PSEUDOSCIENCE
Sources in the Pseudoscience category may publish unverifiable information that is not always supported by evidence. These sources may be untrustworthy for credible/verifiable information; therefore, fact-checking and further investigation is recommended on a per article basis when obtaining information from these sources. See all Conspiracy-Pseudoscience sources.
- Overall, we rate Beyond Science Labs as a pseudoscientific health misinformation site that promotes unproven and potentially dangerous “treatments” for serious diseases, including cancer. The site lacks transparency, operates under unverifiable academic claims, and uses misleading medical terminology to market products. Its content discourages legitimate medical care, endangering readers who substitute these false remedies for professional treatment.
Detailed Report
Bias Rating: PSEUDOSCIENCE (6.0)
Factual Reporting: VERY LOW (10.0)
Country: USA
MBFC’s Country Freedom Rank: MOSTLY FREE
Media Type: Website
Traffic/Popularity: Minimal Traffic
MBFC Credibility Rating: LOW CREDIBILITY
History
Beyond Science Labs describes itself as an “informal documentation database” operated under the “Beyond Science Labs at St. Paul’s Free University campuses.” The site claims to provide open access to “raw data, innovative ideas, and unique insights” from independent researchers. The listed contact is David M. Masters, using a Gmail address and a postal box in Olympia, Washington. There is no verifiable record of Beyond Science Labs being affiliated with any accredited academic institution or recognized research organization. He does appear to sell a course at St. Paul’s Free University, but again, it is not accredited.
Read our profile on the United States media and government.
Funded by / Ownership
According to the site’s product listings, revenue is generated through the sale of pseudoscientific health products such as “Silver Water,” “Ultrazyme Plus,” and “Wayne Rowland’s Clean Me Up Program.” These products are marketed as detoxifying or parasite-cleansing supplements without scientific evidence or regulatory approval. The site explicitly states that it is not reviewed by the FDA and that its claims are “not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.” However, the marketing language—such as describing Silver Water as able to “kill bacteria, viruses, and fungi”—clearly implies unproven medical benefits.
Analysis / Bias
Beyond Science Labs promotes pseudoscience and potentially dangerous medical misinformation. The site’s content repeatedly rejects established medical science and encourages readers to pursue unverified “natural” treatments in place of evidence-based care.
For example, Wayne Rowland Full Body Parasite Cleanse & Transformation endorses a “three-month full-body parasite cleanse” featuring colloidal silver and enzyme supplements that purportedly “de-worm the blood and tissues.” This is scientifically baseless—human blood cannot harbor worms that are eliminated by silver ingestion, and colloidal silver is medically recognized as toxic when ingested in significant amounts, potentially leading to argyria (permanent skin discoloration), kidney damage, and neurological complications.
An even more alarming example is the article 3 Steps to Get Rid of Cancer, which claims that “getting rid of cancer is not that hard” and that cancer can be cured by eliminating toxins, eating “non-toxic food,” and living a “stress-free life.” The author explicitly discourages chemotherapy and radiation, asserting that “you cannot poison yourself to health.” These claims are dangerous and medically false. Cancer is a complex disease that requires evidence-based treatment; suggesting that diet and mindset alone can cure cancer can lead patients to forgo life-saving medical care.
Such misinformation directly contradicts decades of scientific research and poses serious risks to public health. The tone and content resemble “alternative health” conspiracy narratives, in which mainstream medicine is depicted as corrupt or profit-driven while untested natural remedies are marketed as suppressed cures.
Other site content promotes “frequency-enhanced” colloidal silver, “de-worming” enzyme capsules, and “Lugol’s iodine” regimens for vague detoxification. These claims lack peer-reviewed support and misuse scientific terminology such as “ionically charged,” “colloidal minerals,” and “frequency-enhanced structure” to lend false credibility.
Failed Fact Checks
- No IFCN-accredited fact-checkers have directly reviewed Beyond Science Labs, but the site’s medical assertions conflict with consensus statements from reputable organizations such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, National Cancer Institute, and World Health Organization, all of which warn against unregulated colloidal silver and alternative cancer “cures.”
Overall, we rate Beyond Science Labs as a pseudoscientific health misinformation site that promotes unproven and potentially dangerous “treatments” for serious diseases, including cancer. The site lacks transparency, operates under unverifiable academic claims, and uses misleading medical terminology to market products. Its content discourages legitimate medical care, endangering readers who substitute these false remedies for professional treatment. (D. Van Zandt 11/10/2025)
Source: https://beyondsciencelabs.com/
Last Updated on November 10, 2025 by Media Bias Fact Check
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