We ordered this. It's not exactly cheap, and I have no clue if insurance covers it because we did not even TRY to get it covered, but I can vouch for its effectiveness from within our family - the earlier you take it the better. Especially if you start coughing, because that means the virus has hit you in the lungs first (not always the case). If anyone wants the entire regimen we did, let me know and I'll type it out.
By the way, our big mistake was that we stopped taking quercetin, zinc, and D3 a couple of months ago. We got lazy and felt the coast was clear. Before that we were around infected people many times over the past year, and did not get sick. We've literally lived normal lives for a year, gathering with friends, etc, and didn't get sick even when they DID. So if you want to avoid it completely, you CAN do that!
I'm actually glad to have had the Rona to see how HCQ worked so that I could recommend it (or not), and to have permanent immunity is pretty cool. Now I know firsthand it works.
One thing I learned: not everyone gets hit in the lungs by the Rona. Those who don't seem to do fine with just HCQ/zinc/D3, and C. Once it's in the lungs (are you coughing?), we added the ZPak. Going without the azithromycin at first was an experimental error. Oh well - live and learn. For those not coughing, HCQ/zinc/D3, C worked. For those coughing, I added the Zpak and everything began to clear up. The total downtime (it was merely like a bad cold, nothing more) was 10-11 days, most of which was spent watching movies. All in all, not too bad of a bug. But I would NOT want to go through it unprepared.
For folks who are already taking prescription medications, do a search "drug interaction checker" and check to see if there's a chance that any of these supplements may adversely interact with your meds. I was taking Indapimide (water pill) and when I added magnesium to my daily regimen, I started getting heart palpitations. The palpitations went away 5-6 days after I stopped taking the magnesium.
I think that is because water pills require your body to have more potassium. You're upping the need for potassium while also taking magnesium which will then bump your requirement for potassium even higher.
We ordered this. It's not exactly cheap, and I have no clue if insurance covers it because we did not even TRY to get it covered, but I can vouch for its effectiveness from within our family - the earlier you take it the better. Especially if you start coughing, because that means the virus has hit you in the lungs first (not always the case). If anyone wants the entire regimen we did, let me know and I'll type it out.
By the way, our big mistake was that we stopped taking quercetin, zinc, and D3 a couple of months ago. We got lazy and felt the coast was clear. Before that we were around infected people many times over the past year, and did not get sick. We've literally lived normal lives for a year, gathering with friends, etc, and didn't get sick even when they DID. So if you want to avoid it completely, you CAN do that!
I'm actually glad to have had the Rona to see how HCQ worked so that I could recommend it (or not), and to have permanent immunity is pretty cool. Now I know firsthand it works.
One thing I learned: not everyone gets hit in the lungs by the Rona. Those who don't seem to do fine with just HCQ/zinc/D3, and C. Once it's in the lungs (are you coughing?), we added the ZPak. Going without the azithromycin at first was an experimental error. Oh well - live and learn. For those not coughing, HCQ/zinc/D3, C worked. For those coughing, I added the Zpak and everything began to clear up. The total downtime (it was merely like a bad cold, nothing more) was 10-11 days, most of which was spent watching movies. All in all, not too bad of a bug. But I would NOT want to go through it unprepared.
D3 needs K2 and magnesium to ensure calcium isn't driven into the soft tissues.
For folks who are already taking prescription medications, do a search "drug interaction checker" and check to see if there's a chance that any of these supplements may adversely interact with your meds. I was taking Indapimide (water pill) and when I added magnesium to my daily regimen, I started getting heart palpitations. The palpitations went away 5-6 days after I stopped taking the magnesium.
Good point.
I think that is because water pills require your body to have more potassium. You're upping the need for potassium while also taking magnesium which will then bump your requirement for potassium even higher.
Heart attacks and diuretics - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vU8CyIcytX8