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Frontline Doctor Highlights His Preferred COVID-19 Treatments: 4,000 Patients Treated with only Five Ending Up in Hospital, None Dead
Epoch Times ^ | 01/04/2022 | Zachary Steiber

Posted on 01/04/2022 6:55:14 PM PST by SeekAndFind

While the Omicron variant of the the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus seems to be causing less severe disease than the Delta variant, it’s still landing some people in hospitals, highlighting the need for effective treatment before cases progress to that stage, a frontline doctor says.

Dr. Syed Haider has treated more than 4,000 COVID-19-positive patients so far during the pandemic. Just five ended up going to a hospital, and none have died.

The doctor said his preferred treatments include many off-label medications along with vitamins and supplements.

“Vitamin D is really important, ivermectin is important, fluvoxamine, hydroxychloroquine also works, it’s just a lot of people have been convinced that it doesn’t at this point, and are scared off of trying it,” Haider told NTD’s “Capitol Report.” “But I prefer ivermectin, fluvoxamine, Vitamin D, Vitamin C, quercetin, zinc.”

Ivermectin is an anti-parasitic that has had mixed results against COVID-19 in clinical trials and isn’t advised by the Food and Drug Administration to treat the disease. Fluvoxamine is an antidepressant that’s gaining popularity for use against COVID-19. Hydroxychloroquine is an anti-malarial that has shown some success in treating the disease. Quercetin is a plant pigment that’s not widely known yet as a treatment for COVID-19.

Haider has also recommended flax seed oil.

“One really easy thing that anyone can do is just follow the directions on a bottle of hydrogen peroxide, you can get this at the store, can dilute it down to 1 percent swish swish it through your nose, or swish it through your mouth and drip it into your nose or use a neti pot to rinse out your nose. And it’s not uncomfortable, it shouldn’t be burning, if it’s burning, you would want to dilute it a little bit more, and that kills the virus on contact,” he said.

Haider’s list differs from the National Institutes of Health’s recently updated treatment recommendations for non hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

The agency recommends using Pfizer’s COVID-19 pill, known as paxlovid; Merck’s pill, called molnupiravir; GlaxoSmithKline’s monoclonal antibody treatment, sotrovimab; or Gilead Sciences’s remdesivir, administered through IV over multiple days.

The recommendations stem from studies that demonstrate the therapeutics’ effectiveness, the agency said.

Haider, however, doesn’t agree with the remdesivir recommendation, noting it’s never received an endorsement from the World Health Organization and that is has the side effect of causing kidney failure.

The virus that causes COVID-19, he said, is “very, very easily treatable” if early treatment is done with off-label drugs, Haider stressed.

He advises people get prepared ahead of time.

“I think people need to take this seriously and get medications on hand before they get sick,” Dr. Syed Haider told “Capitol Report.”

While Omicron often manifests as a bad cold, even some people who are considered at low-risk of developing severe disease will end up with severe cases, the doctor said. Additionally, emerging data indicate that the protection provided by both vaccination and natural immunity isn’t as good against Omicron, emphasizing the need to be ready.



TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: chinavirus; chinavirustreatment; covid; covidtreatments; ivermectin; syedhaider; therapeutics
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To: fortes fortuna juvat

Glad to know you are already feeling back to normal. Hoping you feel a lot better every day.


41 posted on 01/04/2022 8:22:51 PM PST by Tommy Revolts
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To: KittyKares
No, you can get them at CVS, Walgreens, Walmart or off Amazon. I purchased the CN69, which is good for all ages.

Also bought 0.9% Sodium Choride and 3% food grade hydrogen peroxide. Dilute with saline to 0.1% strength.

So if needed, I would add 1 ounce of 3% hydrogen peroxide to about 16 ounces of saline.

42 posted on 01/04/2022 8:33:16 PM PST by Tommy Revolts
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To: Political Junkie Too; All

I suggest you add Benadryl ( or the genetic equivalent) to your home treatment plan. Take with milk or a milk product as per box directions at the first symptoms. The Benadryl and milk protocol is very new. Just read about it a few weeks ago. Treated my daughter last week when she developed covid symptoms after multiple exposures in her workplace.
Benadryl and hot chocolate over 3 days ( plus other supplements) completely and rapidly knocked down her fatigue, body aches, headache, fever, and GI issues. I was really surprised. I think somehow the Benadryl milk synergy is stopping the immune reaction from going hyper, like cytokine storm. And that immune reaction is causing a lot of the symptoms.
I have been reading a lot of similar good reports.
This is a treatment suggestion. Not a preventive.


43 posted on 01/04/2022 8:35:54 PM PST by silverleaf (“Freedom ultimately means the right of other people to do things that you disagree with”. T. Sowell )
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To: RushIsMyTeddyBear

Fluvoxamine is also a strong anti-inflammatory that suppresses cytokines.

That is likely why it helps with COVID, rarhter than the SSRI activity.

Some over the counter meds that have anti-inflammatory and antihistamine effects, like Pepcid (given to President Trump for his COVID infection) and Zyrtec have also been shown to improve COVID outcomes.


44 posted on 01/04/2022 8:39:38 PM PST by BeauBo
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To: BeauBo

And Benadryl or the generic ... see my post above
Taking it with milk seems to add to the effects


45 posted on 01/04/2022 8:42:05 PM PST by silverleaf (“Freedom ultimately means the right of other people to do things that you disagree with”. T. Sowell )
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To: old curmudgeon
Here's a study: Safety of high-dose ivermectin: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Conclusions Although within this review the safety of high-dose ivermectin appears to be comparable to standard doses, there are not enough data to support a recommendation for its use in higher-than-approved doses. Ocular adverse events, despite being transient, are of concern in onchocerciasis patients. These data can inform programme managers and guide operational research activities as new approaches for the use of ivermectin are evaluated.
46 posted on 01/04/2022 9:17:52 PM PST by \/\/ayne (I regret that I have but one subscription cancellation notice to give to my local newspaper)
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To: mass55th

RE: My Endocrinologist prescribed Vitamin D 50,000 IU, once a week.

Hey, welcome to the club I take Vitamin D every Monday of the week. Do you do the same?


47 posted on 01/04/2022 9:37:48 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
I would suggest everybody print out this PDF and keep a copy handy

Prevention and Early Outpatient Protocol

48 posted on 01/04/2022 9:42:41 PM PST by Mozzafiato
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To: silverleaf
Thanks for the recommendation.

I had heard of Benadryl use, but I need to see further exactly what it's doing so that it doesn't conflict with or duplicate something that I'm already doing.

-PJ

49 posted on 01/04/2022 9:48:37 PM PST by Political Junkie Too ( * LAAP = Left-wing Activist Agitprop Press (formerly known as the MSM))
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To: SeekAndFind
"Hey, welcome to the club I take Vitamin D every Monday of the week. Do you do the same?"

Mine's on Friday. That's just how the schedule worked out after I got the first script. Been on it for many years.

50 posted on 01/04/2022 10:03:52 PM PST by mass55th ("Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway." ~~ John Wayne )
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To: silverleaf
I just did a cursory search on Benadryl as a treatment.

While it seems promising, it looks like it duplicates the goal of Zinc and Quercetin in that it blocks the replication of the COVID-19 virus in the targeted cell.

My concern about taking Benadryl is that I am taking Quercetin and Zinc as a prophylactic; I'm not waiting to confirm having COVID-19 before taking it. Quercetin is plant-based, mostly from onions and green leafy plants. Diphenhydramine is an antihistamine medication.

If I wait until I know I have COVID-19 to take the Benadryl therapy, then the virus will have been in my body for days before I begin the treatment. If I take it as a preventative, I risk building up a resistance to Benadryl when I need it for allergies and other uses.

For now, I will continue with the natural, non-medicine preventative therapy of Quercetin and Zinc to prevent the replication of the COVID-19 virus in my body.

Thanks for suggesting it to me. It might be an appropriate therapy for others, but not for me given the rest of my regimen.

-PJ

51 posted on 01/04/2022 10:08:57 PM PST by Political Junkie Too ( * LAAP = Left-wing Activist Agitprop Press (formerly known as the MSM))
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To: Tommy Revolts

Thanks. I have other necessary items, but I don’t have one of those yet. I have something for inhaling steam (an old European remedy), but it says not to put anything else into it. I will look for a nebulizer.


52 posted on 01/04/2022 11:05:45 PM PST by KittyKares (Trump put us in the room; now we're putting ourselves in the room. - Steve Bannon)
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To: Political Junkie Too

Benadryl is reported to reduce viral replication by about a third.

A doctor named Ostrov in Florida tried combining it with the milk extract lactoferrin (also reported to reduce viral replication by about a third).

He said that the combination produced a 99% reduction.

I have not heard of anyone replicating his results.


53 posted on 01/05/2022 2:22:26 AM PST by BeauBo
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To: Political Junkie Too

Some folks with bad allergies take Benadryl routinely, and others use it routinely as a sleeping pill, but I have heard that long term chronic use is associated with an increased risk of developing dementia.

It is generally recognized as safe, but for myself, I only plan to use it for treatment (along with lactoferrin, an OTC food supplement), not prevention.


54 posted on 01/05/2022 2:31:20 AM PST by BeauBo
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To: SeekAndFind
Haider’s list differs from the National Institutes of Health’s recently updated treatment recommendations for non hospitalized COVID-19 patients.

The agency recommends using
WHATEVER MAKES BIG PROFIT FOR BIG PHARMA
55 posted on 01/05/2022 3:26:33 AM PST by Pollard (PureBlood -- youtube.com/watch?v=VXm0fkDituE)
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To: Tommy Revolts

https://www.revolutionhealth.org/nebulized-hydrogen-peroxide/
https://www.spiritofchange.org/nebulized-peroxide-a-simple-remedy-for-covid-19/

Few drops of iodine too


56 posted on 01/05/2022 3:36:39 AM PST by Pollard (PureBlood -- youtube.com/watch?v=VXm0fkDituE)
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To: Political Junkie Too

Benadryl and Lactoferrin/Colustrum is the study. Diphenhydramine alone knocks the virus replication back 30%. It is just a study, they don’t know if it works in humans.

Two Common Over-the-Counter Compounds Reduce COVID-19 Virus Replication by 99% in Early Testing
University of Florida ^ | 12 December 2021
Posted on 12/13/2021, 7:32:16 AM by zeestephen
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/4020756/posts


57 posted on 01/05/2022 3:55:42 AM PST by EBH (Hold My Beer. 1776-2021 May God Save Us.)
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To: SeekAndFind

.


58 posted on 01/05/2022 4:11:42 AM PST by MasonGal
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To: EBH

Lactoferrin can be purchased as an OTC supplement but from the growing anecdotal reports I am reading plus my personal experience, regular warm milk or even a milk product taken with Benadryl seems to be really knocking down the immune reaction ( histamines) that flood the body when the virus is contracted. It is not an antiviral like zinc and Quercetin, it is a treatment to help people suffering or facing the equivalent of a serious allergic reaction to the covid agent.
It’s been reported that what killed many during the Spanish flu pandemic was not the virus, but the body’s own overstimulated immune system aka cytokine storm.
Offered fwiw. Everyone has access to milk and most people have Benadryl or generic version onhand.


59 posted on 01/05/2022 6:27:54 AM PST by silverleaf (“Freedom ultimately means the right of other people to do things that you disagree with”. T. Sowell )
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To: Tommy Revolts

Thank you very much


60 posted on 01/05/2022 6:37:56 AM PST by RWGinger (Does anyone else really )
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