Every medication, prescription and OTC for every human and animal, is regulated by the FDA. And every single medication comes with a litany of side effects.
The point I am really trying to make is we simply not supposed to take medications used for animals, and animals are not supposed to take medications used for humans. Yes, there are many medications that are prescribed for both animals and humans, but the purpose, dosage, form, ingredients, and route of administration (meaning oral, intravenous, rectal, injection) are extremely different.
I completely understand the direness of obtaining ivermectin in any way possible a few years ago, but there has always been available and reputable sources to obtain the "human" form.
To me, it's more of a common sense thing to take the human form of medication over the animal form. There's also calculations involved, and there's a significant risk for a large percentage of our population to make mathematical mistakes in converting animal dose to human dose.
This just simply isn’t true.
Animal medicine and human medicine are often the exact same thing. This is propaganda inspired misinformation. “Common sense” doesn’t say people shouldn’t take animal medicine. It’s just ignorance and fear mongering.
Be wise on what you ingest into your bodies by every means possible. Including experimental mRNA vaccines that involve fetal cells, mercury, formaldehyde, graphene, etc etc.
Ivermectin works for both humans and animals. It’s been dosed and taken by millions of people across the globe.
My dogs take ivermectin for heartworm prevention monthly.
They also get antibiotics that are common with humans when necessary.
One dog had a swollen eyeball after a scrape with a raccoon. The vet didn't have the eye drops on hand so he wrote a prescription for Walgreens and used our last name for the dog since she only had a first name. The drops were for glaucoma in humans. Many fish antibiotics are the same that we take...
Can anyone verify this to be true? Have we been taking and praising horse paste, when in fact it's possibly harming us?
Every medication, prescription and OTC for every human and animal, is regulated by the FDA. And every single medication comes with a litany of side effects.
The point I am really trying to make is we simply not supposed to take medications used for animals, and animals are not supposed to take medications used for humans. Yes, there are many medications that are prescribed for both animals and humans, but the purpose, dosage, form, ingredients, and route of administration (meaning oral, intravenous, rectal, injection) are extremely different.
I completely understand the direness of obtaining ivermectin in any way possible a few years ago, but there has always been available and reputable sources to obtain the "human" form.
To me, it's more of a common sense thing to take the human form of medication over the animal form. There's also calculations involved, and there's a significant risk for a large percentage of our population to make mathematical mistakes in converting animal dose to human dose.
This just simply isn’t true. Animal medicine and human medicine are often the exact same thing. This is propaganda inspired misinformation. “Common sense” doesn’t say people shouldn’t take animal medicine. It’s just ignorance and fear mongering. Be wise on what you ingest into your bodies by every means possible. Including experimental mRNA vaccines that involve fetal cells, mercury, formaldehyde, graphene, etc etc. Ivermectin works for both humans and animals. It’s been dosed and taken by millions of people across the globe.
My dogs take ivermectin for heartworm prevention monthly.
They also get antibiotics that are common with humans when necessary. One dog had a swollen eyeball after a scrape with a raccoon. The vet didn't have the eye drops on hand so he wrote a prescription for Walgreens and used our last name for the dog since she only had a first name. The drops were for glaucoma in humans. Many fish antibiotics are the same that we take...
My older brother wife is a dressage gran prix rider and trainer.
One thing I have learned?
Those horses are valued far more than the poor destitute person at free health care in the inner city.
The horse is being treated for sickness, while that poor human being is being given drugs to lessen the pain.
By lessening the pain?
That human is most likely not to talk about the suffering.
Drug and numb them.
Totally agree!