Drug Story

On ivermectin and parasites (and other things)

25 snips
Mar 24, 2026
A romp through ivermectin’s real antiparasitic uses and how it moved from river blindness treatments to viral internet fame. They trace hookworm’s history in the U.S. South and big public health campaigns. The story of ivermectin’s discovery, mass donation, and Nobel recognition gets unpacked. They also probe why repurposing drugs sparks hope and how misinformation and anecdotes spread dangerous claims.
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INSIGHT

Ivermectin Is A True Antiparasitic Breakthrough

  • Ivermectin is highly effective against many parasitic diseases like river blindness, lymphatic filariasis, hookworm, and veterinary heartworm.
  • Discovered from soil microbes and developed by Merck, a single pill once or twice yearly can protect whole communities from onchocerciasis transmission.
ANECDOTE

Real People Promoted DIY Ivermectin Regimens

  • Many people on social media and some practitioners promoted ivermectin for parasite cleanses, cancer, and viral prevention despite lacking evidence.
  • The podcast quotes individuals describing self-directed regimens like 12 mg every 12 hours for seven days and combined use with fenbendazole.
INSIGHT

A Golf Course Soil Sample Led To A Global Drug Donation

  • Ivermectin originated from soil microbes discovered by Satoshi Omura and was developed by Merck into a powerful antiparasitic for animals and later humans.
  • Merck donated massive supplies for global distribution, enabling village-level mass drug administration that revived communities afflicted by river blindness.
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