Your vet is a retard. The vet I used to use and fired is a TDS suffering leftist twat and believed that masks stop covid. So, there you go.
I have taken the ivermectin paste many times after doing some research with NO problems. It is VERY safe and also approved for humans for decades. It doesn't matter if it is a horse or cow or dog or human, it is safe to take as long as it is JUST the ivermectin and no other active drugs included.
The delivery method in the form of paste is made that way because that is the easiest way to give to a horse. Similar for cattle - it is a pour on for bovines as cattle are not handled the way horses are and it is easier to apply to the back of the animal and absorbed through the skin as opposed to oral ingestion. I have heard that some farmers apply the pour on for cattle on themselves (skin application) - ALL dosage is by weight.
I said MY former vet believed masks worked and is therefore a retard. Just because someone has "Dr." in front of their name does not make them more intelligent than a layman who has done their DD.
Dr.'s can be reeeetards. Your vet is not up to speed on the ivermectin info and sounds like a retard.
Well, yes, but ... Horses have a primitive digestive system that is designed to consume vast amounts of low energy grass / hay / etc. Humans have a sophisticated digestive system that can process a very wide variety of food sources. I would not expect a dose based on body weight (of a horse) to be appropriate at all. By way of an anecdote, my g/f took 400 mg of ibuprofen recently (prescription strength), after surgery. It caused internal bleeding. Normal dosage ('over the counter') is closer to 200mg or less. So even something as innocuous as ibuprofen can do harm when the dose isn't right. I would carefully review the dose personally.
Again, the doses are based on body weight. It is quite simple really. You move the ring on the plunger to what you weigh and that is the dose. It is quite safe as well.
I have had horses for over 30 years and used many de-wormers, and the doses are all based on the weight of the horse. From 100 lb foals to 1000 lb adult mares and stallions (arabians). Measuring the doses for humans is NO different.
Ivermectin is approved for humans and other animals. Know your information.
Dosage is the same, it is given by weight.
Humans ARE animals, just of a much higher intellect.
Yes, I understand that, but my real equine vet said to be very careful because it can really mess you up. Because we don't metabolize it the same way.
Your vet is a retard. The vet I used to use and fired is a TDS suffering leftist twat and believed that masks stop covid. So, there you go.
I have taken the ivermectin paste many times after doing some research with NO problems. It is VERY safe and also approved for humans for decades. It doesn't matter if it is a horse or cow or dog or human, it is safe to take as long as it is JUST the ivermectin and no other active drugs included.
The delivery method in the form of paste is made that way because that is the easiest way to give to a horse. Similar for cattle - it is a pour on for bovines as cattle are not handled the way horses are and it is easier to apply to the back of the animal and absorbed through the skin as opposed to oral ingestion. I have heard that some farmers apply the pour on for cattle on themselves (skin application) - ALL dosage is by weight.
We have been LIED to about this miracle drug.
My vet is not a retard. And just for the record, she doesn't believe masks work. She never told me not to take it, just to be careful
I said MY former vet believed masks worked and is therefore a retard. Just because someone has "Dr." in front of their name does not make them more intelligent than a layman who has done their DD.
Dr.'s can be reeeetards. Your vet is not up to speed on the ivermectin info and sounds like a retard.
Well, yes, but ... Horses have a primitive digestive system that is designed to consume vast amounts of low energy grass / hay / etc. Humans have a sophisticated digestive system that can process a very wide variety of food sources. I would not expect a dose based on body weight (of a horse) to be appropriate at all. By way of an anecdote, my g/f took 400 mg of ibuprofen recently (prescription strength), after surgery. It caused internal bleeding. Normal dosage ('over the counter') is closer to 200mg or less. So even something as innocuous as ibuprofen can do harm when the dose isn't right. I would carefully review the dose personally.
Again, the doses are based on body weight. It is quite simple really. You move the ring on the plunger to what you weigh and that is the dose. It is quite safe as well.
I have had horses for over 30 years and used many de-wormers, and the doses are all based on the weight of the horse. From 100 lb foals to 1000 lb adult mares and stallions (arabians). Measuring the doses for humans is NO different.
Ivermectin is approved for humans and other animals. Know your information.