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To: meyer

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1,924 posted on 03/17/2021 12:38:38 PM PDT by pgkdan (The Silent Majority STILL Stands With TRUMP! WWG1WGA)
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YOUTUBE deleted this video before. It's posted again and I've placed the auto-generated transcript below it in case it's deleted again.
 
 
Here's the FR thread:
 
 
00:00
good afternoon i'm dr peter mccullough
00:02
and i'm an internist and cardiologist
00:04
and professor of medicine at texas a m
00:06
university school of medicine i'm on the
00:08
baylor dallas campus
00:11
and i've been integrally involved in the
00:14
response to covet 19.
00:16
now the opinions i'll express are those
00:19
of my own
00:20
and not necessarily those of my
00:21
institution
00:23
i can tell you that in my field i'm an
00:26
academic doctor i see patients but i'm
00:28
very involved in research
00:30
i'm an editor of two major journals in
00:32
my field
00:34
i'm the most published person in my
00:36
field which deals with the heart and the
00:37
kidneys
00:38
in the world in history and when covet
00:41
19
00:42
hit i saw it as our medical super bowl
00:45
and there were going to be doctors like
00:46
dr urso coming out of
00:49
wherever they worked to face the virus
00:52
and there were doctors in the hospital
00:54
that just had to receive
00:55
the virus and then there were those who
00:58
headed for the sidelines
01:00
and then there were those that were
01:02
detractors against the pandemic
01:05
and so as i started to survey the
01:07
literature
01:08
i had patients with heart and lung
01:10
disease who needed urgent treatment
01:13
and i refused to let an illness which
01:15
lasted for two weeks at home
01:18
before they got sick enough to be
01:19
hospitalized i refused to let a patient
01:22
languish at home
01:23
with no treatment and then be
01:25
hospitalized when it was too late it was
01:27
obvious that was obvious in
01:28
april that that was the case so i used
01:31
the best
01:32
tools or drugs available at the time and
01:35
these are
01:35
appropriately prescribed
01:38
off label remember a label is an
01:40
advertising label a label isn't a
01:42
scientific document
01:43
sure it's there there is an
01:44
appropriately prescribed
01:46
off-label use of conventional medicine
01:49
to treat
01:50
an illness and i uh in may i put
01:54
together a team of doctors
01:55
because the the the group that was
01:57
facing the pandemic to the greatest
01:59
degree was in milan italy so most of
02:00
them were in the coracle
02:02
italian research network we summarized
02:04
all we knew about the available drugs
02:07
and we published our findings in the
02:08
august
02:10
8th issue of the american journal
02:12
medicine and the title of that paper was
02:14
the pathophysiologic basis and rationale
02:17
for early ambulatory treatment and it
02:19
had a premise
02:20
there's two bad outcomes to covet 19
02:22
hospitalization and death
02:24
the second premise if we don't do
02:26
something before the hospitalization
02:28
we can never stop it we can never stop
02:30
it and i have to tell you when
02:32
i was a lead author in that paper but we
02:34
had dozens of authors from italy
02:36
india ucla emory we had the best
02:39
institutions in the united states
02:40
i can tell you the interesting thing was
02:42
there was 50 000 papers in the
02:44
peer-reviewed literature on covid
02:46
not a single one told the doctor how to
02:48
treat it
02:49
not a single one when does that happen i
02:52
was absolutely stunned and when this
02:54
paper was published in american journal
02:55
medicine it became a lightning rod oh my
02:57
gosh it became the most cited paper
02:59
in basically all of medicine at that
03:00
time the world started and boy the world
03:03
started knocking down my door and i said
03:04
oh my lord i just can't believe what
03:06
became untapped and um i
03:09
had never been on social media before
03:12
and
03:13
my daughter who was home from law school
03:15
was talking to her about it she said
03:16
well why don't i make a youtube video
03:18
so i made a youtube video with four
03:20
slides from the paper
03:22
this is a peer-reviewed paper published
03:23
in one of the best medical journals
03:25
in the world four slides i even wore a
03:27
tie in a suit and she showed me how to
03:29
record it in powerpoint and i posted on
03:31
youtube
03:32
it went absolutely viral and within
03:34
about a week
03:35
youtube said you violated the terms of
03:38
the of the um
03:39
community and that's when senator
03:41
johnson's office got involved in
03:43
washington said oh my gosh this is
03:44
important scientific
03:45
information to help patients in the
03:48
middle of this crisis
03:49
and social media is striking it down
03:51
based on what authority
03:53
well one thing led to another uh and i
03:55
became the lead witness for the u.s
03:57
senate testimony of
03:58
november 19 2020 and the reason why
04:00
there was senate testimony
04:02
is because there was a near total block
04:05
on any information of treatment to
04:07
patients
04:08
a near total block and so what had
04:11
happened over time
04:12
is that we had gotten into a cycle in
04:14
america
04:15
uh of no information on treatment
04:18
patients actually think
04:19
that the virus is untreatable and so
04:21
what happens is they go out to get a
04:23
diagnosis
04:24
now i'm a coveted survivor my wife in
04:26
the galley is a
04:27
father in a nursing home is a cobit
04:28
survivor
04:30
you get handed a diagnostic test it says
04:34
here you're covet positive go home
04:37
is there any treatment no is there any
04:39
resources i can call
04:41
no any referral lines hotlines no any
04:43
research hotlines
04:44
no that's the standard of care in the
04:47
united states
04:48
and if we go to any one of our testing
04:50
centers today in the in texas
04:51
i bet that's the standard of care i bet
04:54
that's the standard of care
04:55
no wonder we have had 45 000
04:58
deaths in texas the average person in
05:00
texas thinks there's no treatment
05:03
they honestly think there's no treatment
05:05
they don't even know about these eua
05:07
antibodies you heard from
05:08
a 90 year old gentleman who got bam
05:10
terrific
05:12
where's the focus there's such a focus
05:14
on the vaccine where's the focus on
05:16
people sick right now
05:17
this committee ought to know where all
05:19
these monoclonal antibodies are they
05:21
ought to know where all the treatment
05:22
protocols are
05:23
they ought to have a list of the
05:24
treatment centers in texas that actually
05:27
treat patients with covet 19. so i led
05:30
the initiative
05:31
the second paper was published in a
05:32
dedicated issue of reviews in
05:34
cardiovascular medicine now i had
05:36
57 authors including dr urso dr
05:39
emanuel uh lead doctors in houston san
05:42
antonio all over and it was
05:43
another worldwide paper and now we have
05:45
it updated integrated
05:47
so yes we used drugs to affect viable
05:49
replication the antibodies are terrific
05:51
we can use intracellular anti-infectives
05:54
in that box
05:55
we use corticosteroids and inflammatory
05:57
drugs the best anti-inflammatory drug is
05:59
colchicine
06:00
you've probably never heard about it in
06:01
the largest highest quality randomized
06:04
trial
06:04
over 4 000 patients double blind
06:07
randomized placebo-controlled trial
06:09
there's a 50
06:10
reduction in mortality no word of it
06:13
none complete block to anybody
06:16
culture scene how can that be how can
06:19
that be and then the most deadly part of
06:21
the the viral
06:22
infection is thrombosis so i have always
06:25
treated my patients
06:26
with something to treat the virus
06:28
something to treat inflammation and
06:30
something to treat pharmacists just as
06:31
dr urso had
06:33
and i have very very sick patients and
06:35
i've lost two
06:38
but i have to tell you what has gone on
06:40
has been beyond
06:41
belief how many of you have turned on a
06:44
local news station
06:45
or a national cable news station and
06:48
ever gotten an
06:49
update on treatment at home
06:52
how many of you have ever gotten a
06:54
single word about what to do when you
06:56
get
06:57
the hand of the diagnosis of 19. no
07:00
wonder
07:01
that is a complete and total failure at
07:04
every level
07:05
okay let's take the white house how come
07:07
we didn't have a panel of doctors
07:09
assigned to put all their efforts and
07:12
stop these hospitalizations
07:13
why don't we have doctors who actually
07:15
treated patients get together
07:17
in a group and every week give us an
07:19
update
07:20
why didn't we have that why didn't we
07:22
have that at the state level zero
07:24
why don't we have any reports about how
07:26
many patients were treated
07:27
in spared hospitalizations from all that
07:29
i listen to six hours of testimony today
07:31
zero zero we have a complete and total
07:36
blank spot
07:37
on treatment it is a blanking phenomenon
07:41
at least in the united states there's
07:42
some heroes now the american society of
07:44
physician and surgeons
07:45
took the lead they're the group they've
07:47
identified 35 treatment centers in texas
07:49
they know who they are
07:50
they have emergency hotlines they helped
07:53
dr hall put together
07:54
this very brief pamphlet but there's
07:56
more an extensive one we can pass it
07:58
around to everyone
07:59
that at least gives people half a chance
08:01
to find out
08:02
about information okay this is a
08:06
complete and total travesty to have a
08:08
fatal disease
08:09
and not treat it now the national
08:11
institutes of health and the infectious
08:13
disease design of
08:14
america started putting out guidelines
08:16
in the treatment of covet 19
08:17
and to this date they nearly exclusively
08:20
deal with a hospitalized patient
08:22
the two papers that i have published as
08:24
the lead author
08:25
and supported by wonderful people by dr
08:27
urso are the
08:28
only publications in the peer-reviewed
08:31
literature
08:32
that tell doctors how to treat covet 19
08:34
as an outpatient
08:36
based on the support of scientific
08:37
information the only two
08:39
the home treatment guide by the american
08:41
physicians and surgeons
08:42
is the only source of information
08:45
available to patients
08:46
on how to treat cova 19 at home the only
08:49
source
08:50
so what can be done right here right now
08:51
there's going to be more people that die
08:53
in texas and it's an absolute tragedy
08:54
how about tomorrow let's have a law that
08:57
says there's not a single result given
08:59
out
08:59
without a treatment guide and without a
09:02
hotline of how to get into research
09:04
let's put a staffer on this and find out
09:06
all the research available in texas and
09:07
let's not have a single person go home
09:10
with with a test result with their fatal
09:12
diagnosis
09:13
sitting at home going into two weeks of
09:15
despair before they succumb to
09:17
hospitalization and death
09:19
it is unimaginable in america that we
09:22
can have such a complete and total blind
09:23
spot
09:24
i blame the doctors for not stepping up
09:26
where was the medical society
09:28
stopping up and putting effort on this
09:30
how about from the federal and state
09:31
agencies there never was
09:33
a single bit of group collaborative
09:36
effort to stop the hospitalizations
09:39
nobody even kind of thought about it bob
09:41
hall had me hana
09:42
teleconference in in april or may and
09:44
we're like wait a minute
09:45
how come where's ut southwestern i'm a
09:47
graduate of ut southwestern
09:49
where's a m where's the rest of the
09:51
universities how come we're not stopping
09:52
this
09:53
how come we are not stopping this but it
09:55
gets worse because
09:57
in the paper i published in december of
09:59
of 2020 you know what he did i had i had
10:01
a terrific
10:02
doctor from brazil we went through
10:04
country by country by country and just
10:06
asked the question what
10:07
are the countries doing was the last
10:09
time you turned on the news and ever got
10:11
a window to the outside world
10:13
when did you ever get an update about
10:15
how the rest of the world is handling
10:17
covet
10:19
never what's happened in this pandemic
10:21
is the world has closed in on us there's
10:23
only one doctor
10:25
whose face is on tv now one not a panel
10:28
doctors we always work in groups we
10:29
always have different opinions there's
10:32
not a single media doctor
10:34
on tv who's ever treated a covid patient
10:37
not a single one there's not a single
10:40
person in the white house task force has
10:41
ever treated a patient
10:43
why don't we do something both why don't
10:44
we put together a panel of doctors that
10:46
have actually treated outpatients of
10:48
covet 19
10:49
and get them together for our meeting
10:51
and why don't we exchange ideas
10:53
and why don't we say how we can finish
10:55
the pandemic strongly
10:56
isn't it amazing think about this think
10:59
about the complete and total blind spot
11:01
so what happened i can tell you what
11:02
happened what happened in around may
11:04
it became known that the virus was going
11:06
to be amenable to a vaccine
11:09
all efforts on treatment were dropped
11:11
the national institutes of health
11:12
actually had a multi-drug program
11:14
they dropped it after 20 patients said
11:15
we can't find the patients
11:17
the most disingenuous announcement of
11:18
all time and then warp speed went
11:21
full tilt for vaccine development and
11:24
there was a silencing of any information
11:27
on
11:27
treatment any silencing
11:31
scrubbed from twitter youtube can't get
11:34
papers published on this
11:35
you can't we can't even get information
11:37
out in our own medical literature on
11:39
this
11:39
there's been a complete scrubbing so
11:41
this program has been one of
11:43
try to reduce the spread of the virus
11:45
and wait for a vaccine
11:47
and when we've when we vaccinate all
11:49
efforts have to be on vaccination and
11:51
probably if i had four hours of
11:52
vaccination on here think about it as we
11:54
sit here today
11:56
the calculations in texas on herd
11:58
immunity
11:59
the calculations are we're at eighty
12:01
percent herd immunity right now
12:03
with no vaccine effect eighty percent
12:05
and more people are developing cova
12:07
today
12:07
they're gonna become immune people who
12:09
develop covid have
12:10
complete and durable immunity and a very
12:14
important principle
12:15
complete and durable you can't beat
12:17
natural immunity you can't vaccinate on
12:19
top of it and make it better
12:21
there's no scientific clinical
12:24
or safety rationale for ever vaccinating
12:28
a cove
12:29
recovered patient there's no rationale
12:31
for ever testing a covert recovery
12:33
patient my wife and i are covered
12:34
recovered
12:34
why do we go through the testing outside
12:36
there's absolutely no rationale
12:38
i'd encourage this committee to actually
12:40
look at what's being done
12:42
and ask is there any rationale is there
12:44
any rationale for anything
12:46
listen there's plenty of cover to
12:48
recover patients let them forego the
12:50
vaccine
12:51
and let people who are clamoring for it
12:53
get it but at 80 percent
12:55
hurt immunity in the vaccine trials
12:57
fewer than one percent
12:59
in the vaccine in the placebo actually
13:01
get coveted fewer than one percent
13:03
the vaccine is going to have a one
13:04
percent public health impact that's what
13:06
the data says
13:08
it's not going to save us we're already
13:09
80 hurt immune
13:11
if we're strategically targeted we can
13:14
actually close out the pandemic
13:15
very well with the vaccine but
13:17
strategically targeted people under 50
13:19
who fundamentally have no
13:21
health risks there's no scientific
13:24
rationale for them to ever become
13:26
vaccinated
13:28
there's no scientific rationale one of
13:30
the mistakes i heard today as a
13:32
rationale for vaccination as
13:33
asymptomatic spread and i want you to be
13:34
very clear about this my opinion is
13:38
there is a low degree if any of
13:41
asymptomatic spread
13:42
sick person gives it to sick person the
13:45
chinese have published a study british
13:46
medical journal
13:47
11 million people that try to find
13:49
asymptomatic spread you can't find it
13:51
and that's been you know one of
13:53
important pieces of
13:55
misinformation when senator hall called
13:58
a conference call
13:58
what should we do in the capitol when we
14:00
reopened i said you know what you know
14:03
what we do at baylor
14:04
you walk in and they zap your
14:05
temperature you got a temperature check
14:06
and go in
14:08
i mean do we test everybody who walks in
14:10
the baylor hospital no are they a lot
14:12
sicker than everybody in this room you
14:13
better believe it
14:14
so why would we do something here at the
14:15
capitol
14:17
that has absolutely positively no
14:19
scientific rationale
14:20
and then do it in this context so my
14:23
testimony as i said here today
14:25
is covet 19 has always been a treatable
14:27
illness
14:28
a very large study from mckinney texas
14:30
another one from new york city
14:32
show that when doctors treat patients
14:35
early
14:35
who are over age 50 with medical
14:37
problems with a sequence multi-drug
14:39
approach with the available drugs uh
14:41
four to six drugs that are available
14:44
to them now the monoclonal antibiotics
14:46
are better better there's an
14:47
85 reduction in hospitalizations and
14:50
death
14:51
85 85 percent i want you to remember
14:56
that number 85 percent
14:58
we have over 500 000 deaths in the
15:00
united states
15:03
the preventable fraction could have been
15:05
as high as 85 percent
15:07
if our pandemic response would have been
15:10
laser focused
15:11
on the problem the sick patient right in
15:13
front of us we're focused over here and
15:14
focused over there and focused on masks
15:16
and
15:16
what have you laser focused sick patient
15:19
treat them
15:20
we lost focus on the most fundamental
15:22
doctor that's my that's my testimony
15:24
yeah thank you i can tell how passionate
15:27
you are and certainly i have been a
15:29
leader
15:29
in talking about preventive protocols
15:32
and also the ambulatory stage and i do
15:35
think that that has been missing
15:37
and it's been a concern because kova 19
15:39
is going to be with us right i mean it's
15:41
uh
15:42
you know i hope we're at 80 percent
15:44
heard immunity i don't know yet i'll
15:46
read your papers but
15:47
um i appreciate that and the message is
15:50
is that there are drugs out there that
15:51
work
15:52
there are therapies out there that work
15:54
but no single one works alone
15:56
and so the the the dismissive mistake
15:58
was to do a very small study oh we
16:00
studied 200 patients
16:01
and we used ivory hydroxychloroquine and
16:04
it didn't work that's like
16:05
cancer and picking one drug and saying
16:07
oh it doesn't reduce cancer mortality we
16:09
never do that in cancer we never did
16:10
that in aids we don't do in hepatitis c
16:13
what we look is for is signals of
16:14
benefit and acceptable safety and then
16:17
we combine them
16:18
and that's what that's all we've done so
16:20
but but but this
16:21
independent declaration drug by drug
16:23
that drugs don't work
16:25
has been uh and that's on that's on us
16:27
that's been our medical house
16:28
that's been a a giant um error
16:31
that we've made on our side we never
16:33
should have expected single drugs to
16:35
reduce mortality
16:36
but drugs in combination against a fatal
16:38
vital infection
16:39
we should have this entire session is
16:40
less learned from lessons i know we're
16:42
running short on time
16:44
uh center hall you have one question or
16:49
real quick um i'd ask the question
16:51
earlier when dr hellestad was here
16:54
about the idea that fits in with what
16:55
you've talked about
16:57
is that when we test someone rather than
17:00
just say
17:00
give them yep you're positive you're
17:02
negative be on your way
17:04
that we at least provide them
17:06
information
17:07
of what we know out there can be
17:10
can be used not trying to play the role
17:13
of doctor
17:14
out there would you do you agree with
17:18
dr hellestadt's interpretation that that
17:21
should not be done
17:22
because it's setting up a doctor-patient
17:24
relationship
17:25
and simply informing people or providing
17:28
with with
17:29
over-the-counter drugs that
17:32
so that we could possibly have the early
17:36
treatment
17:36
for these folks rather than wait till
17:39
they show up in the hospital
17:40
we could at least have a physician group
17:44
approved a guide the aaps guide has been
17:47
used in over 500
17:48
000 cases in the united states in fact
17:50
the early treatment is probably
17:52
what prevented us from overflowing the
17:54
hospitals in the
17:55
in the last quarter of the year i when i
17:57
testified i said listen we're on track
17:59
and i was very
17:59
convinced of this we're on track of
18:01
overflowing our hospitals our break
18:02
point was 135 000 in the hospitals
18:04
united states we hit 128.
18:06
now the curve started going down long
18:08
before the vaccine so i can tell you
18:10
herd immunity
18:11
long before the vaccine showed up
18:12
started to go down but the early
18:14
treatment kicked up ivermectinus
18:16
skyrocketed hydroxychloroquine
18:18
monoclonal antibodies as much as we can
18:20
push them sadly the monoclonal
18:21
antibodies are still sitting on the
18:22
shelf
18:23
in a lot of places but committees like
18:25
this ought to be saying listen where are
18:26
those monoclonal antibiotics
18:28
are do we stock them at the nursing home
18:29
what are the big nursing home chains
18:31
what are the big urging care chains in
18:33
texas and what are they doing what are
18:34
their early treatment protocols
18:36
you know these are blank spots i bet
18:38
nobody here has even thought about this
18:40
this is this is really low hanging fruit
18:43
that we can
18:44
uh we can tackle the bottom line is
18:47
a lot of doctors have checked out and
18:48
when patients call them they say i don't
18:50
treat covet
18:52
and when i asked those doctors i said
18:53
you don't treat how come they go well
18:54
there's no treatment
18:56
i said but do you do you call them two
18:57
days later to see how they're doing
19:00
no so what's that that's not that's not
19:03
i don't treat covet
19:04
that's i don't care anymore that's a
19:06
loss of compassion
19:08
so we have a crisis of compassion in our
19:10
country in the medical field that's in
19:12
our house right now
19:13
but for every doctor that's ever told a
19:15
patient that they don't treat covid
19:17
okay but then they call them two days
19:19
later and help them get oxygen or see
19:21
how they're doing
19:22
if the answer is no that that's the
19:24
hippocratic oath going out
19:26
and that's on us and i'm telling you we
19:28
have a real self-check to do
19:30
uh in the house of medicine yep

1,925 posted on 03/25/2021 11:05:20 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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