Please read my post further down on this thread. If it has been longer than a week since the initial infection, which I am assuming that it has been, you are no longer dealing with a viral infection. What makes people so sick is the secondary type 1 hypersensitivity response that follows the infection and causes all the damage. This can occur very quickly on the eighth day after the initial infection just when a person starts to feel a little better and thinks they have turned the corner. To continue to throw antivirals at Covid, including Remdesivir and Ivermectin, will do little to halt the progression. However, Ivermectin does have some immune modulating activity and is more helpful versus Remdesivir or other such toxic antivirals. At this stage, antihistamines and steroids have been seen to turn this around and do it quickly. Prednisone and not dexamethasone along with comitant use of H1 and H2 antihistamines help to halt the attack on the tissues. H1 antihistamines like promethazine and H2 antihistamines like cimetidine are useful.
Please watch the video from Dr Chetty about how to treat post infection period. If you have a doc that can be consulted apart from the hospital crew that would be great so they can order drugs that the intensivists are reluctant to order since it does not agree with their protocols. Good luck with the attorney. Praying for you. God bless.
From the beginning of this outbreak that started last year, there were so many pieces that did not fit about the symptomology and the subsequent treatment protocols. Patients' lungs were getting blown out from vents and the whole thing was not behaving like an acute respiratory infection - at least not after about 8-10 days. People in the infective stage were simply sent home with no treatment and told to return when they could not breath. That just did not make sense to continue to treat their illness as though it was an active infection at that point and not the hypersensitivity reaction that it had more than likely become. Use of steroids was poo pooed and any suggestion of repurposing existing drugs was discouraged. Even now, nothing has changed in the treatment protocols and all they can do is throw toxic and ineffective experimental antivirals at it.
There seems to be some type of allergic hypersensitivity reaction that may be in response to the spike protein that puts the immune system into overdrive - a cytokine storm. From the beginning, in some of the earliest virtual medical conferences I joined it appeared like a treatment narrative had already been developed and anyone that tried to offer alternative opinions were quickly shut down. Some to the point that the one offering the opinion and recommendation would be shamed - howbeit in a more veiled way. Everyone it seemed got the point. Even though experience and training was saying one thing, the narrative was saying another.
Science, to be science, needs to be challenged. It is never settled as new information becomes available. The hypersensitivity reaction makes sense and answers many questions. There is a track record for those using the 8 day protocol. If I was still active in clinical practice I would be recommending it. Saving lives is all I care about. Thanks in advance for any efforts to expand this information to others. I pray that it reaches some of those already in the fight on the front lines. Censorship still makes it difficult unless one has a direct way of communicating to those that need to know. In the meantime, this forum is a good place for dissemination of information. We are making a difference - even though at times it may not seem so. We save the world one life at a time. God bless.
This has all the signs of a true conspiracy. Suppression of facts and inquiry, witch hunting anyone who questions the narrative, memory holing stuff that breaks through their barriers, suddenly making medicines generally regarded as safe (HCQ, Ivermectin, NAC, etc.) unavailable and essentially illegal to prescribe... this entire thing stinks from stem to stern.
Also, I still want to know how and why an anti-plasmodium drug can "kill" a virus. It makes me think this "COVID19" thing is a bio-weapon. Some sort of worm made into a virus-delivery mechanism, or something even more insane. HIV and/or Herpes Zoster-as-delivery-mechanism .... God only knows what.
Both drugs, Ivermectin and HCQ have protease inhibiting activity. That is why they are useful to treat viral infections. In addition, Ivermectin and HCQ also have immune modulating activity - HCQ especially is used to treat autoimmune conditions like Lupus and RA. This is the reason both of these drugs are efficacious to use at all points along the process of dealing with Covid - even prophylactically. It is probable that those given these drugs in the hospital who are really ill can still gain some benefit from them - but at that point the viral infection has passed and we are dealing with different causative factors for their conditions. If there is still a pathogen onboard in the respiratory tract it is more than likely bacterial - that is where the antibiotics come in. Secondary bacterial pneumonias are more lethal than most viral infections. In my opinion, and of others, the original viral infection runs its course and most people recover unless they have severe comorbidities. But, almost any type of infection has the potential to take people out that are already compromised. It is the secondary bacterial infections or hypersensitivity reactions that cause someone to to degrade. And they can go downhill quickly - just like a hypersensitivity reaction would present such as in severe anaphylaxis. Vaxxines are causing many of the same problems. Much of what they are calling Omicron is adverse vaxxine reactions.
Respiratory viral infections, like colds and flus, usually clear in about a week. When I kept asking colleagues why days and weeks afterwards, Covid was still being treated like it is infectious, I would get silence and the thousand foot stare. None of it made sense and I could see the entire landscape of health care changing - and not for the better. I was in a better position to back out at that point rather than be eaten alive in the meat grinder. I am sure at some point in the future I may return to clinical practice. But in the meantime, I will continue to try and educate and help my frens on this forum. I am sure there are silent lurkers that are also learning from the posts as well. I was one of them for over a year before I joined the fray. It is nice to be among the like minded. For a long time I felt like the lone voice crying in the wilderness. It's nice to be among frens.
Please read my post further down on this thread. If it has been longer than a week since the initial infection, which I am assuming that it has been, you are no longer dealing with a viral infection. What makes people so sick is the secondary type 1 hypersensitivity response that follows the infection and causes all the damage. This can occur very quickly on the eighth day after the initial infection just when a person starts to feel a little better and thinks they have turned the corner. To continue to throw antivirals at Covid, including Remdesivir and Ivermectin, will do little to halt the progression. However, Ivermectin does have some immune modulating activity and is more helpful versus Remdesivir or other such toxic antivirals. At this stage, antihistamines and steroids have been seen to turn this around and do it quickly. Prednisone and not dexamethasone along with comitant use of H1 and H2 antihistamines help to halt the attack on the tissues. H1 antihistamines like promethazine and H2 antihistamines like cimetidine are useful.
https://covexit.com/the-8th-day-therapy-for-covid-19/
https://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.com/2021/12/dr-shankara-chetty-outpatient-therapy.html
https://8days.org/the-protocol
God bless and good luck
Get ‘em!!
Please watch the video from Dr Chetty about how to treat post infection period. If you have a doc that can be consulted apart from the hospital crew that would be great so they can order drugs that the intensivists are reluctant to order since it does not agree with their protocols. Good luck with the attorney. Praying for you. God bless.
This is a whole new aspect I'd not seen before. Very interesting, and I will be saving this post.
Antihistamines makes sense. Make sure that folks know that Prednisone can sometimes make folks (if they are alert, etc.) fairly aggressive, sometimes.
https://www.ehealthme.com/ds/prednisone/anger/
Thank you very much for posting.
From the beginning of this outbreak that started last year, there were so many pieces that did not fit about the symptomology and the subsequent treatment protocols. Patients' lungs were getting blown out from vents and the whole thing was not behaving like an acute respiratory infection - at least not after about 8-10 days. People in the infective stage were simply sent home with no treatment and told to return when they could not breath. That just did not make sense to continue to treat their illness as though it was an active infection at that point and not the hypersensitivity reaction that it had more than likely become. Use of steroids was poo pooed and any suggestion of repurposing existing drugs was discouraged. Even now, nothing has changed in the treatment protocols and all they can do is throw toxic and ineffective experimental antivirals at it.
There seems to be some type of allergic hypersensitivity reaction that may be in response to the spike protein that puts the immune system into overdrive - a cytokine storm. From the beginning, in some of the earliest virtual medical conferences I joined it appeared like a treatment narrative had already been developed and anyone that tried to offer alternative opinions were quickly shut down. Some to the point that the one offering the opinion and recommendation would be shamed - howbeit in a more veiled way. Everyone it seemed got the point. Even though experience and training was saying one thing, the narrative was saying another.
Science, to be science, needs to be challenged. It is never settled as new information becomes available. The hypersensitivity reaction makes sense and answers many questions. There is a track record for those using the 8 day protocol. If I was still active in clinical practice I would be recommending it. Saving lives is all I care about. Thanks in advance for any efforts to expand this information to others. I pray that it reaches some of those already in the fight on the front lines. Censorship still makes it difficult unless one has a direct way of communicating to those that need to know. In the meantime, this forum is a good place for dissemination of information. We are making a difference - even though at times it may not seem so. We save the world one life at a time. God bless.
This has all the signs of a true conspiracy. Suppression of facts and inquiry, witch hunting anyone who questions the narrative, memory holing stuff that breaks through their barriers, suddenly making medicines generally regarded as safe (HCQ, Ivermectin, NAC, etc.) unavailable and essentially illegal to prescribe... this entire thing stinks from stem to stern.
Also, I still want to know how and why an anti-plasmodium drug can "kill" a virus. It makes me think this "COVID19" thing is a bio-weapon. Some sort of worm made into a virus-delivery mechanism, or something even more insane. HIV and/or Herpes Zoster-as-delivery-mechanism .... God only knows what.
Both drugs, Ivermectin and HCQ have protease inhibiting activity. That is why they are useful to treat viral infections. In addition, Ivermectin and HCQ also have immune modulating activity - HCQ especially is used to treat autoimmune conditions like Lupus and RA. This is the reason both of these drugs are efficacious to use at all points along the process of dealing with Covid - even prophylactically. It is probable that those given these drugs in the hospital who are really ill can still gain some benefit from them - but at that point the viral infection has passed and we are dealing with different causative factors for their conditions. If there is still a pathogen onboard in the respiratory tract it is more than likely bacterial - that is where the antibiotics come in. Secondary bacterial pneumonias are more lethal than most viral infections. In my opinion, and of others, the original viral infection runs its course and most people recover unless they have severe comorbidities. But, almost any type of infection has the potential to take people out that are already compromised. It is the secondary bacterial infections or hypersensitivity reactions that cause someone to to degrade. And they can go downhill quickly - just like a hypersensitivity reaction would present such as in severe anaphylaxis. Vaxxines are causing many of the same problems. Much of what they are calling Omicron is adverse vaxxine reactions.
Respiratory viral infections, like colds and flus, usually clear in about a week. When I kept asking colleagues why days and weeks afterwards, Covid was still being treated like it is infectious, I would get silence and the thousand foot stare. None of it made sense and I could see the entire landscape of health care changing - and not for the better. I was in a better position to back out at that point rather than be eaten alive in the meat grinder. I am sure at some point in the future I may return to clinical practice. But in the meantime, I will continue to try and educate and help my frens on this forum. I am sure there are silent lurkers that are also learning from the posts as well. I was one of them for over a year before I joined the fray. It is nice to be among the like minded. For a long time I felt like the lone voice crying in the wilderness. It's nice to be among frens.