Anonymous ID: 6e594a July 31, 2021, 10:24 p.m. No.14242247   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2377 >>2535 >>2618 >>2620 >>2715 >>2827 >>2895 >>2934

How Immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy is changing the health care industry.hmmm sounds just like a therapy TRUMP talked about at the beginning of the scamdemic.

 

Did you know that a component of your blood could be used to create life-saving medicine for someone else? Many people who have chronic diseases or illnesses rely on immunoglobulin therapy, also known as IVIg or SCIg, a drug that is made from plasma.

 

IVIg is administered intravenously, which means “into a vein,” and SCIg is administered subcutaneously, which means “under the skin.” Both methods are effective but are prescribed for different reasons. A patient’s physician will carefully consider their medical situation, medical history, response to treatment, compliance with therapy, and lifestyle to determine which route will be a better option.

 

Ig therapy is radically changing the healthcare industry by empowering patients to quickly reduce inflammation in their bodies and experience relief from symptoms associated with their health condition. This specialty medication has many uses, making it a go-to therapy for physicians worldwide. It is the preferred treatment for patients with antibody deficiencies, low red-blood-cell counts, and more.

 

In the United States, over 75% of IVIg is used specifically for patients with autoimmune or inflammatory conditions. Ig is also used to treat conditions that fall under neurology, hematology, nephrology, and dermatology. How quickly IVIg works to relieve a patient’s symptoms varies based on the disease state itself and the individual’s response to the treatment. On average, most patients tend to see responses within three to four weeks of initial dosing.

 

This super-concentrated collection of antibodies is capable of warding off viruses and bacteria and requires plasma donations from thousands of people to make. After receiving a plasma donation, laboratories conduct rigorous screening for seven different infectious agents, including blood-borne illnesses such as HIV and hepatitis, to keep patients safe.

 

The Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) regulates the collection of blood and blood components like plasma in partnership with the FDA to increase patient safety. All of the blood donations that pass screening are then pooled together to create the final Ig medication. It can then be used to protect patients who cannot fight infections on their own due to a low production of antibodies or an immune system that attacks the body’s healthy cells.

 

Paragon provides treatment to 30,000+ patients annually, and projects to treat over 100,000 patients annually by 2025.

 

https://www.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/news/2021/08/01/how-immunoglobulin-ivig-therapy-is-changing-the.html

 

Long article seems like more of a plug for this paragon company.

Found the increase interesting

Anonymous ID: 6e594a July 31, 2021, 11:16 p.m. No.14242495   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Milwaukee elections rented office space to process absentee ballots, Claire boasted about how big it was in her zoom meeting.

Probably a nothing burger but it was at this address

 

HQ501 Redevelopment

501 West Michigan Street, Milwaukee, WI 53203

Anonymous ID: 6e594a July 31, 2021, 11:32 p.m. No.14242568   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2620 >>2715 >>2827 >>2895 >>2934

A killer whale stranded on rocks in Alaska was savedafter a group of people spotted it and kept it wet until the tide rose. A killer whale got stranded on rocks above the shoreline in Alaska on Tuesday.

 

A group of people helped save the whale by spraying it with water until wildlife officials arrived.

 

Six hours after the orca was spotted ashore, the tide rose and it was able to swim out to sea.

 

Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

 

A killer whale stranded on rugged rocks above the shoreline in Alaska on Thursday was saved after a group of people kept it cool with water until wildlife officials arrived.

 

The orca was seen ashore on Prince of Wales Island off the coast of British Columbia in the morning by people in a boat, Tara Neilson, who lives in the area, told Insider. Her niece, Aroon Melane, who was in the area visiting family, heard about the stranded whale and decided to go help.

 

Melane and her friends stepped in to help the whale before wildlife officials from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration could arrive. The group used buckets to splash water onto the whale, which had also been injured on the rock.

 

@aroonmelane

The craziest experience! #alaska #orca #killerwhale #strandedwhale @heydaniejay

 

♬ original sound - aroonmelane

Melane posted a video of the experience on her TikTok, where she said the whale started to get more "lively" after being splashed with water.

 

The group in the boat anchored and was able to use a hose to spray the whale with seawater, Chance Strickland, the captain of a private yacht, told The New York Times. In addition to keeping the whale cool, the water helped keep away other animals, like birds, that might have started eating it otherwise.

 

"I don't speak a lot of whale, but it didn't seem real stoked," Strickland told The Times. "There were tears coming out of its eyes."

 

Officials eventually arrived and about six hours after the 20-foot-long whale was spotted, the tide rose enough for it to swim back out to sea an NOAA spokesperson told The Times.

 

Canadian officials said the orca was a Bigg's killer whale, according to The Times. Also known as West Coast transients, Bigg's orcas are known for hunting other marine mammals.

 

https://sports.yahoo.com/killer-whale-stranded-rocks-alaska-045326726.html

Anonymous ID: 6e594a July 31, 2021, 11:43 p.m. No.14242605   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2620 >>2638 >>2715 >>2827 >>2895 >>2934

Arizona Border Patrol agent, another driver killed in head-on crash

A Border Patrol agent with the Tucson sector and another driver were killed in a head-on crash in southern Arizona on Saturday morning, authorities said.

 

The crash happened after midnight on Route 86 outside Wells, Arizona, the U.S. Border Patrol's Tucson Sector said in a statement posted to social media.

Both drivers were pronounced dead soon after the crash. The civilian was the only person in the other car, the Border Patrol said.

The victims were not identified and the circumstances that led to the crash weren’t revealed.https://www.foxnews.com/us/arizona-border-patrol-agent-another-driver-killed-in-head-on-crash

Anonymous ID: 6e594a July 31, 2021, 11:48 p.m. No.14242631   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>14242618

Been sum research about that here,not mine, I would assume the blood would be tainted, unless proactively filtered. Colorado university was working on a blood filter for a spike protein early March 2020. Cures may be in place. But you know the waiting game.