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Ivermectin


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2021 May 9, 10:24pm   89,107 views  688 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   ignore (2)  

https://sebastianrushworth.com/2021/05/09/update-on-ivermectin-for-covid-19/

Back in January I wrote an article about four randomized controlled trials of ivermectin as a treatment for covid-19 that had at that time released their results to the public. Each of those four trials had promising results, but each was also too small individually to show any meaningful impact on the hard outcomes we really care about, like death. When I meta-analyzed them together however, the results suddenly appeared very impressive. Here’s what that meta-analysis looked like:



It showed a massive 78% reduction in mortality in patients treated with covid-19. Mortality is the hardest of hard end points, which means it’s the hardest for researchers to manipulate and therefore the least open to bias. Either someone’s dead, or they’re alive. End of story.

You would have thought that this strong overall signal of benefit in the midst of a pandemic would have mobilized the powers that be to arrange multiple large randomized trials to confirm these results as quickly as possible, and that the major medical journals would be falling over each other to be the first to publish these studies.

That hasn’t happened.

Rather the opposite, in fact. South Africa has even gone so far as to ban doctors from using ivermectin on covid-19 patients. And as far as I can tell, most of the discussion about ivermectin in mainstream media (and in the medical press) has centred not around its relative merits, but more around how its proponents are clearly deluded tin foil hat wearing crazies who are using social media to manipulate the masses.

In spite of this, trial results have continued to appear. That means we should now be able to conclude with even greater certainty whether or not ivermectin is effective against covid-19. Since there are so many of these trials popping up now, I’ve decided to limit the discussion here only to the ones I’ve been able to find that had at least 150 participants, and that compared ivermectin to placebo (although I’ll add even the smaller trials I’ve found in to the updated meta-analysis at the end).

As before, it appears that rich western countries have very little interest in studying ivermectin as a treatment for covid. The three new trials that had at least 150 participants and compared ivermectin with placebo were conducted in Colombia, Iran, and Argentina. We’ll go through each in turn. ...

What we see is a 62% reduction in the relative risk of dying among covid patients treated with ivermectin. That would mean that ivermectin prevents roughly three out of five covid deaths. The reduction is statistically significant (p-value 0,004). In other words, the weight of evidence supporting ivermectin continues to pile up. It is now far stronger than the evidence that led to widespred use of remdesivir earlier in the pandemic, and the effect is much larger and more important (remdesivir was only ever shown to marginally decrease length of hospital stay, it was never shown to have any effect on risk of dying).

I understand why pharmaceutical companies don’t like ivermectin. It’s a cheap generic drug. Even Merck, the company that invented ivermectin, is doing it’s best to destroy the drug’s reputation at the moment. This can only be explained by the fact that Merck is currently developing two expensive new covid drugs, and doesn’t want an off-patent drug, which it can no longer make any profit from, competing with them.

The only reason I can think to understand why the broader medical establishment, however, is still so anti-ivermectin is that these studies have all been done outside the rich west. Apparently doctors and scientists outside North America and Western Europe can’t be trusted, unless they’re saying things that are in line with our pre-conceived notions.


And HCQ falls into that same bucket. Even worse - to admit HCQ works would be to admit Trump was right about something.

Liberals would rather that millions die than that Trump be allowed to be right about anything. They hate Trump more than they love their fellow humans.

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672   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2025 Apr 26, 7:39pm  

stereotomy says


What is this stuff? Do tell.


https://mberry.us/products/mberry-freeze-dried-miracle-berries

I hear the vinegar claim they made (watched someone do it on utube) is BS. But the lemon I ate definitely tasted like yummy candy. Way better than candy like lemon drops in fact.

I don't know if freeze dried is as good as a fresh berry like I ate.

I think next time I'm going to eat a little bit of my citric acid fish tank pump cleaning powder.
673   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Apr 26, 10:09pm  

Glad the berry is working out for ya.

I eat like half a pint of sauerkraut with every sausage or hotdog, with a good tablespoon or two of mustard to boot, and put ONLY balsamic vinegar in my salad (sometimes with a little mustard, too).

Pickles too and sometimes a tablespoon of Pickle Juice in a cold cup of water for rehydration power. Better than sugary gatorade or expensive powdery concoctions. A shot of pickle juice before bed when you have muscle strains or cramps is better than ANY OTC and probably most Rx.

One big reason our health might be going to shit is because compared to earlier generations that had only limited/no refrigeration in the house, we eat a lot less fermented vegetables. Interestingly, ALL of the longest lived people - Japanese, Greek Islanders, Scandinavians - eat a ton of fermented foods.
674   PanicanDemoralizer   2025 Apr 26, 10:22pm  

Maga_Chaos_Monkey says

But the lemon I ate definitely tasted like yummy candy. Way better than candy like lemon drops in fact.

Awesome, reading about the history now.
675   HeadSet   2025 Apr 27, 7:45am  

AmericanKulak says

Pickles too and sometimes a tablespoon of Pickle Juice in a cold cup of water for rehydration power

I remember as a kid that pickled eggs and picked beets were common. Also, kids drank the pickle juice after the pickles were gone.
676   Maga_Chaos_Monkey   2025 Apr 27, 7:51am  

AmericanKulak says

Better than sugary gatorade or expensive powdery concoctions. A shot of pickle juice before bed when you have muscle strains or cramps is better than ANY OTC and probably most Rx.


I'm going to try that!
679   Patrick   2025 Jun 12, 11:29am  

It's criminal that ivermectin is not available over the counter in every state.

Is safer than aspirin.
682   HeadSet   2025 Jun 23, 2:47pm  

Patrick says





No irony here, with your comments on Canola Oil originally being an engine lubricant?
683   Patrick   2025 Jun 27, 2:29pm  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/civil-wars-friday-june-27-2025-c


No drug in history has been more unfairly targeted for reputational destruction than ivermectin. The FDA —before being slapped down by courts— ran a smirking negative public relations campaign against the medication, not in the science journals, but on social media. Its efforts were crowned with the infamous folksy tweet that finally broke the legal straw: “You are not a horse,” it said. “You are not a cow. Seriously, y’all. Stop it.”

Two years later, the courts forced the FDA to delete that tweet. Ironically —and tellingly— the FDA’s lawyers rode into court arguing the horse tweet was not medical advice. The judge gave that claim the old horse’s laugh. Seriously, y’all aren’t doctors.

Ivermectin is available over the counter in most of the third world, a fact glaringly conspic. by its a. from the Atlantic’s story. Apparently, in the government’s view, Americans are less trustworthy in making their own health decisions than sub-Saharan Africans and rural Indians. During the pandemic, India’s government tried to move ivermectin behind the counter, but gave it up as a lost cause after irate citizens grabbed pitchforks and began melting tar. ...

A growing group of states are flatly rejecting the scientific-medical establishment. States are using their legislative authority to claw back control over pharmaceutical access— bucking FDA orthodoxy and the entire pandemic-era narrative.

Most significantly, the rebellion isn’t found amongst hemp-clad mushroom circles or barefoot health-retreat crowds storming the Capitol with peace signs. It’s sober, straight-laced state legislators — churchgoers, Rotarians, small-town mayors turned senators — who now don’t trust the FDA even to regulate a generic anti-parasitic.
684   stereotomy   2025 Jun 30, 10:19pm  

Alldaychemist.com has a 10% off coupon good up to $30 (FIREWORKS10). It's probably good up until 7/3/25, and is good for multiple orders. They have ivermectin for $1 per 12 mg pill when you buy a box of 100.

Things I've found out from putting in multiple orders with ADC:

You can only order 1 of each SKU - this is to minimize customs red flags.

Order 3+ items for lowest shipping ($10 per order). 1 item is $20, 2 are $15.

If you pay by eCheck, you need to wait 24 hours between orders if doing multiple orders.

It takes anywhere from 2 weeks to over a month to get your stuff, depending on the customs ports.

They have a shipment guarantee if there's an interception and will reship. They're pretty careful though, so I've never had problems with them. I tried another place once and that got intercepted.
.
Customer service is good - one time I got an empty blister pack in a box of ivermectin. I sent them a photo and they refunded me more than the difference via Paypal. I had Paypal send me a check (fuck linking any bank account to Paypal), so the refund worked out even with the check processing fee.
688   stfu   2025 Jul 16, 4:27am  

I have an anecdotal story from a friend I talked to yesterday.

His Wife tested positive for Lyme disease a month or two ago. They are super red pilled so she refused the anti-biotics that is the normal treatment. My friend has a shit ton of Ivermectin - so they started treating her with this under supervision of their family physician (also red pilled surprisingly) and last week she tested negative for Lyme disease.

I don't know the dosages or duration but I thought it was worth sharing.

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