbendazole kills the cancer cells, the answer is in italics in the previous sentence.
The class of drugs known as benzimidazoles includes fenbendazole, mebendazole, albendazole and flubendazole. Mebendazole is the form that is approved for human use while fenbendazole is approved for veterinary use. The main difference is the cost. Mebendazole is expensive ~$555 per 100 mg pill, while fenbendazole is inexpensive ~48 cents per 222 mg free powder dose (Williams, 2019). As you may recall, albendazole is the form used to treat intestinal parasites in India and these cost 2 cents per pill. FYI, to illustrate how Americans are screwed by Big Pharma, two pills of mebendazole cost just $4 in the UK, 27 cents per 100 mg pill in India and $555 per 100 mg pill in the US.
While most of the pre-clinical research uses mebendazole, probably because it is the FDA-approved-for-humans form of fenbendazole, virtually all of the self-treating clinical reports involve the use of fenbendazole. Because the preclinical cancer studies use mebendazole (ironically the human form of fenbendazole) and humans self-treat their cancers with fenbendazole (the animal form of mebendazole) it is very reasonable to assume that mebendazole and fenbendazole are functional equivalents with respect to cancer. It would be helpful if future pre-clinical and clinical investigations simply used fenbendazole as a practical matter. For the purposes of this Substack, fenbendazole, mebendazole and albendazole are used interchangably.
Where to get fenbendazole
In our experience and the experiences of those that write in, it appears that the three readily available brands of fenbendazole (Panacur-C, FenBen Labs, Happy Healing Labs) are equally effective. Panacur-C can be obtained locally in pet stores, while they all can be obtained from Amazon.
If you would like to report your experiences with fenbendazole you can do so privately by email fenbendazole77@gmail.com or more publically in the Comments section in any of the articles. Also, if you know of people who’ve tried fenbendazole, and it didn’t work, we’d be especially interested in hearing from you now. Understanding the conditions and factors that enhance or impede the success of fenbendazole in treating cancer are valuable. As an example, we recently learned that pairing fenbendazole with oleic acid (olive oil has high oleic acid content) greatly enhances the bioavailability of fenbendazole (Liu et al., 2012). As a practical application of this information taking fenbendazole with a tablespoon of olive oil may result in better outcomes.
Disclaimer:
Statements on this website have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The contents of this website is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. This website does not provide any kind of health or medical advice of any kind. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. The case reports presented reflect the real-life experiences and opinions of other readers or users of the website. The experiences of those readers or users are personal to those particular readers/users and may not necessarily be representative of all readers/users. We do not claim, and you should not assume, that all other readers/users will have the same experiences. Do you own research, consult with relevant medical professionals before attempting to self-treat for any condition.
Currently two people I know who have “turbo cancer” since their shots. One is 41, the other is 42 years old. I told them both about this substack and this marvelous compound fenbendazole. One decided not to respond back to me. The other thanked me. All we can do is try. I decided I wanted to live with myself as a person who tried, even if she got a cold shoulder. That’s ok. It’s not personal. People need to decide for themselves. We are just the messengers.
Imagine if someone could get Tucker to air an episode on Fenbenzadole! The stuff would fly off the shelves and Big Pharma would have a stroke.