UPDATE: Praise the Lord! My friend got to go home today. She is on a oxymizer and on blood thinners, but I can tell she is so much stronger than even 48 hours ago. Long road ahead, but rejoicing today. Thanks for your prayers and advice.
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ORIGINAL: Does anyone have any more info on the vaccinated being bio weapons to the unvaccinated?
She had just started school as school teacher when she came down with it. Her anti-vax doctor put her on hydroxcholoquine and many vitamins, then tried ivermectin and then remdesevir. She is in the hospital still under her doctor’s care.
Did all the spike protein vax teachers and staff’s spike proteins make her sick in the middle of summer?
I’m just so angry and I know all of you are as well.
Whole family sick since aug 2. 1st visit to hospital Aug 6 when she had to get oxygen.
She said that a pulmonary embolism blood clot moved to blocking her oxygen. They have her on her stomach for some reason and she is not allowed to move without nurses helping her because it messes up her vitals and she can’t get enough oxygen.
"They have her on her stomach for some reason"
Being in that position makes it easier to breathe, I read that early, on as a way to keep the patient off the deadly ventilator.
yes, where I live in Singapore the hospitals are also doing this for patients who have difficulty breathing.
is she on heparins or anti-coagulants such as dabigatran (Pradaxa)?
Have her doctors discussed with her a strategy for resolving the clot, such as dissolving it with pharmaceuticals or removing it surgically?
The FLCCC Alliance recommends this protocol for hospitalized covid patients: https://covid19criticalcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/FLCCC-Alliance-MATHplus-Protocol-ENGLISH.pdf
However, there can be many causes of pulmonary embolism and it's not entirely clear that your friend's problem is related to covid at all.
She is on blood thinners.
She wasn’t sick and then this.
OK, you might want to compare the list of medications on the FLCCC's list to whatever meds the hospital has put her on. She can discuss that list with her doctors and ask/pressure them to add meds from the list that she might not already be getting.
Many people in this situation have reported that large doses of ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) given intravenously (10 to 50 grams -- not milligrams! -- per day) help to improve oxygenation. That one seems a no-brainer to me.
Also, once she is well enough to get discharged, it would be a good idea for her to visit a PEMF (pulsed electromagnetic therapy) clinic since PEMF machines are good at super-charging sick/diseased parts of the body with oxygen.
Here is an example of a PEMF clinic in San Luis Obispo, California : https://www.fionamedical.com/therapies/pemf-therapy/
Similar PEMF clinics are located all over California in case your friend doesn't live close to San Luis Obispo.
Thank you for all the advice and info.
blood thinners <=JUST SAY NO!!!!!!! omg just say no way
When she is on her stomach, gravity helps by increasing blood flow to the lungs.