Lately been seeing posts about folks who've done everything right and still have bad covid.
Before going to the hospital, this therapy is worth a try. Difficulty breathing is very scary, and once it starts with Covid, it can worsen rapidly.
This happened to me. I was already on the recommended vitamins, and I was in a bad state, no knowledge of ivermectin at the time, and for me it felt like my choices were this nebulizer therapy, death, or the hospital. (Yes, I had a major comorbidity: type 1 diabetes. Otherwise healthy and active, my breathing had become increasingly difficult and was a few days past the worrying stage.
Fortunately the nebulizer therapy worked quickly. Everything is OTC, way faster than getting a prescription or an appointment, and very inexpensive, with the exception of the nebulizer, $40-100. (Obviously nothing compared to any hospital cost.) All usually available in one trip to a pharmacy.
It quickly calmed my breathing, and I felt a little better immediately, and much better overnight. I continued for weeks, not out of any discipline or respect for medicine, but because it was so obviously helpful. It is worth a try.
When covid is bad, it can sneak up on people. Both articles are good. After reading I think you'll agree there is a big upside compared to almost no downside.
Here is the protocol: https://www.spiritofchange.org/nebulized-peroxide-a-simple-remedy-for-covid-19/ Archived: https://archive.md/SvEEm
2nd article. https://deeprootsathome.com/dr-mercola-nebulized-peroxide-the-single-most-effective-early-strategy/ Archived: https://archive.md/snzF5
By all means, do the vitamins, NAC, IVM or HCQ, I'm not opposed to any of those things. But don't ignore breathing issues especially if they seem to get progressively worse, and keep this in mind. These articles mention more than one formula- if you're skittish, just start with the most diluted; your body will tell you if it helps and you can priced from there. Pro tip in comment about making nebulizing even easier.
Well, that's only with prescription, so at the very least it will take more time. I think it is a steroid that would help like other steroids that have been reported. But albuterol dilates the lungs without addressing the infection, and I believe it has long-term negative side effects. If the vitamins and ivermectin aren't helping, I think albuterol would only be a stopgap, whereas according to these doctors and my experience, the hydrogen peroxide is curative. But I can only speak to my experience; I didn't use albuterol for this.
My son started having breathing issues weeks after COVID. No one wanted to be in the room with him. He sounded like he was dying. Doctor gave him albuteral nebulizer, more ivermectin, antibiotics and steroid shots. It did not help much. He is now on Trelegy and is better. Trelegy inhaler is expensive but magically becomes $25 with a coupon.
Must've been scary. I'm glad he pulled through. Watching this info get censored on the net made me angry. Even doctors looking for treatments missed it. It's good the doctor was awake and invested enough to keep trying and pushing. I'm sure the albuterol helped, it's just that the lungs were fighting against the tide. When covid provokes serious breathing difficulty is when people die. If he's over the covid he should be improving, and it's a matter of recovery time to get back to normal. But if it gets worse, I wouldn't hesitate to give the peroxide a try.
There's another post about albuterol on this thread you might want to read. My summary is that the temporary dilation from steroids (like trelegy) helps in the short-term but long-term makes the lungs weaker. But do your own research.
My son had asthma growing up. I always used mentholatum ( they advised against) on his chest, back and feet. I also would have him take baths with the baby medicated bath. Plus kept a humidifier/vaporizer going when sick.