There's been stories of people sneaking the paste in to give to people, and strategically administering a proper weight-based dosage orally while no one was looking. This is not medical advice, just stories of what people have done.
Edit:
Anons, please don't upvote this more than this:
Regardless of your thoughts on ivermectin, please consider very carefully before doing anything like this. Ivermectin is an active drug and can interact with other medications that the doctors may be giving people in the hospital.
Even if ivermectin is a 100% safe 100% guaranteed cure for COVID, it can be dangerous if it interacts with something else. The last thing you want is a bad reaction with a hospital medication because the doctors had no idea their patient was secretly taking ivermectin as well. They can't plan for interactions with medications they don't know the patient is taking.
Not only that, but if something goes wrong and they do a blood test and find out ivermectin was secretly being administered to their patient, then that can be legally problematic for whoever administered that drug.
Just be careful with this sort of thing. You can be 100% right that ivermectin is the right choice, but administering it secretly without telling the people who are also giving drugs to the patient is a very risky decision to make.
I am sorry to hear about your son, and I am truly wishing him the best.
Show of hands - who is sick of this asshole popping up and in favor of deportation? I don't want to grief the mods but I've yet to see a single thing posted that is an actual contribution to this board.
Literally nothing I said here was non-factual. Ivermectin is a real medication, and it does things within the body. Even very safe medications can have interactions, which is why doctors ask you what you're taking. Surgeries can be postponed for things as simple as fish oil due to the increased chance of bleeding. You can't avoid problems with medication interactions that you don't know are in the patient.
If something goes wrong at the hospital and the doctors have the ability to blame the fact that their patient was secretly being administered a drug that they didn't know about, you don't think they'd jump on that to avoid liability? You trust that they'd ignore the fact out of the kindness of their heart?
I'm just trying to provide people with information that prevents accidental interactions from taking place. Whether or not you wish to use that information is entirely up to you.
You consistently doom (see sidebar), offer nothing boom, are against Q etc. We have plenty of facts, plenty of people discussing things in the spirit of this board rather than against it etc without your wading in occasionally to offer what is essentially contrarian to the mission here.
It's beyond tiresome.
Edit: and at this writing your comment is +5/-29, and mine is +20/-0, so I don't think it's just me.
Sometimes people don’t want to hear the truth. I watched two oils of the same spec but from different manufacturers froth up and overflow from a gearbox… Strange reactions can and do occur.
There's been stories of people sneaking the paste in to give to people, and strategically administering a proper weight-based dosage orally while no one was looking. This is not medical advice, just stories of what people have done.
Edit: Anons, please don't upvote this more than this:
https://greatawakening.win/p/140cIqmBw1/x/c/4JJfPHhtDUY
^ this is the right way.
My way is the last ditch effort based on your stories.
Regardless of your thoughts on ivermectin, please consider very carefully before doing anything like this. Ivermectin is an active drug and can interact with other medications that the doctors may be giving people in the hospital.
Even if ivermectin is a 100% safe 100% guaranteed cure for COVID, it can be dangerous if it interacts with something else. The last thing you want is a bad reaction with a hospital medication because the doctors had no idea their patient was secretly taking ivermectin as well. They can't plan for interactions with medications they don't know the patient is taking.
Not only that, but if something goes wrong and they do a blood test and find out ivermectin was secretly being administered to their patient, then that can be legally problematic for whoever administered that drug.
Just be careful with this sort of thing. You can be 100% right that ivermectin is the right choice, but administering it secretly without telling the people who are also giving drugs to the patient is a very risky decision to make.
I am sorry to hear about your son, and I am truly wishing him the best.
Show of hands - who is sick of this asshole popping up and in favor of deportation? I don't want to grief the mods but I've yet to see a single thing posted that is an actual contribution to this board.
Literally nothing I said here was non-factual. Ivermectin is a real medication, and it does things within the body. Even very safe medications can have interactions, which is why doctors ask you what you're taking. Surgeries can be postponed for things as simple as fish oil due to the increased chance of bleeding. You can't avoid problems with medication interactions that you don't know are in the patient.
If something goes wrong at the hospital and the doctors have the ability to blame the fact that their patient was secretly being administered a drug that they didn't know about, you don't think they'd jump on that to avoid liability? You trust that they'd ignore the fact out of the kindness of their heart?
I'm just trying to provide people with information that prevents accidental interactions from taking place. Whether or not you wish to use that information is entirely up to you.
You consistently doom (see sidebar), offer nothing boom, are against Q etc. We have plenty of facts, plenty of people discussing things in the spirit of this board rather than against it etc without your wading in occasionally to offer what is essentially contrarian to the mission here.
It's beyond tiresome.
Edit: and at this writing your comment is +5/-29, and mine is +20/-0, so I don't think it's just me.
Sometimes people don’t want to hear the truth. I watched two oils of the same spec but from different manufacturers froth up and overflow from a gearbox… Strange reactions can and do occur.