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Posted On: 02/17/2022 12:24:00 AM
Post# of 148881
Re: craigakess #118350
I didn't say Leronlimab was one of the most safe and tested drugs in the world.
That paragraph (in my post) was all about the denial of a woman's request to give Ivermectin to her dying husband. So yes, Ivermectin is one of the most tested and safe drugs in the world, and it turns out, it's incredibly effective against COVID. Acknowledged by the CDC/FDA or not, all you have to do is check the dozens of clinical trials and look at the drug's real world success in nations from Brazil to India to Africa.
Here's the bottom line: no judge or hospital policy should get in the way of a woman's request to try a safe, proven therapeutic in the last days/hours of her husband's life. This was what Right to Try was all about, and last I heard, it was law. A good law. Why in the name of heaven would some judge and 2 doctors deny a last desperate lifeline to a dying man? Legally and morally, they literally have no right. What they did was evil, and if you or wife was in the same position, I would protest your right to try with the same vehemence.
Oh, and about Remdesivir and intubation not killing half the patients on this therapy, I recall hearing that number -or perhaps it was as high as 70%? - in the spring/summer of 2020. I know once you are intubated, the odds of surviving are dramatically reduced, or at least that was the case 18 mths ago.
That paragraph (in my post) was all about the denial of a woman's request to give Ivermectin to her dying husband. So yes, Ivermectin is one of the most tested and safe drugs in the world, and it turns out, it's incredibly effective against COVID. Acknowledged by the CDC/FDA or not, all you have to do is check the dozens of clinical trials and look at the drug's real world success in nations from Brazil to India to Africa.
Here's the bottom line: no judge or hospital policy should get in the way of a woman's request to try a safe, proven therapeutic in the last days/hours of her husband's life. This was what Right to Try was all about, and last I heard, it was law. A good law. Why in the name of heaven would some judge and 2 doctors deny a last desperate lifeline to a dying man? Legally and morally, they literally have no right. What they did was evil, and if you or wife was in the same position, I would protest your right to try with the same vehemence.
Oh, and about Remdesivir and intubation not killing half the patients on this therapy, I recall hearing that number -or perhaps it was as high as 70%? - in the spring/summer of 2020. I know once you are intubated, the odds of surviving are dramatically reduced, or at least that was the case 18 mths ago.
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