We all know that Covid has extremely high recovery rate. However, if by chance you or someone you love have an extreme case and have to go to the hospital you need a plan since there is a good chance the hospital is not on your side.
What not to do:
DO NOT LET THE HOSPITAL ADMINISTER REMDESIVIR EVER. IT IS A DEATH SENTENCE.
STAY OFF THE VENTILATOR.
BE WARY OF ANY DRUGS THEY ARE PUSHING HARD ON YOU. DO INDEPENDENT RESEARCH FIRST.
What to do:
Take Vitamin C & D before you catch COVID. Get that immune system in peak shape ahead of time.
Have a stash of Ivermectin, HCQ, Zinc, Quercetin at home that you can take at first signs of being sick. Stock and shipping times can take weeks so you may not be able to find these things when you need them.
Hydrate - Lots of water
If you do go the hospital Monoclonal Antibodies (Regeneration/Regen-COV), NAC and Vitamin Drips are your friends. Ivermectin and HCQ preferably but likely the hospital will not provide them so you will need your own or a lawyer.
Oxygen at the right settings
Stand strong. If the hospital protocol is Remdesivir they will push it harder than a sleezy used car salesman. Over and over and over again. If you give in side affects may include death.
Please add to the list in the comments and definitely correct if there are things you don't agree with. These are just my guidelines.
The important thing is to have a plan just in case things go bad. Hopefully they never do.
Yes, I have had a similar experience with my brother being admitted to the hospital. He didn't want to go, but when he went to receive the monoclonal antibodies, they wouldn't administer it to him because his oxygen was too low.
He was admitted and given remdesivir, but wasn't put on the vent because he refused this. It was a very rough 6 days (he was in ICU for part of that time), but gratefully he started to improve after high flow oxygen and steroids along with the remdesivir. He was discharged once he started to improve and went home with oxygen.
He's now fully recovered and back to work. I don't think people should avoid the hospital if they are having a hard time breathing and need oxygen. If he had not been admitted, he may not be here today.