If your loved one is suffering from covid, they should never see the inside of a hospital. I can tell you from personal experience they will just send them home until they are knocking on death's door and then they'll pretend they need "their" treatment which will be Fauci and the NIH's killer protocol.
Please don't call people morons. People with comorbities can enter into dangerous situations with them while fighting off this virus. Even if they are taking the ivermectin/Hcq protocol. My father was one of them. He had to be hospitalized for severe dehydration and his diabetes which is easily controlled by a pill went out of control as well as his atrial fib kicking up. If I had kept him home he wouldn't have survived.
He never needed oxygen but did need fluid and diabetes/AFib control.
Agreed, we followed ALL the protocols yet my brother's pulse ox fell to 68... and that mandates a ride to the ER... then , like it or not you are in the hospital.
His numbers were dangerously high and he only had pills (not insulin) because they've always controlled it well. I think the dehydration might have exacerbated the diabetes and the afib
If your loved one is suffering from covid, they should never see the inside of a hospital. I can tell you from personal experience they will just send them home until they are knocking on death's door and then they'll pretend they need "their" treatment which will be Fauci and the NIH's killer protocol.
Please don't call people morons. People with comorbities can enter into dangerous situations with them while fighting off this virus. Even if they are taking the ivermectin/Hcq protocol. My father was one of them. He had to be hospitalized for severe dehydration and his diabetes which is easily controlled by a pill went out of control as well as his atrial fib kicking up. If I had kept him home he wouldn't have survived. He never needed oxygen but did need fluid and diabetes/AFib control.
Agreed, we followed ALL the protocols yet my brother's pulse ox fell to 68... and that mandates a ride to the ER... then , like it or not you are in the hospital.
Yes, Covid throws a monkey wrench in diabetes. Even if you knock down the infection quickly, the blood sugars don’t stabilize.
His numbers were dangerously high and he only had pills (not insulin) because they've always controlled it well. I think the dehydration might have exacerbated the diabetes and the afib