I will disagree with you.
Could post lots of “antidotal” or meta analysis data but for brevity will relate to you an interaction with a patient in my store. This person has had long COVID for a long time. First, was told there was no reason for the patient’s brain fog, fibromyalgia like symptoms, headaches, etc. Finally, long COVID became an accepted diagnosis. No one would treat this person because the treatment was unacceptable except by the FLCCC protocols. The dad had all during this time tried to get his child to try some “ horse paste.” After a spinal tap and increasingly suicidal ideation, this person came to the breaking point of “I’m dead if I do and dead if I don’t” and called the dad. Remember, the news was presented that if you take horse paste, you’re going to end up in the ER.
After one week of therapy, this person had turned around 180 degrees. No suicide thoughts, body was starting to not hurt, could think again, felt 90 percent their self not 60, and more to the point had hope that wellness was achievable.
My question for you is… Will you go and tell this person the what they experienced was only a bs psychosomatic experience and nothing of the past 1.5 years was real and the turn around is a false expression of a non-possibility?
Just wondering…
I took the “horse paste” version of Ivermectin as well. I trusted this more than pills purchased from India from sources that I was not sure were legit. I took less than half of the dosage recommended by those advocating for the pills. I didn’t experience any bad side effects but it also didn’t cause an immediate recovery.