Anonymous ID: 9aa5e0 March 19, 2020, 11:57 p.m. No.8485764   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5775 >>5889 >>6005 >>6230

>>8485433 (LB)

 

>>8485664 (LB)

>Spaghetti without sauce isn't very appetizing.

>>8485451 (LB)

>pics or it didnt happen

>Military vehicles moving via rail towards Chicago.

>

>Weird vehicles/semis with escorts moving through Philly.

>

>Military jets over Miami.

>

>Get ready people. Whether this is Q, Martial Law, this virus, a comet, or whatever; Something is definitely happening. Pray!

 

See vid:

Military vehicles being hauled by another train, heading towards Chicago. Footage taken in Barrington, IL on 3/19/2020. Verbal verification in video

Anonymous ID: 9aa5e0 March 20, 2020, 12:02 a.m. No.8485788   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5822 >>5867 >>5957

Coronavirus Australia: Queensland researchers find ‘cure’, want drug trial

 

Some patients who tested positive for coronavirus in Australia have already been treated with one of the drugs and “all did very, very well,” researchers say.

 

A team of Australian researchers say they’ve found a cure for the novel coronavirus and hope to have patients enrolled in a nationwide trial by the end of the month.

 

University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research director Professor David Paterson told news.com.au today they have seen two drugs used to treat other conditions wipe out the virus in test tubes.

 

He said one of the medications, given to some of the first people to test positive for COVID-19 in Australia, had already resulted in “disappearance of the virus” and complete recovery from the infection.

 

Prof Paterson, who is also an infectious disease physician at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, said it wasn’t a stretch to label the drugs “a treatment or a cure”.

 

“It’s a potentially effective treatment,” he said.

 

“Patients would end up with no viable coronavirus in their system at all after the end of therapy.”

 

The drugs are both already registered and available in Australia.

 

“What we want to do at the moment is a large clinical trial across Australia, looking at 50 hospitals, and what we’re going to compare is one drug, versus another drug, versus the combination of the two drugs,” Prof Paterson said.

 

Given their history, researchers have a “long experience of them being very well tolerated” and there are no unexpected side effects.

 

“We’re not on a flat foot, we can sort of move ahead very rapidly with enrolling Australians in this trial,” Prof Paterson said.

 

“It’s the question we all have – we know it’s coming now, what is the best way to treat it?”

 

https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/health-problems/coronavirus-australia-queensland-researchers-find-cure-want-drug-trial/news-story/93e7656da0cff4fc4d2c5e51706accb5