Tell me what I need to tell them.
Yeah that’s one of the things frontline doctors suggest for very early covid treatment
“Tell me what I need to tell them”
… to consult with their doctor.
I think they were using the budenoside inhalers to open the airways in the lungs to aid breathing.
they need the prescription kind if they can get it. much different. if they can’t...then use the OTC version
not sure current status of myfreedoctor.com but they could try with them
Circle back on spray
Wilkie with figures on midazolam/covid deaths in UK’s NHS; plus the far better BUDESONIDE alternative being used in Texas, etc:
18 June: Banned Video: Gareth Icke: Right Now - Medical Researcher Stuart Wilkie Exposes State Murder In The UK
https://banned.video/watch?id=62ad147ae80dab2bf0a24045
I’ve been using budesonide since that was mentioned early on. I have allergies all year long, so it really helps me get through the night.
My husband and I recently contracted CoVid also, before Memorial Day weekend.
We take 5000 IU D3, 1000+mg Vit C, quercetin, zinc, K2, turmeric, selenium, lysine, among other vitamins and supplements. We are vaxxed but not boosted. 62, no health issues.
Omicron is just a cold. A typical cold, at least for us. We upped our doses to most everything per the Frontline drs protocol. We took vitamin C around the clock.
At our kids begging, we asked the doctor for the antiviral Paxlovid. The aftertaste is HORRIBLE and lasts until you take the next dose. Our kids actually think we have a foot in the grave, they were SOOO worried that we would go into the hospital. I try so hard to show that we are healthy and active but they just don’t listen to me at all. We are on only one prescription each for nothing but convenience. (I have restless legs and the Rx helps me not kick my husband at night when I’m asleep.) These are not life threatening issues in any way, so we can go off these meds whenever they counteract other medicines, which they did for the antiviral.
Needless to say, my belief is that Omicron is just your average cold, maybe a tad worse for some folks. I never felt sick enough to stay in bed for a day. Nights were hard for two nights because I had a cough. That’s one of my allergy symptoms so it mimicked that for me. My husband stayed in bed for a half day his first day with it.
The budesonide helped but didn’t help a whole lot. My nose was no more stuffy than usual. For me it was largely an annoying allergy cough. Never got into my lungs, was always at the back of my throat. That’s the best I can explain it.
We took Mucinex night time to help with the cough during the night. The first night I took that, I didn’t wake up once. Worked great.
Here’s the Frontline doctor’s Covid protocol
https://covid19criticalcare.com/covid-19-protocols/i-mask-plus-protocol/
I did get her the antibody treatment within a couple of hours of testing positive, and we did do all the vitamins + "horse paste" at home, but I can't help but believe that her prescription inhaler didn't make a big difference in her case.
In Texas, a Dr. Bartlett was getting amazing results with Budesonide.
You people don't get it. The "shots" DO NOT PREVENT YOU FROM GETTING IT, and NEVER DID. Your government LIED to you.
Bkmrk
There was a posting awhile back saying put Povidone Iodine 10% with 90% water in a nose sprayer and also gargle same solution. I have that waiting if any symptoms come along.
Ping
I know someone who used an inhaler for the first couple
days he tested positive, initial symptoms were fever and body
ache, on the third day, sore throat and a dry cough.
By the 5th day, he was over the worst of it. Most people
I know started getting better by about the 4th day. I think
I’ll be asking my doctor to prescribe an inhaler, wouldn’t hurt to have one in the house.
Budesonide as a nebulized aerosol for inhalation has been very effective in treating Covid. So is dexamethasone. But these drugs are available by prescription only in that form. My recollection was that the nebulized budesonide was quite expensive, about $500 without insurance. This is not something to fool with when you’re in your eighties. You should be telling your friends to seek medical care, not try to treat it themselves. Steroids, bronchodilators, and massive Rx doses of vitamins like C and D may be necessary. Zinc and melatonin may be helpful as well.
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