Typo in the title, meant to say Stepmom smh
So today I got a text from my Dad saying his wife's sister was in the hospital with covid. I sent him that rumble video earlier this week where the wife demanded certain treatment and opposed their guidelines. He said they were doing everything in that video that was not supposed to be done. Had her hooked up to a ventilator. I told him she needed to get ivermectin ASAP but it was already too late. They collapsed her lung with that ventilator and she died within an hour of him sending me that text. I feel bad for my Stepmom because she probably seen that video too. I look forward to the day Fauci and his cronies hang from a rope for their crimes against humanity.
So sorry for your loss, and to the others who’ve posted stories in replies here as well. Hubby and I just promised each other - no matter how sick we might get at some point (hopefully never) we will die at home before we will go to the hospital. I’ve got Quercetin, Zinc, Vitamin C & D3 here now that we are both going to start taking faithfully to protect ourselves until this is over. With people all around us getting jabbed, we can’t protect ourselves anymore by just being careful to wash hands, etc.
My dad is in the hospital with COVID right now. I want to share that from my experience there is a certain point where you will increase your chance of survival at the hospital if you go and you will increase your risk of death if you don't go.
Here is my advice. I am not a doctor but I have done a lot of research on COVID in hope's of avoiding this exact scenario we now face.
Take Ivermectin prophylactically whenever you are noticing high numbers of cases in your community or when you're directly exposed to a sick person. Follow the protocol at covid19criticalcare.com and do not skimp on recommended doses. The first phase of the disease is all about virus replication so as soon as you think you have contracted COVID (it can happen even if taking Ivermectin prophylactically though less likely) take the full recommended dose for early treatment (double or even triple the prophylactic dose based on your weight...refer to protocol above for details).
Monitor your blood oxygen levels. Silent hypoxia CAN kill you or make it really difficult to recover in hospital from microclotting and tissue damage resulting from inflammation in the second phase of the disease. We learned this lesson the hard way. We were doing everything according to the at home protocol but my dad still had the virus progress to the secondary pulmonary phase in his body. We thought we could wait it out at home and he would get better....how long can a virus live, right? Wrong. If you try to wait it out at home in this stage and choose to ignore falling blood oxygen levels until supplemental oxygen is required, know that you are allowing the virus to wreak havoc on your tissues that will take several days at a minimum to repair and likely months or years to fully restore to health. We did this with my father. His blood oxygen started in low 90s, then went to high 80s where we could get it to 90s with some breathing exercises. A couple days later when he was in mid to even low 80s we started trying to find supplemental oxygen AND I AM SO THANKFUL WE COULDN'T GET IT. I want to warn you friends: even If you can get your hands on an oxygen concentrator or similar it is a mistake to think your body will beat it at this stage without additional meds. By the time you've reached the inflammation stage the virus has successfully spread itself throughout your tissues and you REALLY need both a powerful corticosteroid and a powerful anticoagulent to combat the inflammation and to reduce the clotting and microclotting happening in the blood. Both these drugs are difficult to acquire in a home setting and to be fair....unless you also have outpatient access to a D Dimer test (Patriot business idea - D Dimer home test kit?) you are really taking a lot of risk by not being in hospital because without the D dimer test you can only gauge your level of inflammation based on how you feel and your blood oxygen, both of which can mask problems especially if you're on supplemental oxygen (that's why it is called silent hypoxia).
Regardless of what your insurance is, go to the hospital in your community that you think is likely to provide the best care. Not everyone is fortunate enough to have a physician in their community using the FLCCC treatment protocol (covid19criticalcare.com). We did not have an option to work with a physician who was using the protocol in our neighborhood which was scary for us and was a big factor in delaying our acceptance that my father needed hospitalization. The local hospital we chose, as it turns out, IS using most of the drugs in the protocol (although explicitly NOT Ivermectin) and the doctor has been receptive to adding some vitamins and making changes to drugs used when they are within the same drug class.
Do not allow yourself to believe your loved one will definitely die if they don't get Ivermectin at this stage in the disease. Ivermectin is beneficial st every stage of the disease because it both inhibits viral replication AND reduces inflammation. That said, by day 12 and beyond of the illness, the viral replication is falling considerably on its own and inflammation becomes the new focus of targeted treatment. There ARE other drugs that treat inflammation so the hospital doesn't have to be a death sentence just because they refuse to administer Ivermectin. That said, if you can get your loved one Ivermectin I would do it. In my opinion it is easier to smuggle a drug in to your loved one than it is to fight the system when you're in the throws of dealing with the illness and trying to supervise care remotely but if you are more legal savvy than I, 20-guage has a great list of legal options for fighting this tyranny on this site. Just search mask mandates or vaccine and you'll come across the resource soon enough.
Based on what I have seen with my father, by day 7 or 8 of the illness for people who are likely to have a difficult battle, blood oxygen levels are already beginning to come down if the patient hasn't kicked the virus by then. It is critical at this time to try to get monoclonal antibodies (arranging this should be a first course of action upon positive COVID test so you're not hunting for help while feeling really sick. Better yet make a detailed plan of where you'll get monoclonal antibodies and what hospital you'll admit to well in advance of any illness as part of your preparedness plan. "They all suck so I'm not going" may feel like - or even be -reality, but it is not a good plan. After 10 days of illness monoclonal antibodies are not an option so the window is tight to get this done. They are ineffective and clinics will not give them to you because they can make your situation worse. Do not delay on moncoclonal antibodies. They are recommended on the FLCCC treatment protocol and the data suggests they are very beneficial.
If the illness extends beyond day 8-10 coupled with blood oxygen consistently below 94 without help....get in to the ER of the hospital you chose ASAP. 94 means there is already damage happening so just bring your Ivermectin in with you...it is not (yet!) a prison and they cannot prevent you from taking your own outside prescription in your name from another doctor. They just don't want to be liable for administering it to you...they may tell you you can't take outside prescribed meds and you just be firm and say it is a prescription and you will be continuing to take it. Better yet, don't mention you even have it and just take the pills (or paste for you horses out there) with your lunch quietly...this is another example where admitting yourself prior to extreme oxygen deprivation is beneficial. You are more dependent on them if you are too physically weak to stand up and get your own bag of pills. If you don't tell them about the Ivermectin for fear of problems or interference from them that you cant combat in your vulnerable situation, you have to get really good at learning about drug interactions and contraindications with meds. Quercetin, for example, should not be taken at the same time of day as Ivermectin because there may be a negative interaction. So....once again....if you are a little bit stronger going in to emergency for the drugs in phase two of treatment it is much much easier to be your own researcher and advocate and protector.
Oh, last thing, if you know the hospital isn't going to administer Ivermectin don't even bother asking for it (unless you can't get or bring in your own). Focus instead on making sure the other drugs they are prescribing line up with the protocol. Most doctors will be somewhat flexible with switching drugs of same class and if they dont prescribe a vitamin that you want from the protocol, most will prescribe it for you if you ask because even if it doesn't help it is considered a "benign" treatment that won't harm.
Way too long but I hope it will help someone!
There was someone on here whose uncle was in hospital with the WuFlu. The hospital refused to give him ivermectin. The family demanded privacy to pray for their uncle, and rubbed ivermectin on his lips. He recovered soon after that.