Anonymous ID: e0c612 Oct. 30, 2021, 12:25 p.m. No.14887640   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7700 >>7835

>>14887504

notable

 

funny how parasites cause incurable psoriasis hey… all the major incurable diseases are mainly caused by parasites, especially after a run of antibiotics. Also all the herbs & drugs that work to treat covid, like wormwood, also work against malaria and parasites. The connection is unknown at this time, but viruses can infect parasites… and if they infect something like chagas who knows what the outcome is.

 

/wagmi (worms aren't gonna make it)

Anonymous ID: e0c612 Oct. 30, 2021, 12:53 p.m. No.14887826   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7831 >>7842 >>7859 >>7947 >>8051 >>8151

Post-Covid Patients Report Gastrointestinal Issues

 

In Uttar Pradesh, COVID-19 recovered patients are now facing problems related to the gastroenterology system.

 

Anil Gangwar of Lucknow's SGPGI's gastroenterology department, said: "All viral diseases have a tendency to leave behind gastrointestinal issues like rotavirus, dengue etc. A similar pattern is seen in patients of novel coronavirus. Many of these patients showed a pattern of overconsumption of herbal and Ayurvedic drinks like 'kadhas' which caused inflammation of their liver and gut."

 

‘More and more patients with Covid history are reporting to hospitals with inflamed liver and gut, upset stomach or abdominal pain. Many of these patients are being diagnosed with post-infection irritable bowel syndrome.’

 

Covid patients with no prior history of gastrointestinal issues (GI) are now visiting hospitals with trouble in their gut, loose motions, stomach fullness, abdominal pain and allied symptoms.

 

Sumit Rungta, Head of the gastroenterology department at Lucknow's King George's Medical University, said: "Initially, majority Covid patients in ICU had accompanying GI problems. We are still getting patients with persistent GI troubles even after months of having contracted Covid-19 infection.

 

"We have not correlated if these GI troubles are a new development or related to Covid-19. It could be because of the virus or because the new normal has become more of a sedentary lifestyle."

 

Source: IANS

 

https://www.medindia.net/news/post-covid-patients-report-gastrointestinal-issues-203969-1.htm

 

>the parasites in the body go crazy after covid /wagmi

Anonymous ID: e0c612 Oct. 30, 2021, 1:04 p.m. No.14887877   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14887842

they help anon, but as someone who has had gut issues for years it is not enough. When I start on anti-parasiticals much healing occurred. My sleep got better, my energy increased, the psoriasis in my ears diminished by 80%, my head is much clearer, sense of smell better, taste better, bloating stopped, appetite diminished.

Anonymous ID: e0c612 Oct. 30, 2021, 1:14 p.m. No.14887914   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14887884

I appreciate that.

 

Also if you go on /wagmi you can find a lot of info regarding parasite cleansing and archived threads. The thing that is interesting is that a lot of cultures eat in such a way that is antiparisitical. For example India and South East Asia all eat antiparasiticals with their food. The west traditionally did too, but we exchanged our traditions and food for globohomo. When you get into you realize that the deep state worships these fucking worms / demons.

Anonymous ID: e0c612 Oct. 30, 2021, 1:26 p.m. No.14887981   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The WHO vs. the Tea Doctor. For once, an herbal remedy actually works. Why are malaria experts against it?

 

>However, no organization I know of has taken things quite as far as the Dutch-owned Wagagai Flower Farm. In 2005, the farm’s owners were struggling because more than one-third of their 1,500 workers were falling ill with malaria each year. The Tororo Botanical Garden in Fort Portal provided Artemisia seeds, and the owners began distributing the tea for free—not for treatment but for prevention of malaria episodes. Soon afterward, a researcher named Patrick Ogwang with the Ugandan Ministry of Health documented a decline of malaria incidence among almost 300 workers drinking the tea, and followed up with the randomized controlled trial demonstrating the tea’s effectiveness. Today, workers like Peter Osire, an irrigation supervisor, tell me it has been years since they had a fever.

 

>Ogwang says that may be because the tea, like other herbal products, contains multiple active compounds besides artemisinin. Cinchona bark is still effective after hundreds of years even though chloroquine (a derivative) is not. The Chinese have been using wormwood for more than 1,500 years for a variety of ailments, but the only place where we’ve seen signs of artemisinin resistance is on the Thai-Cambodian border, where conventional artemisinin drugs are used with abandon. If the goal is really to reserve these last-resort drugs for treatment rather than for prevention, then why do American and European doctors gladly prescribe Malarone—the only effective artemisinin alternative in some areas—for a romp around Southeast Asia? Nevertheless, Ogwang is now trying to test whether the tea remains effective for prevention even if the artemisinin is eliminated, an idea that sounds crazy but that could eliminate the objection that the tea could stimulate resistance.

 

tl;dr

 

  • no one who drinks wormwood tea weekly gets a fever anymore

  • Cincocha Bark tea which contains chloroquine works for malaria, while the drug chloroquine doesn't.

  • You don't get breakthrough cases with herbs because they have multiple components.

 

https://slate.com/technology/2013/04/wormwood-tea-to-treat-malaria-the-who-is-opposed-to-an-effective-preventive-medicine.html