Executive Summary

  • This article covers the issue with subscribing and how our site works.

Introduction

You need to be a subscriber to access or support this. We cover what happens when people rely on free sources of information on medical and health topics which are invariably sponsored by establishment medicine in the article How WebMD is a Paid Shill for the Medical Establishment and the article Should Brightwork Research Find Industry Sponsors to Support Our Research?

How the Site Works

When we respond to subscribers, we typically send them the link to the content; however, as a non-subscriber, you can’t read the articles we send.

By requesting information without being a subscriber, you contradict our revenue model and create extra work for us, because we would have to explain everything in emails.

What Keeps People from Subscribing

The vast majority of visitors to this website want to access the information on our site. But only a tiny fraction of those visiting this page will ever join and become subscribers. The public mostly believes that there should be no compensation for any information provided for information published on websites. At least one reason for this is that websites like WebMD and MD Anderson (which we cover in the articles How WebMD is a Paid Shill for the Medical Establishment, and MD Anderson’s Inaccurate Explanation of the Relationship Between Cancer and Sugar) offer free information but are both funded by financially biased medical entities. However, for most of the population, the first objective is to get information at no cost — regardless of the biases and undeclared financial conflicts of interest with these websites. This is similar to visiting Ford’s website. Ford does not have to make money from their site — they use their site to provide biased information that convinces you to purchase a Ford car or truck.

Just Keep Looking?

Many think they can keep searching until they find the information elsewhere, but they don’t realize that so much of our research is original, and the tools and calculators we offer can’t be found elsewhere, and they value their time incorrectly, trying to simply avoid paying $35 per month to access our information.

What is Generally Available: Mostly Low Effort Articles

We are very familiar with the information available online on these topics. For example, virtually all the information online about the dosage of the drugs we cover is for the antiparasitic dosage. There is no consideration of what the dosage should be for other uses. Instead, the source repeats the antiparasitic dosage. Another article we found, for some reason, used the covid dosage and frequency and applied it to cancer.

Most sites that cover this topic will write one article on Ivermectin. We have over 160.

The Medical Establishment’s False Information on the Topics We Cover

When it comes to Ivermectin for cancer and other ailments, the search results are dominated by the medical establishment, which opposes this use as they don’t want it competing with their very high-profit treatments. The medical establishment and also individual oncologists will tell any lie to keep patients on the conventional treatments. There is nothing regulating what oncologists tell their patients — as long as the statement promotes more conventional treatments, their employers will be happy. We have articles for subscribers on this topic at How Oncologists Provide False Information to Cancer Patients on Ivermectin and Fenbendazole, and How Oncologists Lie About Their Profits From Chemotherapy Drugs. Remember, oncologists will even tell patients not to take Vitamin D, even though there is no evidence to support this.

The Effort to Replicate Our Site’s Information

Another thing is that we have all the information processed and available in one place. Our information is comprehensive, purpose-specific, and informed by interactions with many subscribers going through what you are going through. Trying to figure out how to get the information we have is a very poor use of the time of those who choose not to subscribe, and an impossible task. Subscribers repeatedly tell us that our site is like nothing else they have seen. Our site also covers a comprehensive protocol that is more than just the basics, which many people start off thinking that they will need.

Our Customer Support and Who it is For

All subscriptions come with customer support. This is not consultative support; it is primarily about helping with site access questions, finding articles, and answering questions that are nearly always covered in one of our articles.

Our customer support is for subscribers.

Ready to get access to our database of articles? This website contains information developed over the years and tested by many subscribers and us. You are also supporting research that is designed to benefit you rather than the MDs and companies in the medical establishment. 

Steps

1 - The first step is to subscribe below.

2 - The second step is to read the Welcome Article. This will show you how to get started with the site. It will also be emailed to you; however, you can read it now before you subscribe by opening the link. It will open in a separate page.

3 - Then begin using the site. The welcome article includes the navigation guide, and Cynthia is available at support@brightworkresearch.com if you have any issues. 

Subscription = $35 Per Month

I AM READY TO SUBSCRIBE

Or first review our bioequivalence-tested Ivermectin source.

For All Subscriber Support Questions

If you have questions about subscribing or if you are a current subscriber, contact us at support@brightworkresearch.com

For Nonsubscribers

Our customer support is only available to subscribers or those with questions about subscribing. If you want information but are not a subscriber, you should not email us. See this article for more details for a fuller explanation The Requirement to be a Subscriber to Gain Access to Support.