Posted on 01/25/2022 7:01:06 AM PST by Heartlander
Dr. Vladimir Zelenko was going about his ordinary practice in Monroe, New York, when he suddenly found himself at the epicenter of one of the first covid outbreaks in the US. Patients he’d been taking care of for twenty years were looking to him for help, and he had nothing to offer them. So, he prayed to God for help and set about doing some research.
A Theory
A video from MedCram.com, a medical information and teaching site, was sent to him. It explained how the mineral zinc inhibits viral replication. All the strains of covid, influenza, and RSV (a common respiratory virus) use the same enzyme to replicate themselves inside the cell. Zinc blocks that enzyme, and thus stops the virus from replicating.
But zinc can’t get into the cell on its own. It needs help. That help can be supplied in the form of a zinc ionophore, which can deliver the zinc into the cell. There are four readily available zinc ionophores: chloroquine (or hydroxychloroquine – HCQ); ivermectin; quercetin, a bioflavonoid; and epigallocatechin (EGCG), a green tea extract. Quercetin and EGCG are available over the counter. HCQ and ivermectin require a prescription.
Success
Zelenko further learned that a doctor in France was having some success treating covid patients with a combination of HCQ and azithromycin, a common antibiotic. He was quite familiar with these drugs and knew them to be readily available and safe. So, tweaking the dosages to adjust to the needs of individual patients, he tried using them early in the course of the disease. “From the moment I started giving it to patients,” he said, “they stopped going to the hospital.” After seeing remarkable results in around fifty patients – improved breathing in as little as six to twelve hours – he realized he’d stumbled onto something important, and he put the information out on his website.
Meanwhile, halfway across the country, Dr. Bradley Meyer was doing his own research too. He learned of the early treatment recommendations coming out of France and Italy, and he found the Zelenko protocols online. He was very familiar with HCQ, having used it as an Air Force physician serving soldiers in malaria-prone regions, and he began offering it as an option to his patients.
Most were receptive, and after two or three days on it, “it was like a switch was turned” inside them. Their body aches, fatigue, and other symptoms were gone. By this time, HCQ had become controversial, but he knew he had to share this information with his colleagues.
A Damper
It was not well received. Various colleagues and administrators expressed their opinions, either privately or in public, but regardless of anyone’s opinion, such opposition was a significant deviation from typical practices. Medicine has long preferred early treatment over delaying until a disease reaches Mack truck momentum.
Meyer knew there were other agendas in play, but he continued doing what he thought best for his patients. It was rare see such a dramatic effect in a short period of time, but that was what he and others were seeing. The theory that zinc plus a zinc ionophore could stop viral replication was holding up before his very eyes.
Obstruction
In late 2020, he was called to a meeting. Hospital administrators wanted to discuss how his ideas about treating covid differed from those of the hospital. They also wanted to discuss his future with the hospital. No one said that what he was doing was wrong or dangerous or that there wasn’t evidence to support it. But the CDC was recommending a different protocol. They didn’t want Dr. Meyer creating confusion in the community.
CDC and “confusion” notwithstanding, Dr. Meyer continued to offer the early treatment option to his patients as a matter of conscience – until that option was taken off the table. That happened after two patients, elderly men he’d seen for years, came down with covid at about the same time. As had become his practice, he explained their options. Both patients chose the early treatment regimen, and Dr. Meyer put in an order for them to receive ivermectin. But the orders were not filled. When he inquired as to what had happened, he was told that the Chief Medical Officer had interceded and prevented the pharmacy from filling the orders. Both patients died.
At this point, things got very real for Dr. Meyer. “I knew that what was coming was more turbulence.” Would he continue to do what he believed was the right thing to do for his patients? Or would he follow the path of least resistance, keep his head down, and comply with hospital administrators? He recalled that he had made his Hippocratic Oath to God, not a corporation, and resolved to keep doing what he thought best for his patients.
Before long, he was summoned to another meeting with hospital officials. This time they were more direct. He was to stop prescribing ivermectin (or trying to prescribe it) and to stop “scaring” patients about the covid vaccine.
Success (Again)
So, when another patient was hospitalized with covid and deteriorating, he ordered that she receive N-Acetyl Cysteine (NAC) by IV. Available in pill form over the counter, NAC is known for producing many healthful benefits, one of which is supporting respiratory function. The patient recovered.
Termination
Soon after that, Dr. Meyer was summoned to a third meeting. This time, he was to leave his patients waiting and come immediately. When he arrived, he was informed that he had been terminated from the hospital, effective immediately. He was allowed to collect his personal belongings, and then he walked out of the building.
Debrief
Dr. Meyer said that when he walked out of that hospital, he didn’t know what the future held, but he had never felt so free. His story is told in Doctor’s Orders, an hour-long documentary produced by "Defend the Republic" and available free on their Rumble channel. Marilyn Strickland, the patient who received NAC and recovered, also makes an appearance, as does Dr. Zelenko. Doctor’s Orders is not primarily about covid or the vaccines, but more about what covid may be exposing regarding practices in medicine as it has become increasingly bureaucratized and corporatized.
There has been much moral posturing over the past two years about how we’re all “in this together” and must sacrifice to save lives from covid. But if Dr. Meyer’s account is accurate, saving lives is not an especially high priority. And the “sacrifices” might be working differently than we think. Watch it below and decide for yourself. Alternatively, you can view a trailer for it here.
too many corporate quacks not enough doctors
Hospital administrator illegally practice all the time. They force doctors to do or not do things in their medical practice.
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I guess we can expect gas-doc to tell us more. /sarc with a side of LOL
And doctors have gone along with this for years.
Doctors today live under the constant threat of having their licenses yanked and practices destroyed should they run counter to the rule of regulators, most of which have little to no medical training, nor do they have the patient's best interests in mind.
Independent doctors are few.
The doctors taking orders from headquarters have prescribe limits.
My son is an attorney and I let them know.. in a kind way... I get more cooperation.. which is all I ask. I know what works and what doesn’t.
As a senior... don’t go long term.. just cooperate with me on what helps.
The government tell doctors if you do not obey our dictates regarding treatment, we will pull your medicare funding. Doctors comply. Everything is tied to medicare/medicaid funding. It applies to those who have private insurance or even self-pay. Private insurance companies also require that doctor’s adhere to guidelines implemented by medicare/medicaid administrators. It’s a no-win situation for doctors.
That’s why people are hunting for physicians that do not take insurance or medicare/medicaid funds and there are more and more doctors providing that service. Dr. Paul Broun of Georgia is an example. He makes house calls and does not process insurance claims.
CDC and “confusion” notwithstanding, Dr. Meyer continued to offer the early treatment option to his patients as a matter of conscience – until that option was taken off the table. That happened after two patients, elderly men he’d seen for years, came down with covid at about the same time. As had become his practice, he explained their options. Both patients chose the early treatment regimen, and Dr. Meyer put in an order for them to receive ivermectin. But the orders were not filled. When he inquired as to what had happened, he was told that the Chief Medical Officer had interceded and prevented the pharmacy from filling the orders."
For the bolded-identify them. Publicly.
I guarantee they would not want their discussions "on the record".
Still, their numbers are very, very low. One reason is that people are conditioned to believe that a single dollar out of pocket is a sin against mankind.
Why yes you can expect me to weigh in. The conspiracy that someone is telling us how to practice medicine is nonsense. At the end of the day a physician is licensed to practice and his or her independent judgment is what counts.
If you are employed by a physician group they may tell you what you can or can’t do.
Nonclinical administrators are the worse wart on all of medicine. However, they exist because physicians abdicated their duty to run hospitals in the pursuit of the almighty dollar. It is sickening.
Heartlander :" A video from MedCram.com, a medical information and teaching site, was sent to him.
It explained how the mineral zinc inhibits viral replication.
All the strains of covid, influenza, and RSV (a common respiratory virus) use the same enzyme to replicate themselves inside the cell.
Zinc blocks that enzyme, and thus stops the virus from replicating."
"But zinc can’t get into the cell on its own. It needs help.
That help can be supplied in the form of a zinc ionophore, which can deliver the zinc into the cell.
There are four readily available zinc ionophores: chloroquine (or hydroxychloroquine – HCQ); ivermectin; quercetin, a bioflavonoid; and epigallocatechin (EGCG), a green tea extract.
Quercetin and EGCG are available over the counter.
HCQ and ivermectin require a prescription."
I have heard that drinking green tea is supposed to be good as a zinc ionophore.
Is that good enough or does it need to be the extract?
If no one is telling them how to practice medicine, then why has the vast majority of doctors chosen to tell us to just go home and wait out Covid symptoms and go to the emergency room when we can no longer breath, instead of actively treating the Covid from the onset with everything they have? I would think that practicing medicine means living up to the oath they made and continually seeking new answers to treatment when it appears nothing works, listening to their peers who may have a new treatment and at least trying it. Instead they sat on their little stools in their treatment rooms behind their silly masks, with their laptops in hand and refused to see us.
A great many of them don’t even mention supplementing the immune system with C, D3, zinc….. and my doctor laughed at me for also taking Quercetin and NAC.
I am sad to say that I have lost all confidence in Doctors for the most part, and wish I could find a local doctor who does not bow to the dark-side powers that be. There actually is one in our tiny community, but his independent practice is overflowing and I am on a waiting list with more than 100 above me. Meanwhile I can only pray that some how God will provide.
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