If it has been longer than a week since the initial infection, you may no longer dealing with a viral infection. Most respiratory viruses will run their course in about a week. 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. Sometimes a person starts to feel a little better and thinks they have turned the corner only to get very ill - quickly. If her Covid has now moved into a second phase, 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 so quickly. Inflammation is the enemy at this stage and some medical interventions only exacerbate the problem. I am glad you are seeking the medical power of attorney. That is the only way to protect her from medical kidnapping and attempt to control her treatment.
Things to use to fight inflammatory Covid sequela are:
Prednisone and not dexamethasone along with comitant use of H1 and H2 antihistamines to help to mitigate the attack on the tissues. H1 antihistamines like promethazine and H2 antihistamines like cimetidine are useful. She has both lung and digestive symptoms so the antihistamines may help. Budesonide has also been shown to help with compromised breathing. Antibiotics are only useful for secondary bacterial infection. Usually viral pneumonia is bilateral with equal sounds, while bacterial pneumonia is usually on one side with unequal sounds. Please review the following material to see if this may fit her case. God's speed to you fren.
No remdesivir! She need high flow oxygen, and antibiotics. My mother in law is going through the same thing right now. Bacterial pneumonia, they gave her remdesivir and put her on a vent the first night and her kidneys didn't respond well to it, so they stopped the remdesivir. Once they got the lung infection under control with antibiotics, they found parts of her intestines had died, most likely from the remdesivir. So she had to have a big amount of her intestines removed as well. She's on the mend now and getting better every day, but be wary of that remdesivir shit.
The kind of cultures hospitals like to run may not show for pneumonia and they take 24 hours anyway. Just get the antibiotics. The side effects of most antibiotics are mild so the consequences of over treating are a non-issue.
Well, it's hardly uncommon for a viral infection to be followed by a bacterial one. I'm sure that's why the rebel protocols like Z stack include an antibiotic and why they have been successful.
If she has bacterial pneumonia she needs antibiotics.
If it has been longer than a week since the initial infection, you may no longer dealing with a viral infection. Most respiratory viruses will run their course in about a week. 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. Sometimes a person starts to feel a little better and thinks they have turned the corner only to get very ill - quickly. If her Covid has now moved into a second phase, 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 so quickly. Inflammation is the enemy at this stage and some medical interventions only exacerbate the problem. I am glad you are seeking the medical power of attorney. That is the only way to protect her from medical kidnapping and attempt to control her treatment.
Things to use to fight inflammatory Covid sequela are: Prednisone and not dexamethasone along with comitant use of H1 and H2 antihistamines to help to mitigate the attack on the tissues. H1 antihistamines like promethazine and H2 antihistamines like cimetidine are useful. She has both lung and digestive symptoms so the antihistamines may help. Budesonide has also been shown to help with compromised breathing. Antibiotics are only useful for secondary bacterial infection. Usually viral pneumonia is bilateral with equal sounds, while bacterial pneumonia is usually on one side with unequal sounds. Please review the following material to see if this may fit her case. God's speed to you fren.
(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
No remdesivir! She need high flow oxygen, and antibiotics. My mother in law is going through the same thing right now. Bacterial pneumonia, they gave her remdesivir and put her on a vent the first night and her kidneys didn't respond well to it, so they stopped the remdesivir. Once they got the lung infection under control with antibiotics, they found parts of her intestines had died, most likely from the remdesivir. So she had to have a big amount of her intestines removed as well. She's on the mend now and getting better every day, but be wary of that remdesivir shit.
The kind of cultures hospitals like to run may not show for pneumonia and they take 24 hours anyway. Just get the antibiotics. The side effects of most antibiotics are mild so the consequences of over treating are a non-issue.
Well, it's hardly uncommon for a viral infection to be followed by a bacterial one. I'm sure that's why the rebel protocols like Z stack include an antibiotic and why they have been successful.
Pcr doesn't find covid so they'll have her on the wrong regimen.
Regular healthy people still get regular nasty bacterial pneumonia. People now seem to think everything is coof.
Of course the follow up PCR test came back positive. How many cycles they running 40? 45?
If they aren’t using antibiotics to cover for everything then transfer her somewhere else. Do not let them start remdesivir.