Due to his earlier research with colleagues at UF, Ostrov already knew diphenhydramine was potentially effective against the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The latest discovery has its roots in a routine meeting of scientists with the Global Virus Network’s COVID-19 task force. One researcher presented unpublished data on federally approved compounds that inhibit SARS-CoV-2 activity, including lactoferrin.
Like diphenhydramine, lactoferrin is available without a prescription. Ostrov thought about pairing it with diphenhydramine and ran with the idea. In lab tests on human and monkey cells, the combination was particularly potent: Individually, the two compounds each inhibited SARS-CoV-2 virus replication by about 30%. Together, they reduced virus replication by 99%.
99% reduced replication. Your natural immune system can handle the leftovers (If you still have the immune system that God gave you and not the new one that the clot-shot reprograms yours to.)
Let that sink in. 99% Antihistamine + Milk Protein
Link to the scientific paper published in the Journal; Pathogens
How about some proof that the SARS-CoV-2 virus actually exists?
No virus/Chyna bioweapon?
I guess my niece bringing it home from a classmate and then my brother (her father), her mother, her brother and her grandparents catching it from her all happened in their head?
My brother was in ICU for 4 days on remdesivir and high flow oxygen (luckily not the vent, which he refused). He went through hell, but you say there is no virus that caused this??
If the virus does not exist, then obviously it could not have caused anything.
Everybody live in the same house? Mold? EMF? Poor nutrition? Could be a lot of things.
But I will tell you something it cannot be: something that does not exist.
What?? You're trying to list anything you can think of, but actually acknowledge that a virus caused all that to happen.
Same nutrition as the week before they became sick, same house with no mold issues.
Why is it hard for you to acknowledge this? I don't think you'll have any luck trying to convince people who have had it that it's all in their head and it doesn't exist.