Stella Immanuel MD: We are so totally swamped with patients seeking HCQ and IVMT with no where else for them to go. We went from 100 to 700+ a day signing up for telehealth in three weeks. We have a great need for mom and pop pharmacies that can help the people.
(media.greatawakening.win)
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tell them how to make their own HCQ
https://www.nutritruth.org/single-post/home-recipe-for-hydroxychloroquine-hcq
So I followed this link, and she says to basically steep grapefruit and lemon peels in hot water to make it. But she's calling it tonic water. Does tonic water you buy at the store have quinine in it? I'd rather just go buy a bunch of that if so.
The tonic water is quinine. Doesn’t appear to be the same as HCQ. HCQ might have a common ingredient though. Dig more.
Well they're different words but according to this nutritruth person quinine is just another word for HCQ. Kind of like Midol and Excedrin (until recently) had the exact same cocktail of caffeine, aspirine, and acetaminophen, in the exact same dosage, but marketed for different purposes (headaches/migraines vs. period cramps).
I don't know if that's the case here though--do you know for sure that it's not?
*edit - I looked it up. If the site I found is to be believed, there's only about 83 mg of quinine in a liter of tonic water. Compared to the 500-1000 mg it was apparently given as a medicine in the past. And apparently Chloroquine is a derivative of that, and HCQ is a further derivative of Chloroquine, which for whatever reason, makes it safer somehow. I don't know. I just bought a bunch of tonic water, but I'm still gonna order some real HCQ just in case (already got my horse paste, vitamin C, vitamin D, zinc, quercetin, and NAC).
Quinine (chloroquine, CQ) is the active component of HCQ. Hydroxychloroquine is just a modified man-made version that is less likely to cause nausea and other mild side effects that some people experience from pure Quinine, and may (?) be slightly better absorbed by the body. Quinine is effective regardless of where it comes from and it's been used worldwide for 70+ years for malaria, lupus, arthritis, etc so there is plenty of data to prove that it's safe in proper doses.
Just understand that every time you distill a batch from grapefruit or other citrus fruits, the Quinine concentration in your concoction will vary slightly. Don't be careless and overdose by drinking too much of your homemade brew. More is not always better. I am not a doctor, so don't take any of this as medical advice. Maybe some doctors here can add to what I've said and advise you on proper amounts of homemade distillation to take.
I'm making some for 2 ladies at work tonight. Easy as pie
Be careful who you talk about this to. If some Karen finds out what you're doing for people, you may find yourself reported for practicing medicine without a license. Probably better to just tell them what you're doing for your family and then let them distill it themselves in their own homes for their own use.