All blood thiners do the same thing, they thin the blood. Fun fact Warfarin (a common blood thinner is/was used in rodenticides)
When you mess with blood, it will affect other parts of the body.
A blood thinner should be a last resort option. If some one is at the point where blood is thick enough to need a blood thinner then there is something else going on that needs to be looked at.
Here are the top three side effects to be aware of with blood thinners in general :
Strokes (Bleeding in the brain)
Increased calcium in ateries (hardening of arteries)
Increased risk of diabetes, alzheimers and dementia
I don't have any medical credentials, but I do take care of two family members who have been on blood thinners most of their adult life. I can't see a reason why children would need a blood thinner in normal conditions. Usually once prescribed, a blood thinner is often a long term deal as going on and off blood thinners can itself cause blood clots.
^Edit : Hi, so I got a bit of a response on that one. I do agree there is a medical place for blood thinners, it has saved so many lives. I didn't mean to come off as "blood thinners are evil poison". I just wanted to add a perspective on the end of the road view.
The long term use of these types of drugs are generaly not good, but they'll keep you alive if your one of the many people who just got a bad dice roll at life.
The thing that has flown over all of our heads is what on earth is causing so many people to need blood thinners, and why has that risk started to appear in children in recent years? So much so that they need to create specific drugs just for kids instead of altering the dosage of a well known and long used one.
What a coincidence!!! This should make it a lot easier to combat that rapidly growing blood clot in children epidemic that is growing for a completely unknown reason.
I'm...I'm confused here. How can they claim this? Isn't children's Aspirin a thing? I know it's a thing cause I've got in my medicine cabinet right now.
Technically, a “blood thinner” and an antiplatelet are two different things. Aspirin is specifically an antiplatelet. Commonly, people just say “blood thinners”, but there are many ways a medication can effect the clotting of someone’s blood. For the issues that FDA article is describing, aspirin wouldn’t be strong enough.
Yeah, give those kids the jab so they can get clots like everyone else. I hope parents are doing SOME research before they allow this to happen to their children.
83mg aspirin once a day is what I take for a blood thinner... Doctor prescribed... He tried to put me on a blood thinner other than aspirin and I refused...
Classic big Pharma move; make people afraid of something, sell a drug to fight it, but with side-effects that require other drugs big Pharma makes. Pure evil. All the tobacco company executive must have re-located to the big Pharma companies (at least the ones that didn't move to "Big Food")
I don't want, nor do I even like kids, but this is fucking evil. I'm pretty damn sure their bodies can't handle much blood thinner, probably only in the case of an emergency.
As of 2018, Boehringer Ingelheim is one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, and the largest private one. ... Unlike most large pharmaceutical companies which are listed, the company is private and fully owned by the Boehringer, Liebrecht and von Baumbach families.
People should be aware that garlic has the same ability to thin blood (as do many other natural supplements) plus it comes with the benefit of being antibacterial/antiviral in nature. Doctors can advise dosage for those seeking a natural solution to blood thinning meds.
Did I read this correctly. Of the testers, 48.8% of those treated with pradaxa had no blood clots at end of treatment compared to 42.2% who were treated with standard care. The FDA just approved a drug for a blood clot medicine that had marginal if any gains of success to treat kids 3 months to 12 years old. What a bunch of fucking clowns.
Interesting that it was approved in 2010. Until 2 years ago I'd worked for 15 years in a facility where half the patients were on anticoagulants and I'd never heard of it until my sister had a pulmonary embolism last year.
I've no experience with it so I wonder how often ptt/inr's have to be done. What fun for kids. And will they have to give up contact sports? Be treated with kid gloves to not risk bleeds?
I've been on Warfarin since 2009. Four veins clogged up in my lower left leg. All kinds of procedures out there to remove clots, but the VA won't do it. I'll eventually have to pay out of pocket if I ever want to get off Warfarin.
Problem - Reaction - Solution......the DS use it all the time.
This pede gets it!
Yes!!! All to suck $$$$ out of our pockets. Until we truly have nothing... you will own nothing and be happy.
All blood thiners do the same thing, they thin the blood. Fun fact Warfarin (a common blood thinner is/was used in rodenticides)
When you mess with blood, it will affect other parts of the body.
A blood thinner should be a last resort option. If some one is at the point where blood is thick enough to need a blood thinner then there is something else going on that needs to be looked at.
Here are the top three side effects to be aware of with blood thinners in general :
I don't have any medical credentials, but I do take care of two family members who have been on blood thinners most of their adult life. I can't see a reason why children would need a blood thinner in normal conditions. Usually once prescribed, a blood thinner is often a long term deal as going on and off blood thinners can itself cause blood clots.
^Edit : Hi, so I got a bit of a response on that one. I do agree there is a medical place for blood thinners, it has saved so many lives. I didn't mean to come off as "blood thinners are evil poison". I just wanted to add a perspective on the end of the road view.
The long term use of these types of drugs are generaly not good, but they'll keep you alive if your one of the many people who just got a bad dice roll at life.
The thing that has flown over all of our heads is what on earth is causing so many people to need blood thinners, and why has that risk started to appear in children in recent years? So much so that they need to create specific drugs just for kids instead of altering the dosage of a well known and long used one.
Don't worry, there's more new brand name medications in the pipeline to "treat" all of those side effects
Good post. đź‘Ť
Thank you.
Oh joy. I’m hoping to come off them by next summer.
"A Cure is Not Welcome" by Desmond Allen
Truth. But Pharmakeia has always had the antidote to their poisons ... more poison.
warfarin is already tried and tested…it’s cheap…available as a generic and it works.
What a coincidence!!! This should make it a lot easier to combat that rapidly growing blood clot in children epidemic that is growing for a completely unknown reason.
I'm...I'm confused here. How can they claim this? Isn't children's Aspirin a thing? I know it's a thing cause I've got in my medicine cabinet right now.
Technically, a “blood thinner” and an antiplatelet are two different things. Aspirin is specifically an antiplatelet. Commonly, people just say “blood thinners”, but there are many ways a medication can effect the clotting of someone’s blood. For the issues that FDA article is describing, aspirin wouldn’t be strong enough.
Yeah, give those kids the jab so they can get clots like everyone else. I hope parents are doing SOME research before they allow this to happen to their children.
Why would they need a new one? Heparin works very well. For them to want one that is PO, by mouth, raises way to many red flags.
Money and control.
83mg aspirin once a day is what I take for a blood thinner... Doctor prescribed... He tried to put me on a blood thinner other than aspirin and I refused...
I think we're going to find that they've been using their Shotz to causes all sorts of illness to sell their drugs, for a whlie.
2 years ago that would be Heresy to me.
Cascading interventions. They love this tactic with pregnant women.
Classic big Pharma move; make people afraid of something, sell a drug to fight it, but with side-effects that require other drugs big Pharma makes. Pure evil. All the tobacco company executive must have re-located to the big Pharma companies (at least the ones that didn't move to "Big Food")
They're not even trying to hide it
Blood thinner is used for people on dialysis. Just saying.
My dad was a dialysis patient.
JC! That's all I have to say.
You can say things like 'Jesus fucking Christ' on here.
More goddamn fucking crimes against humanity.
I don't want, nor do I even like kids, but this is fucking evil. I'm pretty damn sure their bodies can't handle much blood thinner, probably only in the case of an emergency.
These bastards need to hang.
Repeated pattern for years. Now everyone seeing it.
Made by:
As of 2018, Boehringer Ingelheim is one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, and the largest private one. ... Unlike most large pharmaceutical companies which are listed, the company is private and fully owned by the Boehringer, Liebrecht and von Baumbach families.
I just posted this about the Flu shot causing Covid-19 to be so dangerous. https://greatawakening.win/p/12jwaKGm99/why-this-corona-virus-is-kicking/
Great racket these pharma people have going for them.
People should be aware that garlic has the same ability to thin blood (as do many other natural supplements) plus it comes with the benefit of being antibacterial/antiviral in nature. Doctors can advise dosage for those seeking a natural solution to blood thinning meds.
Did I read this correctly. Of the testers, 48.8% of those treated with pradaxa had no blood clots at end of treatment compared to 42.2% who were treated with standard care. The FDA just approved a drug for a blood clot medicine that had marginal if any gains of success to treat kids 3 months to 12 years old. What a bunch of fucking clowns.
Create the sickness, sell the cure but with side effects, sell the cure to the side effects $$$$$$ at every turn
Interesting that it was approved in 2010. Until 2 years ago I'd worked for 15 years in a facility where half the patients were on anticoagulants and I'd never heard of it until my sister had a pulmonary embolism last year.
I've no experience with it so I wonder how often ptt/inr's have to be done. What fun for kids. And will they have to give up contact sports? Be treated with kid gloves to not risk bleeds?
I've been on Warfarin since 2009. Four veins clogged up in my lower left leg. All kinds of procedures out there to remove clots, but the VA won't do it. I'll eventually have to pay out of pocket if I ever want to get off Warfarin.