Posted on 05/21/2021 9:06:31 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has stated that it has suspended Gilead Sciences’ antiviral drug remdesivir, which was touted as COVID-19 treatment, from its prequalification list—- an official list of medicines used as a benchmark for procurement by developing countries.
In an emailed response to news agency Reuters, WHO spokesperson Tarik Jasarevic said,”Yes we have suspended it from the PQ (prequalification list). The suspension is a signal to countries that WHO, in compliance with the treatment guidelines, does not recommend countries procure the drug for COVID
Earlier on Friday, the WHO had warned that the antiviral drug remdesivir should not be used to treat COVID patients, no matter how ill they are as there is no evidence it works.
Nope. Doctors haven't had any treatment options recommended by the usual organizations. They've been doing their own thing which is how we got HCQ and Ivermectin as options. There's a doc in Detroit that uses food grade hydrogen peroxide in a nebulizer as part of his protocol.
-PJ
Surprised...
Graph of treatments use in hosps.
(2 months old though)
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E1rdznTXoAgYCRq?format=png&name=large
I’ve known two people who were in the hospital with COVID pneumonia and Remdesvar basically healed them in 2 or 3 days.
That’s right, and it’s EVIL. But we can bypass them. We don’t have to blindly obey “the authorities” like so many do.
FDA has recently relaxed their guidelines for use of monoclonal...
https://twitter.com/walidgellad/status/1394482012799520768
“
Now emergency use authorization (EUA) of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) is more inclusive ...)
See my post just above.
Rules for use of monoclonal antibodies have just been relaxed.
Doubt if you’ll ever get a doc to forecast what he’d do since it depends on how the disease progresses. And these days they still don’t know a lot, sadly.
At what stage of the disease?
Early outpatient treatment. They were even letting people stay in their cars and giving them treatments in the parking lot.
You wrote “Doubt if you’ll ever get a doc to forecast what he’d do since it depends on how the disease progresses.”
I agree with that. I just wanted to understand what was in his bag of tricks. Is he the sort that would say “Go home and go to the hospital when you can’t breathe. Then we’ll put you on a ventilator and hope for the best.”
Or is he the sort who says “There are lots of treatment options you can use at home before you progress to the point where you should go to the hospital. Let’s discuss the current treatment options I think work best.”
I was hoping to find my doc in the latter category, but he seems to be in the former category.
The medical profession has learned a lot in the past year. We are way beyond what we knew in February 2020.
I was treated with Bamlanivimab. I was very sick and recovered. I don’t really know if the drug helped or not.
SaNOtize and Taffix are two other nasal sprays that have shown promise against covid.
Produced in Israel
https://nocamels.com/2021/04/israeli-nasus-nasal-spray-taffix-covid-variants/
Don’t know what their latest status is.
Well it makes sense to not stock an expensive medication with a short shelf life when ivermectin works better, is cheaper and already has a robust supply chain because it’s readily available for parasite treatments.
Kind of a no brainer.
Find the nearest infusion center to you, call them and ask for a recommendation for a doctor who is using their services. They’ll know who is sending them business.
That is in fact good news. Thanks.
The distribution of the infusion centers is strange. My brother (who lives in a different state than i do) was infused in a town with a population of about 2,500. There are also infusion centers in bigger towns about 15-20 miles to the north and south of that town. On the other hand, the small city near me which is the medical hub for a fairly large area and 25 times larger than the town where my brother was infused doesn’t have an infusion center. The nearest one to me is about 50 miles away in a town about 7 times smaller than the city that is the medical hub for my area. Seems there are lots of infusion centers in the eastern half of the U.S. and on the west coast, but in certain areas of the country they aren’t so common.
FWIW, my brother’s doctor was going to send him home untreated but realized he qualified for infusion due to his age and comorbidity. The qualifications have been expanded since then according to a post in this thread. Good to see that.
It’s funny. I tried that with the infusion center at my clinic. They didn’t know anything about MABs for COVID, so the person I talked to put me in touch with the head of the center. The head said she would get back to me.
She then looked up my immunologist and contacted her without my permission. Then my immunologist wrote me a somewhat nasty message saying “I told you we would deal with it if you get sick and why are you contacting the infusion center?” That was the end of it — I got stymied again and gave up.
The whole thing was a clusterfark from my viewpoint.
No evidence it works except the testimonials FROM PATIENTS WHO ARE ALIVE BECAUSE OF RENDESIVIR.
No agenda, no conspiracy...
Sooo glad biteme reinstated WHO funding...
I would really like to hear what the pro-vaccine crowd thinks of this...Come on now...you know who you are...Don’t be shy...
CDC just changed their opinion on Ivermectin from not recommended to no opinion so that may help. I think it’s only been a small percentage of doctors who dare to treat their patients. Most say go home and when you can’t breathe, go to the hospital due to the DEM/CDC/MSM and their war on treatments like HCQ and Ivermectin.
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