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This week, Phil Harper, Documentary producer and author of The Digger substack joined Dr. Pierre Kory to discuss the outcome of Andrew Hill's paper on ivermectin. Who and/or what influenced Andrew to change the conclusion of his paper and why? Phil has been 'digging' into this issue looking to find answers. Watch the webinar to find out.
I had a longer flu recently. It was the longest in a few years. I took ivermectin horse paste for the worst 3 days along with the vitamins etc.
What the ivermectin seemed to do best is keep my lungs completely clear. My oxygen exchange never suffered. I still had some mild chills, weakness, brain swelling, tiredness for the worst three days, but it wasn't terrible like regular flu. All in all, the flu lasted about ten days before I started feeling 'normal' again.
On a scale of one to ten, this flu was probably a four or five, just lengthy and annoying mostly with ten days of butt dragging. The symptoms were less important than the apparent effectiveness of the ivermectin/cocktails at keeping my lungs clear. I am impressed that it cuts down the part of the flu that can really hurt or even kill, which is the pneumonia and lung reactivity.
Again, this is a testimonial, and not a recommendation for medical treatment.
Ivermectin is safer than aspirin and effective against Covid if used at the right dose prophylactically or in early treatment. It’s such an enormous breakthrough that the guy who discovered it (it’s a microbe in the soil) won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2015.
The FDA does not like ivermectin because it works and this costs the pharmaceutical industry hundreds of billions of dollars in lost vaccine profits. Almost everyone who works at FDA is auditioning for a job with a big pharmaceutical company. So the FDA ran and continues to run hit pieces against this Nobel Prize winning treatment, calling it “horse medicine.”
Of course many (most?) medicines have dual use in human and other animals — including antibiotics, pain relievers, chemotherapy drugs etc. So the FDA staff debased and degraded themselves in service of the cartel and now no one trusts them.
We can have cheap effective and safe medicine to treat cancer. That will cost big pharma billions!
rwmalonemd
@rwmalonemd
·
19h
Ivermectin can now be sold in Tennessee over the counter. One of the safest drugs in the world - and now over the counter. I am proud to say that I went down to Tennessee, spoke to legislators and did my best to make this happen.
But I wasn't alone. CHD TN, Dr. Ryan Cole, Dr. Richard Urso, Dr. Pierre Kory, Dr. John Littel and many, many others also worked diligently to educate Tennessee lawmakers and it worked!
This isn't just about ivermectin. It is about generics and off-label drugs. Cheap, effective drugs being denied - while pharma pushes more costly options. As the Internet takes over from in-house physician/patient visits, pharms wants these off-label, generics gone from the computer algorythms. If you think this was all about HCQ or IVM - think again.
Ivermectin can now be sold in Tennessee over the counter.
TOGETHER seriously underdosed its ivermectin high-BMI patients & how you can help me
Alexandros Marinos
The underdosing issue in the TOGETHER trial is a lot more serious than I realized.
Doctors Sue FDA Over Unlawful Attempts to Prohibit Ivermectin Use
For Immediate Release: June 2, 2022
Galveston, TX – Today, a group of doctors filed a lawsuit against the Department of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra in his official capacity as Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Food and Drug Administration, and Robert M. Califf in his official capacity as Commissioner of Food and Drugs, over the FDA’s unlawful attempts to prohibit the use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19.
The plaintiffs, Drs. Robert L. Apter, Mary Talley Bowden, and Paul E. Marik argue the FDA acted outside of its authority and illegally interfered with their ability to practice medicine by directing the public, including health professionals and patients, to not use ivermectin, a drug that has received full FDA approval for human use.
Missouri Gov. Mike Parson on Tuesday signed into law a bill that bars pharmacists from questioning doctors who prescribe the controversial off-label drugs ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine. The measure, which passed in the General Assembly last month, was attached to a bill that exempts military employees and contractors participating in a federal training program from licensing requirements if they hold licensing in another state. Parson’s office announced his signing of the legislation along with six other bills Tuesday. The new law, which goes into effect in August, prevents state medical licensing boards from punishing or taking away the medical licenses of doctors who “lawfully” prescribe the two drugs. And it prevents pharmacists from contacting a doctor or patient “to dispute the efficacy of ivermectin tablets or hydroxychloroquine sulfate tablets for human use” unless the doctor or patient asks about the drugs’ effectiveness.
Read more at: https://www.kansascity.com/news/politics-government/article262258172.html#storylink=cpy
In this small-scale study, it was determined that various sources of ivermectin—within the United States, as well as from overseas—differ significantly in the rate at which they effectively kill parasitic worms. It is possible that these differences represent variability in the drug’s purity—depending on the manufacturing location—but this matter needs to be investigated further. Relative to the US-made Edenbridge brand of ivermectin, certain manufacturing or compounding sources demonstrated a lower rate of lethality for the parasites, whereas other sources demonstrated a faster rate of lethality—in terms of days required to kill all six parasitic worms treated—with the same final concentration (5uM) of each ivermectin source.
https://doyourownresearch.substack.com/p/not-all-ivermectin-is-created-equal
In this small-scale study, it was determined that various sources of ivermectin—within the United States, as well as from overseas—differ significantly in the rate at which they effectively kill parasitic worms. It is possible that these differences represent variability in the drug’s purity—depending on the manufacturing location—but this matter needs to be investigated further. Relative to the US-made Edenbridge brand of ivermectin, certain manufacturing or compounding sources demonstrated a lower rate of lethality for the parasites, whereas other sources demonstrated a faster rate of lethality—in terms of days required to kill all six parasitic worms treated—with the same final concentration (5uM) of each ivermectin source.
Do you work for a large pharmaceutical conglomerate? Are you worried about repurposed off-patent drugs? Are you concerned that your brand new proprietary drug will have to deal with unfair competition by a molecule discovered 100 years ago? Have no fear, Do Your Own Research is here to help!
This is an all-in-one guide you can use to help your quest to approve drugs you have monopoly rights over, while eliminating any competition from off-patent repurposed generics. ...
Explain Away Positive Results
Defend Negative Results
Deploy Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt
Go After The Researchers
Make Meta-analyses Sound Unconvincing
Invest In Post-publication Takedowns
Use The Regulator and the Press To Your Advantage
...
I know this sounds like a lot of work, but ultimately it’s just money. Easy money that you will earn back in multiples, to be precise. Afterall, even though most of these tricks are well known and many have written about them, people have short memories:
In case of emergency, remember, there’s always the c-word. Deploy it like so:
"hey guys, are we sure we should trust the people that have been messing with the evidence for decades without checking their work?"
"CONSPIRACY THEORIST!!!"
"hey guys, I think these doctors from all over the world are somehow producing these consistent results to get us to eat horse dewormer" ...
With all these tricks up your sleve, you may tear society to pieces, you may destroy trust in the medical establishment for generations. But what matters is one thing and one thing only: Your. Drug. Will. Get. Approved.
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