Anonymous ID: d191ee March 28, 2020, 8:14 p.m. No.8607060   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7155

>>8606492 pb

 

We should be getting to a point, pretty soon, where we're just giving out free hydroxychloroquine to everyone who wants it.

 

Screw the doctors, screw the tests - are you or are you not capable of eating 3 and only 3 pills in a day for 10 days in a row?

 

There are some who can get some aquarium cleaner (same stuff actually) and make a random guess about how much to take, and guess wrong and die of an overdose. It turns out that this chloroquine phosphate (and hydroxycholorquine) really does have to be taken in fairly measured doses. 5000 mg (a teaspoonful) is 10 times the accepted dose and that much is enough to kill you.

 

But, if you can take 3 200mg hydroxychloroquine pills in a day, one at a time, and do that for 10 days, it should cure and or prevent coronavirus.

 

And if people were able to do that, we'd have no problem. I'm not suggesting forcing people to take those drugs, that would be morally abhorrent, in the same way that forcing people to take vaccines is morally abhorrent, evil. But, everyone should have the Q drug to take at their leisure, as a preventative or a cure, provided they're capable of following the instructions.

 

I'm hearing things like no hospitalizations, or at least no ventilators, for people who have been taking the Q drugs for 3 days. Maybe Cuomo can figure this out?

 

If you give everyone the Q drug for 3 days, and no one who takes the Q drug for 3 days needs a ventilator, how many ventilators do you need?

 

Answer = Zero, 0.

Anonymous ID: d191ee March 28, 2020, 8:39 p.m. No.8607293   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7351

https://www.web24.news/u/2020/03/new-study-by-professor-raoult-and-identical-reviews.html

 

new study by Professor Raoult … and identical reviews

 

This study, published online Friday evening but not yet in a scientific journal, covers 80 patients, 80% of whom experienced “favorable development “,

 

“We confirm the effectiveness of hydroxychloroquine (derivative of chloroquine, a drug against malaria, editor’s note) combined with azithromycin (an antibiotic, editor’s note) in the treatment of Covid-19”, wrote Didier Raoult and his team at the conclusion of the new study.

 

The study included 80 patients, half of whom were under 52 and a half, followed for 6 to 10 days during March at the Institut Hospitalo-Universitaire (IHU) Mediterranee Infection in Marseille. All received treatment with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin.

 

According to the study, 65 patients (81%) experienced “a favorable development” and were discharged from hospital after less than five days on average, a 74 year old patient was still in intensive care at the end of the study and another 86 year old had died.

 

In addition, the study says that most patients experienced a “rapid decrease” of their viral load in less than a week. Again, this argument has left many scientists skeptical.