So many articles trying to make Ivermectin sound dangerous because it’s also used to treat horses. But the MSM has to know there are many meds used to treat both people and animals. Are we going to give up on them too.
And someone needs to memory hole the episodes of House where he prescribes Ivermectin for a mystery illness he solved. But, once again, their need to attack it lets us know it works.
IV fluids that you will pay minimum 300$ a bag for in a hospital or ambulance,are sold to a veterinarian for 10$ a bag.Literally the same manufacturer,same concentration,same formula,same sterilization.
vet just sold me 2 bags for over 100 bucks, but yeah - buy direct for 10 bucks a bag.
Yup.Got in before shut down on canada meds.Figure they will land on lines etc next.
"their need to attack it lets us know it works"
I figure anything the medical-industrial complex says not to do is the very thing to do, and anything they promote should be avoided like the plague.
They completely killed their credibility on this fake pandemic. Avoid hospitals. They are being incentivized to ban treatments that work.
Solid advice!
And the vax killed all animals it was tested on...
Very good point!
I had to go through my vet for antibiotics a month or so ago. Gave me amoxicilin(sp?) Same thing I would gotten from a prescription. He used to give my buddy prescriptions for blood pressure meds and other things. We trust our vet more than a hospital.
Fish and humans use the same antibiotics.
Dog can have imodium, ramadil which is like ibuprofen and ivermectun to de worm.
People do realize that humans are "animals" right?
I thought dems were plant based.
They do not, not even for a religious reason either but instead because they think theyre superior to animals
My dad was on an antibiotic that is often administered to horses. Per dose, for humans, it was $120 20 years ago. The price per dose for a horse? $6.
I've lost track of how many times my animals have gotten a prescription I filled at Walgreens.
I used to give my dog Benadryl every day for her allergies. Guess I should've let her suffer because it's for humans and not dogs. People are fucking dumb.
People are stupid. It's like 90% of the United States didn't pay attention in HS bio, chem, and health classes.
I have the first four seasons of House on DVD
Ah, the good seasons.
All good info. One other item of interest - drug interactions. There are several people out there who will tell you that their pharmacist has refused to issue an Rx for some drug that their doctor prescribed because the doc didn't catch the interactions (with other meds the patient is on). Pharmacists are specifically focused on such things. I have no idea if Ivermectin has any such interactions, but something to be aware of.
Also - you covered 'concentration/suspension' already, but specific 'delivery issues' can come into play. Not sure of the best way to explain this, other than by example. Many meds say you need to take 'on a full stomach', and some say 'do not crush', 'do not chew', and so on. Some meds can really damage the linings of the stomach, intestine, etc, and are specially 'coated' in such a way that they release / dissolve in a carefully controlled manner. These coatings may be designed specifically with the human stomach / intestine in mind. A digestive system largely tasked with processing 'hay' and 'grass' may be quite different from a system (human) designed to digest everything from lamb to prawns to sauerkraut to vodka! Having said that, I would hope the human system is way more sophisticated and thus, capable of handling anything thrown at a horse!
Edit to add - my g/f recently had surgery (appendectomy) and was prescribed something as benign as Ibuprofen during recovery - but it was 400 mg, which is stronger than 'over the counter'. She dutifully took it as prescribed, for pain. She ended up back in ER due to blood in the stool (docs told us to look out for blood in case the surgery site itself was bleeding). The ibuprofen was too strong for her stomach and caused internal bleeding! When things like that can happen with something as benign as ibuprofen (Advil), it does make me think twice about dosing in general.
I’ve filled dog scripts at the local pharmacy.
My vet gave me regular OTC famotidine with instructions to cut the pill in quarters for a sick cat.
People think theyre superior to animals for some reason, meanwhile we have the same metabolic processes for the most part with some variation. The thing that kills me is that horses are mammals too so if anything they should be closest to us in terms of how drugs effect them
Remember that a horse primarily eats grass / hay; they are a rather gentle species in many ways! Similar to cows, I guess. Compare that to a wolf, or lion, that eats raw flesh. I imagine the digestive system of a horse or cow is quite unsophisticated compared to that of a wolf.
So take a smaller dose to find out
Carbon based life forms are going to have many similar metabolic processes.
Oh yeah. fish mox 500mg amoxicillin capsules you can get anywhere. Great to have on hand for any bacterial infection.
I get meds from my vet all the time for my animals - which, coincidentally, are the SAME ones we humans take!!!! So, if it's good enough for the critters -it's good enough for me! God Bless!
Pretty much everyone I know uses heart worm medicine for their dogs, too. Why all this talk of horses only. Many of us have had this in our homes for years.
I have heard that the 'dogs' version is a lot less applicable to humans than the horse version, for reasons I don't understand. Just be aware it may be different (different carriers, etc).
Oh ya good point! I was NOT suggesting eating the dog pills, just that it's a common substance many folks have been buying for years. And giving it to their loved ones!
Do you have that episode link?
Perhaps OP means S04E03 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/97_Seconds
Yes, this episode.
Thanks fren!
House drop!!!
I think this one might be special, like kill cancer special. They can’t let us have that. They need us sick, weak and brainwashed.
I actually learned years ago when my vet sent me to the local pharmacy for my dog...