Posted on 12/31/2021 8:43:27 AM PST by max americana
Hi. Asking for help where to buy ivermectin. One of our employees is down with covid and these idiots at the hospital gave her remdisvir. She doesn't have much family but she's a great conservative and her mom is in Canada. We became the guardians after we spoke with her family. No one flies in out of that country. The doctors don't believe in ivermectin (suprise).
You can't order from indiamart because USPS with the big pharma wing of the FDA confiscated all ivermectin 2 weeks ago (search FR). Highly preferred no prescription get it quick and get her out before these clowns do more harm. Suggestions and directions please. Thanks.
Thanks,
Dr. David Ostrov of the University of Florida is working on alternative over-the-counter medication for COVID19.
He is studying a combination of Benadryl and lactoferrin (better to get it specifically in supplement, not plain milk).
https://www.wcjb.com/2021/11/23/uf-research-reveals-new-compounds-effective-against-covid-19-virus/
Remdesivir can cause kidney damage.
bkmk
feed store
tell them it is for your sister’s goats if they ask
paste or some of us prefer injectable (though you aren’t shooting it, you will take it orally), if you purchase injectable, you will still need syringes to measure portions
Amazon
The Eastern Virginia Medical School (EVMS) and other healthcare organizations have incorporated a mix of readily available agents into their management protocol for COVID-19, while acknowledging that âthere is very limited data (and none specific for COVID-19)â for the combinations.
For prophylaxis, the medical school recommends vitamin C (500 mg) and quercetin (250 mg-500 mg twice a day) with zinc (75 mg-100 mg per day), melatonin (0.3 mg-2 mg) each night, and vitamin D3 (1,000-4,000 IU per day). Famotidine (20 mg-40 mg per day) may be added to the mix. For patients with mild symptoms, EVMS recommends the same combination, with optional additions of ivermectin (150 ug-200 ug per kg as a single dose), and one low-dose or regular aspirin per day.
Whatâs the thinking behind recommending these supplements and medications?
Vitamin C is critical to the proper functioning of immune cells. Itâs also a powerful antioxidant that protects the body from the oxidative stress caused by free radicals, which are associated with a number of diseases. Vitamin C has been used for years to reduce the symptoms of colds, about one-quarter of which are caused by other coronaviruses, and a meta-analysis of studies that enrolled more than 11,000 patients showed that it also reduced the risk of contracting colds. Perhaps the most direct evidence for vitamin Câs use in COVID-19 is a study published this February demonstrating that it reduced symptoms in patients with sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome caused by other viruses.
Quercetin has shown preclinical benefit as an antiviral medication, and a Chinese study found that it bound with the spike protein in the novel coronavirus, reducing its ability to infect cells. Like vitamin C, it has antioxidant effects. On the downside, it has not shown significant stability or potency in in vitro experiments.
Zinc is essential for immune-cell development, and some studies have found that it reduces the risk of contracting respiratory infections. It may also reduce the number of days that someone has a cold or other respiratory tract infection. About 30% of American adults are deficient in the mineral, so taking a moderate dose of the supplement may be helpful anyway.
Melatonin is best known and most commonly used to boost sleep and reduce anxiety, both of which improve the immune system. It also blocks inflammasome activity, reducing inflammation in the lungs, and it reduces the risk of fibrosis, one of the most challenging complications for patients who have had COVID-19.
Evidence for vitamin D3 is mixed. On the one hand, several studies early in the pandemic found that countries with populations that had low levels of vitamin D on average were more likely to have serious outbreaks and higher mortality rates. Other observational studies found that individuals with vitamin D deficiency were more likely to be hospitalized in the U.S., but confounding factors could explain some of the difference as well.
In the U.S. studies, low levels of vitamin D were associated with patients who lived in nursing homes and with African American patients. Both groups also had other notable risk factors for COVID-19. âVitamin D deficiency has also been implicated in asthma and other respiratory disorders,â according to Thomas Carpenter, MD, an endocrinologist at Yale Medicine, so it might be helpful. Excess vitamin D, however, might overstimulate the immune system, which could be damaging in COVID-19. In addition, too much vitamin D can be toxic to the heart and kidneys.
Famotidine is available OTC as Pepcid and as youâve likely experienced, it has been in short supply in many parts of the country since an April news report stated that it reduced the risk of death or ventilator use in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. A subsequent case series published in June found that 10 people who managed the disease at home improved within a couple of days of taking famotidine. Results of a large clinical trial in hospitalized patients have not yet been published, and exactly why the drug would work remains unclear.
Aspirin reduces the symptoms of fever and aches associated with COVID-19. It may also reduce the risk of blot clots, which have emerged as a serious problem in COVID-19. Up to 70% of patients hospitalized with the novel coronavirus experience hypercoagulability, and about 25% of patients admitted to the ICU with the disease develop pulmonary embolisms. A growing number of reports indicate that stroke is a commonâand sometimes presentingâsymptom of COVID-19.
But is she really sickly? Or are they just âobservingâ her?
the best and is very safe
bkmk
Amazon also has lactoferrin and Benadry, add zinc quercitin and vit d
Not a doc..
Yes, agreed, but weâre also helping pump 5e narrative that this disease is so terribly deadly. Fear is what the tyrants are living on.
If the drugs arenât going to change the bottom lineâŚ.not dead or even in hospitalâŚthen why bother?
The disease is at most (IF you can trust the numbers) 2% case fatality rate. This is on par with some diseases we donât even think about anymore.
If people want to once they have symptomsâŚfine. But to me itâs a waste for prophylactic.
I started trying pharmacies in Northern Mexico, but clicking on results in StartPage I was routed to mail order from India, it took 3 weeks, it was $135 for 20 doses. But try OTC Lactoferrin & Benadryl until it comes.
Save for later
need an attorney for that question
we aren't freeper attorneys, we are just freeper "doctors"
Regarding vitamin D, here’s an extended discussion:
https://odysee.com/@BretWeinstein:f/vitamin-d-for-covid,-what%E2%80%99s-the-catch:6
Thank you for tge info. That’s scary. The idiots already gave one last night.
In the middle of this hysterical crisis, can you really say that? The other month people were talking how itâs hard to get.
With all the supply chains broken down thanks to this fake crisis, yes, even âcheapâ stuff can run out. Look at toilet paper. And thermometers! People freak and hoard on the 1 hand, and then people are fired or quarantined and canât get the work done on the other.
Iâd rather save it for the people who really suffer. Whether COVID (doubtful), or the patients it was really meant for.
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