I don’t believe this is the right dosing. There is no reason someone should take more than a horse would. This is purposely trying to hurt people and sabotage us.
Shadow, I thought so too when I first used it. But this what it says. The paste is portioned out on the box for 0.2 mg per Kg of body weight. So multiplying by 1.5 as the guide says would make it 0.3 mg per Kg of body weight. Since the person asking is feeling ill, I assume they would be a moderate risk patient. If you review the Zelenko protocol for Covid he recommends 0.4 to 0.5 mg per Kg of body weight for moderate to high risk patients. Therefore, 0.3 is a good place to start and could be increased if conditions worsen IMHO according to Zelenko, a doctor. https://vladimirzelenkomd.com/treatment-protocol/
Recommended ivermectin dose is .2 - .4 mg per kg of body weight. If you follow the weight on a horse dewormer, it equals .2 mg per kg of body weight. (Does not matter whether you are a horse or a human, kg = kg.) It just so happens that horse anti-parasite dosage is the same as human prevention dosage (note that for treatment, they recommend .4 or even .6 mg/kg)
I don’t believe this is the right dosing. There is no reason someone should take more than a horse would. This is purposely trying to hurt people and sabotage us.
Shadow, I thought so too when I first used it. But this what it says. The paste is portioned out on the box for 0.2 mg per Kg of body weight. So multiplying by 1.5 as the guide says would make it 0.3 mg per Kg of body weight. Since the person asking is feeling ill, I assume they would be a moderate risk patient. If you review the Zelenko protocol for Covid he recommends 0.4 to 0.5 mg per Kg of body weight for moderate to high risk patients. Therefore, 0.3 is a good place to start and could be increased if conditions worsen IMHO according to Zelenko, a doctor. https://vladimirzelenkomd.com/treatment-protocol/
Recommended ivermectin dose is .2 - .4 mg per kg of body weight. If you follow the weight on a horse dewormer, it equals .2 mg per kg of body weight. (Does not matter whether you are a horse or a human, kg = kg.) It just so happens that horse anti-parasite dosage is the same as human prevention dosage (note that for treatment, they recommend .4 or even .6 mg/kg)
Reference: https://covid19criticalcare.com/covid-19-protocols/i-mask-plus-protocol/