So my friend in Vietnam sent me the list of meds that the authorities there are recommending to those who test positive for Kung-flu on their silly PCR machines. The drug on there that I'm not familiar with is called molnupiravir. Any anons know about this one pro or con?
According to wiki, *"Molnupiravir (development codes MK-4482 and EIDD-2801) is an experimental antiviral drug which is orally active and was developed for the treatment of influenza. It is a prodrug of the synthetic nucleoside derivative N4-hydroxycytidine, and exerts its antiviral action through introduction of copying errors during viral RNA replication.[1][2]
The drug was developed at Emory University by the university's drug innovation company, Drug Innovation Ventures at Emory (DRIVE). It was then acquired by Miami-based company Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, who later partnered with Merck & Co. to develop the drug further."
Besides molnupiravir, the Vietnamese health authorities are prescribing 500mg paracetamol (Tylenol/acetaminophen), 2g Vitamin C, a multivitamin tablet, 0.5mg dexamethasone OR 5mg prednisolone (depending on local availibility), and 110mg dabigatran.*
So basically they are trying an antiviral (molnupiravir), a fever reducer (paracetamol), an anti-inflammatory steroid (prednisolone), and an anti-coagulant (dabigatran).
The obvious questions are... why no ivermectin? Why no HCQ? Why no quercetin? Why no bromelain (which Vietnam happens to produce in copious amounts since pineapples grow very well there)? Why no NAC?
As in most every other country, Vietnam had no kung-flu problem to speak of until they started jabbing people with that AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and SinoPharm crap. Now ambulances are screaming up and down the streets day and night, my friend tells me. Still, the people aren't able to see that it's the jabs that are causing the problem.