Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 6:35 a.m. No.18276197   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6228 >>6266

https://mobile.twitter.com/jengleruk/status/1544952568870313985

 

Dr Jonathan Engler MB ChB DipPharmMed LLB🐭

@jengleruk

Hadn’t seen this - from May 2020 - before.

 

Pretty clear now that a relatively small coordinated group of unelected and unaccountable individuals and corporations has essentially controlled the global response to “Covid” over the past 2 years.

Quote Tweet

Tony Blair Institute

@InstituteGC

¡

May 9, 2020

Our teams are now embedded in governments around the world, helping them to keep their people safe during this pandemic - not just in respect of Covid-19 itself but also the political and economic collateral damage.

 

Watch Tony Blair's update on our response to #COVID19 👇

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 6:38 a.m. No.18276220   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6258 >>6455 >>6786 >>6839

https://mobile.twitter.com/AaronSiriSG/status/1621329291949604864

 

Aaron Siri

@AaronSiriSG

White House formally announces it opposes

@RepThomasMassie

bill removing C19-V mandate for healthcare workers based on dogma that these products prevent infection. Also says getting C19 causes staff shortage, so illogically argues must fire them instead! https://whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/SAP-H.R.-497.pdf

 

STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY

H.R. 497 – A bill to eliminate the COVID-19 vaccine mandate on health care providers

furnishing items and services under certain Federal health care programs

(Rep. Duncan, R-SC, and 67 cosponsors)

Protecting vulnerable patients across the country from the devastating effects of COVID-19

remains a top priority for the Administration. Therefore, the Administration strongly opposes

the Freedom for Health Care Workers Act, which would expose patients to unnecessary risk.

The Administration’s requirement that health care facilities that participate in Medicare or

Medicaid establish policies and procedures to ensure covered staff are vaccinated against

COVID-19 protects the lives of patients, along with the health care workers that provide them

care, at 76,000 medical facilities nationwide. Ensuring patient safety and quality of care is a

critical responsibility of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and COVID-19

vaccination requirements for health care workers are key to combatting the evolving

circumstances of COVID-19. As the Supreme Court said with respect to this rule, “[E]nsuring

that providers take steps to avoid transmitting a dangerous virus to their patients is consistent

with the fundamental principle of the medical profession: first, do no harm.”

Vaccines remain one of our strongest tools to fight against COVID-19 and protect individuals

from serious illness, hospitalization, and death. Health care workers may work on a daily basis

with vulnerable populations, and the virus in health care settings continues to pose a significant

risk to health care workers and their patients. Health care staff being unable to work because of

COVID-19 further strains the health care system and limits patients' access to safe and essential

care.

While COVID-19 is no longer the disruptive threat that it once was, it makes no sense for

Congress to reverse this protection for vulnerable patients, as well as our health care workers

who have given so much to protect us. A vote for this bill threatens the lives of patients and

health care workers alike.

If Congress were to pass H.R. 497, the President would veto it.

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 7:12 a.m. No.18276386   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6394 >>6455 >>6786 >>6839

https://mobile.twitter.com/EduEngineer/status/1621441778485166080

 

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

8h

  1. This thread will reveal the details of how the #HealthyUserBias demonstrates that the #COVID19vaccines (at least used in the U.S.) have zero efficacy.

 

This will take a few days to complete…follow me on this one…make Big Data proud.

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

8h

  1. Here is the punchline up front: Using the

@CDCgov

's data for all 3.141 U.S. counties, the only correlation between vaccine uptake and COVID-19 mortality is fully explained by the fact that wealthier (healthier on average) people are more vaccinated.

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

8h

  1. "Oh, but how can that be…the trials said 95%…THE TRIALS!"

 

The trials were rushed past the obvious need to check to see if the vaccines themselves confounded PCR positivity.

roundingtheearth.substack.com

Nonsensical, Procedurally Invalid Vaccine Trial Results

The Vaccine Wars Part LII

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

8h

  1. And you absolutely cannot ignore the implications of the

@IamBrookJackson

lawsuit in which

@pfizer

has chosen to hide behind the

@DeptofDefense

.

roundingtheearth.substack.com

Brook Jackson Fraud Suit News

The Vaccine Wars Part LVIII

 

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

8h

  1. Never forget the absurdly long list of ways in which data was hidden, obscured, or fabricated.

 

https://roundingtheearth.substack.com/p/hiding-the-truth-by-hiding-the-data

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. Now, we need a definition of the Healthy User Bias (HUB). Perhaps Wikipedia can help?

 

The Wikipedia is so short you'd think the topic were unimportant.

en.wikipedia.org

Healthy user bias - Wikipedia

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. All we get from Wikipedia is a vague story that HUB "can damage the validity of epidemiologic studies" due to the fact that "subjects that take up an intervention, including by enrolling in a clinical trial, are not representative of the general population."

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. The Healthy User Bias (HUB) is the bias observed in medical intervention studies due to the recipients being healthier on average.

 

But could this HUB be behind all the apparent vaccine effictiveness (VE) that we see in retrospective analyses?

 

Yes. Yes, it can. From CDC data:

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. "If this were true, the experts would have told us so."

 

Oh, you're adorable.

 

I'm guessing that by "expert" that you mean Paul "Ten Mouse Minimum Testing Standard" Offit.

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. Paul is a big fan of something called the Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD). The VSD was established in 1990, the same year that the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) was established.

 

Is the VSD the oracle that tells us that the C19 vaccines are effective?

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. The VSD is a consortium of health providers in several states, almost half of which are Kaiser Permanente. This would seem to give the impression of a vast user database that would dodge confounders. Does it dodge HUB?

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

¡

7h

  1. Not only does VSD not dodge HUB, it seems to be designed to enshrine it!

 

The VSD's own data on non-COVID mortality shoes extreme levels of HUB.

https://roundingtheearth.substack.com/p/proof-of-statistical-sieves-in-vaccine?s=w

Mathew Crawford

@EduEngineer

  1. If you take the VSD, unadjusted and raw, it shows C19 quasi-vaccine recipients enjoying up to 72% lower mortality (depending on age bands) for non-COVID deaths!

 

Huh.

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 7:15 a.m. No.18276401   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6455 >>6786 >>6839

https://www.hartgroup.org/how-to-nullify-criticism-of-the-vaccines/

 

How to nullify criticism of the vaccines

 

A World Health Organisation guide

 

At a time when concerns about serious adverse reactions to the Covid-19 vaccines are escalating, one might reasonably expect the World Health Organisation (WHO) – a specialised agency of the United Nations responsible for international public health – to take immediate and decisive action. Perhaps a recommendation to pause the vaccine rollout would be a reasonable step under the circumstances. Or maybe an urgent request to member states to rapidly undertake thorough investigations of the links between the mRNA vaccines and serious physical harms, such as myocarditis. But no, those responses have not been forthcoming. Instead, the WHO has published communication guidance on how to nullify criticism of the vaccines.

 

The document, titled Vaccine Crisis Communication Manual – a step-by-step guidance for national immunization programmes, was produced in 2022 by the WHO European office with the stated aim of supporting countries ‘in effectively responding to events which may erode the public’s trust in vaccines and authorities that deliver them’. The manual offers detailed recommendations about how those in authority should respond to a ‘vaccine crisis’ (defined as any occurrence that ‘will most likely or has already eroded public trust in vaccines … and may create uncertainty’). The explicit, overarching goal is to ‘rebuild trust in vaccines’.

 

The guidance is structured – with military precision – around four sequential phases:

 

  1. Co-ordinate & engage

 

  1. Design communication response

 

  1. Monitor public opinion & the media

 

  1. Inform the public

 

In keeping with the dominant narrative during the Covid era, the presumption is that vaccinations are always for the greater good. Repeatedly asserted throughout the document is that adverse events may not be causally linked to the jabs. Pre-prepared messages are recommended that ‘emphasize the value of immunization based on a risk-benefit analysis’. Somewhat sinisterly, public health officials are advised to ‘use existing or implement new monitoring tools to monitor public opinion’ and to maintain ‘good relations with key journalists and the media’. And when someone dies in the aftermath of vaccination, communicators are directed to say, ‘We are committing all available resources to the investigation of this unfortunate incident and are doing our utmost to find the cause as soon as possible’; (it is doubtful whether the vaccine-harmed population would concur with this claim). Clearly, the overarching goal of this WHO manuscript is to protect the pro-vaccine narrative under any circumstances.

 

The tone of this WHO document perpetuates the myth that anyone questioning the net benefits of the jabs is an ‘anti-vaxxer’ who is spreading misinformation. One illustrative example is the reference to an earlier – 2017 – WHO publication, titled ‘How to respond to vocal vaccine deniers in public’. Co-authored by Katrine Habersaat (who is also a co-author of the WHO, 2022, document) the article refers to these ‘vaccine deniers’ as people who have ‘a very negative attitude towards vaccination and are not open to a change of mind no matter the scientific evidence’. According to Habersaat, these agitators ‘censor opposing opinions’ and ‘use personal insults or even legal actions to silence representatives of the scientific consensus’. In light of the widespread vilification and censorship endured by those experts who have, over the last three years, challenged the dominant Covid narrative, the irony of these assertions is off the scale.

 

There was once a time when the primary aim of the WHO was the provision of accessible and holistic healthcare to all, regardless of socioeconomic status. The content of this Vaccine Crisis Communication Manual provides further evidence that this is no longer the case. The welfare of ordinary people is not the WHO’s priority; the appeasement of their pro-vaccine paymasters now takes precedence.

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 7:34 a.m. No.18276520   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6524 >>6574 >>6577 >>6654 >>6676

>>18276444

same day as this article:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/experts-say-the-zombie-fungus-from-the-last-of-us-is-real/ar-AA16UjNS

 

Experts Say the Zombie Fungus From ‘The Last of Us’ Is Real

 

If you’ve been following HBO’s breakout hit The Last of Us—a story of people navigating a post-apocalyptic world where the cordyceps brain infection (CBI) has turned most of mankind into zombies—then you might be wondering if the“zombie fungus” is real (and if it affects humans). While the show is a freaky science fiction series based on a video game, the alarming spore-filled infection seen in the show is actually real.

 

The Last of Us is reportedly based on the cordyceps fungus (specifically Ophiocordyceps unilateralis), which is a so-called“zombie fungus” that infects ants. But while the fungus is a real thing, experts say it can’t infect humans. Still, it’s understandable to have questions. Here’s the deal.

 

What is the cordyceps fungus?

Ophiocordyceps unilateralis is a specialized parasite that infects, manipulates, and then kills ants, usually in a tropical setting, according to one scientific paper on the fungus.

 

“The fungi spreads through spores. A spore lands on an ant and produces a tube that bores through the cuticle into the ant body,” explains Raymond J. St. Leger, Ph.D., a mycologist and professor in the department of entomology at the University of Maryland, who has worked on Ophiocordyceps unilateralis.

 

“Once in the hemolymph—insect ‘blood’—the fungus multiplies and spreads through the body of the insect,” says entomologist Roberto M. Pereira, Ph.D., a research scientist with the University of Florida.

 

St. Leger adds that it does so in a “yeast-like form.” The fungus moves on to grow around the ant’s brain, causing the ant to develop “quite specific” behavior during the zombie stage, he says.

 

How does the cordyceps fungus spread?

Related video: Experts Weigh in On Whether a Fungal Pandemic Like in the ‘The Last of Us’ Is Possible

 

There’s a very specific way this fungus makes its way around ants. Once an ant is infected, it “crawls up a plant stem and bites down hard onto a leaf’s vein with its mandibles (jaws),” St. Leger says, adding, “This ‘death grip’ is caused by the fungus colonizing the mandibles.” The fungus also comes out through the legs of the ant as tubes that basically stick the ant to the leaf. “The ant then dies and the fungus produces a fruiting body from the ant’s head—the brain is one of the last parts of the ant’s insides that the fungus digests,” St. Leger says. But, even if the ant doesn’t spread spores over other ants, the spores are often “spread by wind and water, and eventually land on a new healthy host so the cycle can be repeated and new fungal spores can be produced,” Pereira says.

 

Even creepier? The ant attaches itself to a “pretty specific spot on the underside of a leaf that is near where other ants are foraging or coming down,” says Ian Williams, an entomologist at Orkin. Once the ant dies, the fungus will release spores and, given the ant’s very strategic position, “There’s a high chance those spores will land on others and infect them as well,” Williams says.

 

Basically, not only does Ophiocordyceps unilateralis turn ants into zombies, it strategically tries to infect as many other ants as possible in the process—an aspect seen in The Last of Us.

p1

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 7:35 a.m. No.18276524   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6577 >>6654 >>6676

>>18276520

 

“The zombie thing is of particular interest as a creature without a brain—the fungus—is manipulating the behavior of a creature with a brain,” St. Leger says. Consider us creeped out.

 

What are the signs an ant has Cordyceps?

When the ant is first infected, it’s not something most people would notice. “It might start doing odd behavior that only very specific scientists might notice,” William says.

 

Ants, however, can pick up on it. An infected ant initially “starts trembling and cleaning itself,” St. Leger says. That’s a heads-up to other ants to get out. “Other ants recognize this behavior as a danger and will carry an infected ant away from the nest and dump it,” St. Leger says.

 

So, can Cordyceps infect humans?

That’s why you’re here, right? Experts stress that you don’t need to worry about a The Last of Us situation happening anytime soon—from Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, at least. “It’s really specific to a small group of ants,” Williams says. “It’s co-evolved with these ants to have a specific reproductive strategy.”

 

Of course, some pathogens do jump from animals and bugs to humans, but it seems unlikely to happen in this situation, says Thomas Russo, M.D., chief of infectious diseases at the University at Buffalo in New York. “There are literally billions of microbes on this planet—it’s a microbial world,” he says. “Only a very small part infect humans and, when it comes to fungi, it’s an even smaller number.”

 

Pereira points out that it’s possible for humans to have an allergic reaction to the fungus, though, noting that one of his employees once developed a severe case of bronchitis while working with a similar insect fungus. “If the quantities of spores are very high in the air, some people may show allergic signs to the fungus, even if no true infection occurs,” he says. However, it’s worth reiterating, you still won't turn into a zombie.

 

Basically, don’t lose sleep at night over fears that you’ll be turned into a zombie by a creepy fungus that targets ants. But, if you’re a fan of the spook factor, then definitely check out The Last of Us via HBO. New episodes drop every Sunday.

 

 

First the jabs soften the target- vaids/ADE

perhaps then follow on phases…

 

Again eerily similar IMHO to Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night and the Metallica video from 2008.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFqjDXy9s5A

 

Metallica All Nightmare Long video re: weaponized spores and fungus

 

"The music video, directed by Roboshobo (Robert Schober),[3] debuted on December 7, 2008, on Metallica's official website and Yahoo! Video.[4][5] The video, which does not feature the band, is an alternate history narrative done in grainy mockumentary style, depicting a sequence of fictional events following the historic 1908 Tunguska event, at which Soviet scientists discover spores of an extraterrestrial organism, a small harmless thing resembling an armored worm.

 

However, it turns out the incredibly hardy spores are able to reanimate dead tissue, and subjects turn violent sometime after exposure to the spores; a cartoon then shows the USSR adapting them as a bioweapon and scatters them from balloons in a preemptive strike against the U.S., causing a localized zombie apocalypse before intervening militarily to distribute humanitarian aid. At the end of the cartoon, a hybrid U.S.–USSR flag is raised in the now-Soviet-ruled America, and in 1972, a headless corpse is shown breaching containment and escaping from a Soviet biowarfare lab. The uncensored version of the music video ends with an incident in Arkansas, similar to the start of the video, with various news reporters reporting on chemtrails."

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 7:59 a.m. No.18276654   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6665 >>6667 >>6676 >>6732

>>18276444

>>18276577

>>18276524

>>18276520

 

>First the jabs soften the target- vaids/ADE

perhaps then follow on phases…

 

Invasive Mold Infections in Immunocompromised People

https://www.cdc.gov/mold/invasive-mold-infections.htm

 

People, especially those with weakened immune systems, can develop invasive mold infections days to weeks after exposure to fungi that live in the environment.

 

Risk Factors

These include people who:

 

Have had a transplant, especially hematopoietic stem cell transplants

Have cancer, especially hematologic cancers like leukemia and lymphoma

Are undergoing cancer treatment (chemotherapy)

Are taking medications that weaken the immune system, such as corticosteroids and biologics

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:01 a.m. No.18276667   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6676 >>6732

>>18276654

Fungal Diseases and COVID-19

 

Overview

COVID-19-associated fungal infections can lead to severe illness and death.1, 3, 4, 7, 8, 28, 29, 30 Symptoms of certain fungal diseases can be similar to those of COVID-19, including fever, cough, and shortness of breath.1, 31 Some patients can have COVID-19 and a fungal infection at the same time. Laboratory testing is necessary to determine if a person has a fungal infection, COVID-19, or both.

 

COVID-19 likely increases the risk for fungal infections because of its effect on the immune system and because treatments for COVID-19 (like steroids and other drugs) can weaken the body’s defenses against fungi.32 The most commonly reported fungal infections in patients with COVID-19 include aspergillosis, invasive candidiasis, and mucormycosis (sometimes called by the misnomer ”black fungusexternal icon.”1–6 Fungal infections resistant to antifungal treatment have also been described in patients with severe COVID-19.19, 20

 

Awareness of the possibility of fungal co-infection with COVID-19 is essential to reduce delays in diagnosis and treatment in order to help prevent severe illness and death from these infections.

 

https://www.cdc.gov/fungal/covid-fungal.html

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:03 a.m. No.18276676   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6678

>>18276654

>>18276667

>>18276444

>>18276577

>>18276524

>>18276520

 

https://www.healthline.com/health-news/black-fungus-is-appearing-in-people-with-covid-19-what-to-know

 

‘Black Fungus’ Is Appearing in People with COVID-19: What to Know

 

A rare type of fungal infection has been reported in people with COVID-19 in India. Jit Chattopadhyay/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

A typically rare fungal infection called mucormycosis has surged in India recently, primarily affecting people recovering from COVID-19.

Experts say this type of fungal infection is extremely rare and that it may be affecting people whose immune systems have been damaged by the coronavirus.

Experts say the use of steroid drugs in these patients may partially explain some of the surge, while the immune-compromised state of COVID-19 patients could explain others.

All data and statistics are based on publicly available data at the time of publication. Some information may be out of date. Visit our coronavirus hub and follow our live updates page for the most recent information on the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Even as India struggles to contain a deadly surge of COVID-19, doctors are now reporting cases of a rare infection called the “black fungus,” occurring among people recovering from the disease.

 

The fungal infection is increasingly being seen in vulnerable patients in India, as the country’s health system struggles to save lives during the pandemic.

 

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Trusted Source, this black fungus infection is called mucormycosis and is caused by a group of molds called mucormycetesTrusted Source that typically live in soil and decaying organic matter.

 

The infection can be life threatening and has a mortality rate between 46–96 percent depending on severity.

 

What to know about mucormycosis

“Mucormycosis is a rare, invasive, fungal opportunistic infection that causes serious, sometimes fatal disease,” Dr. K.C. Rondello, epidemiologist and special adviser to the Office of University Health and Wellness at Adelphi University, told Healthline.

 

He explained that those most at risk for mucormycosis have compromised immune systems that make them susceptible to fungal and other opportunistic infections.

 

“This includes individuals who are currently fighting or have recently recovered from COVID-19 disease,” said Rondello.

 

Over the last 10 years, doctors have only seen a handful of mucormycosis cases in India, reported USA Today.

 

This past month, however, tens of thousands of cases have been reported, Dr. Bhakti Hansoti, associate professor in the department of emergency medicine and international health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told USA today.

 

“We’ve seen this skyrocket in recent weeks,” she said. “It consumes a lot of resources especially during this pandemic right now in India where healthcare resources are stretched at the limit.”

 

Symptoms of mucormycosis

Mucormycosis can affect different parts of the body, showing different sets of symptoms, according to the CDCTrusted Source.

 

If the infection grows in the sinuses and brain (rhinocerebral mucormycosisTrusted Source), symptoms include fever, one-sided facial swelling, headache, and nasal or sinus congestion.

 

If your lungs are affected by the fungus, you can experience cough, chest pain, and shortness of breath.

 

When mucormycosis attacks the digestive system, you may experience abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting, and gastrointestinal bleeding.

 

“It’s an environmental mold, which once it infects you, is very morbid and has a high mortality,” said Dr. Eric Cioe-Peña, director of Global Health at Northwell Health in New York. “Because the infection is so rare, the exact mortality rate isn’t clear. But researchers estimate that overall, 54 percent of people with mucormycosis die.”

 

He added that people with COVID-19 theoretically could be at higher risk due to an immune reaction, or inflammation locally in the sinus tract. Cioe-Peña confirmed the fungus isn’t normally contagious.

 

According to Bhayani, you can contract the fungus by inhaling the mold spores or when you come into contact with them in things like soil, rotting produce or bread, or compost piles.

 

“Mucormycosis is normally not spread person to person, but is found in the environment,” he said. “However, due to the level of spread, it’s too early to say how this is spreading.”

 

p1

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:03 a.m. No.18276678   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18276676

Who’s at risk and how is mucormycosis treated?

According to researchersTrusted Source, while mucormycosis is comparatively rare, increased use of chemotherapy and steroid drugs — like those used to treat some COVID-19 patients — may be increasing its frequency.

 

In a recent small studyTrusted Source, scientists concluded that COVID-19 patients with diabetes that were treated with steroid drugs had a significantly increased risk of experiencing fungal infections like mucormycosis.

 

According to Dr. Nikhil Bhayani, infectious disease expert at Texas Health Resources, mucormycosis can be treated with antifungal agents like amphotericin B, isavuconazole, and posaconazole.

 

“In severe cases, your doctor may recommend surgery to remove infected or dead tissue to keep the fungus from spreading,” he said. “This might include removing parts of your nose or eyes. This could be disfiguring, but it’s crucial to treat this life threatening infection.”

 

People with COVID-19 at increased risk of many ‘opportunistic infections’

Dr. Rondello explained that individuals fighting a “significant infection” like COVID-19 are more susceptible to developing opportunistic infections as their immune systems are busy fighting the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

 

“Opportunistic infections can be caused by fungi, bacteria, viruses, even parasites,” he said.

 

He said other common fungal infections can include:

 

Candidiasis, a fungal infection caused by a yeast (a type of fungus) called Candida.

Histoplasmosis, a disease caused by a fungus (or mold) called histoplasma. This fungus is common in the eastern and central United States.

Aspergillosis, caused by aspergillus, a common mold found in buildings and outdoors.

“There is limited evidence that patients with COVID-19 are vulnerable to developing pulmonary (lung) aspergillosis,” said Dr. Rondello.

 

Aspergillosis infection of particular concern

Rondello pointed out that there is “mounting recognition” of a condition called coronavirus disease–associated pulmonary aspergillosis (CAPA).

 

“In one study published in JAMA, the authors estimate that CAPA affects about 20 to 30 percent of severely ill, mechanically ventilated patients with COVID-19,” he said.

 

Rondello emphasized that much is still unknown about COVID-19 and its consequences.

 

“There is still so much that we do not fully understand about COVID-19,” he said. “As we have more experience with this disease and its consequences, I suspect we will learn more about COVID-19’s relationship with other infections, including opportunistic ones.”

 

The bottom line

A typically rare fungal infection called mucormycosis has surged in India recently, primarily affecting people recovering from COVID-19.

 

The use of steroid drugs for treating COVID-19 may partially explain the surge in these fungal infections, along with weakened immune systems from COVID-19.

 

Mucormycosis is just one of many opportunistic infections that can occur with COVID-19. Much is still unknown about the consequences of COVID-19 and its relationship with other diseases.

 

2 of 2

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:15 a.m. No.18276720   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6749 >>6783

"It's Official: Fungus Epidemic, Biblical Leprosy Was Mold & "The Privilege" Fungus Apocalypse"

 

EntertheStars

2 hrs ago

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/dangerous-fungal-illness-rapidly-spreading-182156354.html

https://www.studylight.org/lexicons/eng/hebrew/06883.html

http://www.qbible.com/hebrew-old-testament/leviticus/13.html

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:25 a.m. No.18276755   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18276611

>>18276611

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2020-07-18/Alien-fungi-The-little-cups-SdFfRIEIik/index.html

 

https://matrixdisclosure.com/mushrooms-species-aliens-hypothesis/

 

https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-11-17/Alien-Fungi-The-mushroom-that-inspired-Alice-in-Wonderland-creators-LFu9V3HMSQ/index.html

 

define: alien

Anonymous ID: 4aaefd Feb. 3, 2023, 8:28 a.m. No.18276771   🗄️.is 🔗kun

fear and stress produce biochemical markers, substances, AND electromagnetic signatures. Perhaps these are in essence 'painting targets' for predators in the forms of parasites, mold, and fungi. In other words, not only are you signaling them as an available field of occupation and residence, but as a host and food source.

 

Fear no evil…

and no weapon formed against you shall prosper.

 

THIS may just be why fear, stress, worry, and doubt are the main products and exports of government, media, education, religion, and authority. Constantly making new hosts and resources.