Just do the Ivermectin Paste 1.8% horse version. It has a plunger with weight scale. What ever you weight, just squeeze out that much. I have taken it many times.
Many studies state that there may be a difference between the ingredients in horse paste v. pill form.
For instance, the animal paste form may contain higher than accepted amounts of residual solvents, heavy metals, pesticides, and other trace chemicals. The USP grade Ivermectin for human use contains none of these.
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.
It is OTC in some states, right?
Is it easier/less expensive now?
If so, from where?
Just do the Ivermectin Paste 1.8% horse version. It has a plunger with weight scale. What ever you weight, just squeeze out that much. I have taken it many times.
Also see this for calculating dose: https://www.maximpulse.com/permethrin/ivermectin-calculating-a-dose.html
Or Pharmacies that will prescribe human version of IVM: https://covid19criticalcare.com/pharmacies/
But why not forget the IVM and just go with MMS which cures it faster.
Many studies state that there may be a difference between the ingredients in horse paste v. pill form.
For instance, the animal paste form may contain higher than accepted amounts of residual solvents, heavy metals, pesticides, and other trace chemicals. The USP grade Ivermectin for human use contains none of these.
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.