COVID-19 Prevention and Treatment – Worldview https://worldview.dhw6358.com "Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom." Wed, 06 Sep 2023 01:06:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/masked-dog-150x150.png COVID-19 Prevention and Treatment – Worldview https://worldview.dhw6358.com 32 32 245867834 Madagascar Protocol to Treat COVID 19 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/madagascar-protocol-to-treat-covid-19/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/madagascar-protocol-to-treat-covid-19/#respond Thu, 06 Apr 2023 12:09:04 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=25384 Benefit-Guide-for-Admin-updated-September-2012Download ]]> https://worldview.dhw6358.com/madagascar-protocol-to-treat-covid-19/feed/ 0 25384 Sweet wormwood, also known as Artemisia annua https://worldview.dhw6358.com/sweet-wormwood-also-known-as-artemisia-annua/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/sweet-wormwood-also-known-as-artemisia-annua/#comments Thu, 06 Apr 2023 11:58:57 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=25379 https://ivmmeta.com/

Sweet wormwood, also known as Artemisia annua, is a green herb native to Southeast Asia that has feathery leaves and yellow flowers.

The ‘First Choice’ Alternative to Ivermectin: Expert by Marina Zhang, April 5, 2023

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Physicians who use the FLCCCA MATH+ , I-MASK+, I-MASS, or I-RECOVER protocols https://worldview.dhw6358.com/physicians-who-use-the-flccca-math-i-mask-i-mass-or-i-recover-protocols/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/physicians-who-use-the-flccca-math-i-mask-i-mass-or-i-recover-protocols/#respond Wed, 19 Jan 2022 18:30:46 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=14273 Source: https://covid19criticalcare.com/network-support/the-flccc-alliance/

NORTH CAROLINA

Misty Reagan, AGNP-CHOPE-Full WellnessUnited States, North Carolina, Asheboro
Anne Walch, MHS, PA-CUnited States, North Carolina, Asheville
Constance Cantwell, RN, PMH-BCUnited States, North Carolina, Asheville
David Clements, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Asheville
Jonathan Williams, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Burlington
Amy Deer, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Camden
Cherry Pfau, MSN, RN, AHN-BCIntegrative Medical of North CarolinaUnited States, North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Kate Hansen, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Darryl Kelly, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Charlotte
Deborah Allen, RPhUnited States, North Carolina, Charlotte
James P. Johnston, DOYour Home Medical CareUnited States, North Carolina, Charlotte
Phyllis Love, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Charlotte
William F. Taylor, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Charlotte
Brittany Barber, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Clemmons
Bridgett Farell, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Durham
Cynthia Cooke, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Durham
Kathryn Godly, PA-CThe Functional Medicine CenterUnited States, North Carolina, Durham
Shiela Zeigler, BSN, RNWakemed HospitalUnited States, North Carolina, Emerald Isle
Julie Andrews, MSN, RN, FNPOnespirit WellnessUnited States, North Carolina, Fairview
Dawn Ruminski, DO, MDValley Physical Medicine, PLLCUnited States, North Carolina, Fayetteville
Alesha Logan, NPLgos HealthUnited States, North Carolina, Gastonia
Kimberly Shelton, MDTIMA WellnessUnited States, North Carolina, Greensboro
Tracey Long, RDNBig Picture Health LLCUnited States, North Carolina, Hendersonville
Franklin McGuire, MD FccpUnited States, North Carolina, Hickory
A. Claire Wilson, DDSUnited States, North Carolina, High Point
Courtney Love, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Kernersville
Ralph Carter, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Laurinburg
Cathy J. Fanning, DOUnited States, North Carolina, Lowgap
Jason LeonardMars Hill ChiropracticUnited States, North Carolina, Mars Hill
Mary Gantt, MSN, RN (ret.)United States, North Carolina, Mills River
Mary C Medford, BSN, RN, CCMHealthy Strategies PLLC
(704) 690-3676
Healthy_Strategies_PLLC@outlook.com
United States, North Carolina, Monroe
Leigh Meier, MSN, RN, CENUnited States, North Carolina, Mooresville
Hope McIntyre, MDLyme Hope LLCUnited States, North Carolina, Mount Airy
Thomas Lash, CTBSUnited States, North Carolina, Murphy
Jill Hatcher Kopanski, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Pink Hill
J. Lee Harris, RN, MSNUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Kiara Eiley, MDCarolina Center for Restorative MedicineUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Kiera Eily, MDCarolina Restorative CenterUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Kira Eily, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Lisa Hogan, MDYouthologie Outpatient Practice OnlyUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Maribeth Malone, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Michael O. Citron, MDFoundationMEDUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Natalie Jane Adams, MSN, FNP-CUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Octavian M. Belcea, MDWakefield Family MedicineUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Sabrina Kittilson, RTTUnited States, North Carolina, Raleigh
Joseph Guarino, MD, MPH, FACOEMPiedmont Occupational and Urgent Care www.reidsville-urgent-care.comUnited States, North Carolina, Reidsville
Randall M. Carlyle, MT(ASCP), MPACareSouth CarolinaUnited States, North Carolina, Rowland
Felisa Hammonds, MSN, FNP-CUnited States, North Carolina, Shannon
Karen Fitch Theis, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Shelby
Betsy Walker, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Siler City
Carleen M. Willeford, DNP, MS, FNP, RN, BSN, BSWUnited States, North Carolina, Supply
Laurie Winner, RN, BSN, DCHolden Beach Family ChiropracticUnited States, North Carolina, Supply
Gregory Lee Jones, MDValdese HospitalUnited States, North Carolina, Valdese
Vincent G. Williams, PA-CUnited States, North Carolina, Wake Forest
Chris Lace, RN, CNORUnited States, North Carolina, Wilmington
Gregory Schimizzi, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Wilmington
Kristen Soles Ludwig, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Wilmington
Morgan Wallace, AGAC-NPMorgan Lefleur Aesthetics and WellnessUnited States, North Carolina, Wilmington
Christy Saunders, PharmDUnited States, North Carolina, Wilson
Laura W. Blackman, BSN, RNUNC NashUnited States, North Carolina, Wilson
Shannon Lee Petty, BSN, RN, EMT-P, CENUnited States, North Carolina, Wilson
Martha Shuping, MDUnited States, North Carolina, Winston Salem
Staci Kay, AGACNP-BCSophelina Consulting, PLLCUnited States, North Carolina, Winston Salem
William Miller, BSN, RNUnited States, North Carolina, Winston-Salem
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Aspirin https://worldview.dhw6358.com/aspirin/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/aspirin/#respond Thu, 28 Oct 2021 04:16:06 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=11903 Aspirin found to greatly decrease covid hospitalizations

Monday, October 25, 2021 by: Ethan Huff

Image: Aspirin found to greatly decrease covid hospitalizations

(Natural NewsNew research out of George Washington University (GWU) has found that over-the-counter aspirin could help to protect the lungs of patients who test “positive” for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19).

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Antihistamines and azithromycin as a treatment for COVID-19 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/antihistamines-and-azithromycin-as-a-treatment-for-covid-19/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/antihistamines-and-azithromycin-as-a-treatment-for-covid-19/#respond Fri, 24 Sep 2021 12:43:15 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10990 Reported outcomes

Not one adverse event occurred among these residents and staff and no hospitalizations were necessary either.

All of our patients evolved satisfactorily and were recovered at the beginning of June. No adverse effects were recorded in any patient and no one required hospital admission. At the end of June, 100% of the residents and almost half of the workers had positive serology for COVID-19, most of them with past infection.

Between March and April 2020, 84 elderly patients with suspected COVID-19 living in two nursing homes of Yepes, Toledo (Spain) were treated early with antihistamines (dexchlorpheniramine, cetirizine or loratadine), adding azithromycin in the 25 symptomatic cases. The outcomes are retrospectively reported. The primary endpoint is the fatality rate of COVID-19. The secondary endpoints are the hospital and ICU admission rates. Endpoints were compared with the official Spanish rates for the elderly. The mean age of our population was 85 and 48% were over 80 years old. No hospital admissions, deaths, nor adverse drug effects were reported in our patient population. By the end of June, 100% of the residents had positive serology for COVID-19. Although clinical trials are needed to determine the efficacy of both drugs in the treatment of COVID-19, this analysis suggests that primary care diagnosis and treatment with antihistamines, plus azithromycin in selected cases, may treat COVID-19 and prevent progression to severe disease in elderly patients.

Sources:

Antihistamines and azithromycin as a treatment for COVID-19 on primary health care – A retrospective observational study in elderly patients, National Institutes of Health, 2021 Apr; 67: 101989. Published online 2021 Jan 16.

Once Upon A Time…, 2021-09-24 05:03 by Karl Denninger in Covid-19 , 386 references 

What did these few nursing homes did:

  • 1. Early start of treatment, regardless of the severity of patient symptoms.
    • – Antihistamines every 12 h: dexchlorpheniramine 2 mg, cetirizine 10 mg or loratadine 10 mg.
    • – Azithromycin 500 mg orally every 24 h for 3 days if there is rapid improvement, and for 6 days if the duration of symptoms is prolonged.
    • – If pain or fever, acetaminophen 650 mg/6–8 h.
    • – Nasal washing and gargling with sodium bicarbonate water (half a glass of warm water with half a teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate).
  • 2. Patients with mild or recent-onset symptoms (cough, fever, general malaise, anosmia, polymyalgia):
    • – Antihistamines + Azithromycin (see mild treatment management)
    • – Levofloxacin 500 mg/12 h, up to 14 days of antibiotic treatment from diagnosis.
    • – Mepifilin solution, 50 mg/8 h as a bronchodilator, until subjective improvement. Patients with previous lung disease (asthma or COPD) used their usual bronchodilators.
    • – If the patient experienced increased breathing difficulty, prednisone 1 mg/kg/day divided into two doses until clinical improvement, and then it was slowly tapered down.
  • 3. If symptoms of severity (dyspnea, breathing difficulty, mild or moderate chest pain, with SpO2 >80%, heart rate <100 beats per minute at any time of the process).
  • 4. Prophylactic treatment for close contacts, including all asymptomatic residents:
    • – Antihistamines at the same dose as symptomatic patients.

Cetrizine is otherwise known as Zyrtec.  Loratadine is otherwise known as Claritin.  Dexchlorpheniramine is not often-used in the US anymore, but it used to be.  The other two core drugs were Azithromycin and Levofloxacin, both common antibiotics with the first being the infamous “Zpak” from the HCQ+Zinc+Zpak combination that a fraudulent study was used to discredit.

Both of the first two antihistamines are available over the counter in most nations including the United States.  The dosing they used is twice that on the label.  The two antibiotics are both available anywhere for little money.

RESULTS

Before they started treating people three residents died.  The entire group of them had the common maladies of old age — hypertension, diabetes, COPD, cardiovascular disease.  Most were using a huge range of existing drugs for their conditions (5 or more.)  

As soon as they started treating people the following happened:

All of our patients evolved satisfactorily and were recovered at the beginning of June. No adverse effects were recorded in any patient and no one required hospital admission. At the end of June, 100% of the residents and almost half of the workers had positive serology for COVID-19, most of them with past infection.

Not one adverse event occurred among these residents and staff and no hospitalizations were necessary either.

In pooled data 28% of the residents in similar nursing homes over the same time period died.  In these two, once they started treating with cheap drugs, leading with those available over the counter in the US, ZERO — I repeat — ZERO had a bad reaction to the protocol, ZERO died and ZERO were admitted to a hospital for treatment.

ZERO.

It was one hundred percent effective.

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Vitamins? https://worldview.dhw6358.com/vitamins-2/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/vitamins-2/#respond Sat, 18 Sep 2021 13:14:55 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10794 The Effects of Vitamin D and COVID-Related Outcomes

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Treatments? https://worldview.dhw6358.com/treatments/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/treatments/#respond Sat, 18 Sep 2021 13:13:37 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10792 PROPHYLAXIS & EARLY OUTPATIENT TREATMENT PROTOCOL FOR COVID-19 as recommended by Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance:

FLCCC-I-MASK-Protocol-v4-2020-11-22-1

Ivermectin

Alternative Treatments others have tried with reported success:

  • “Have your doctor write a prescription for Azelastine nasal spray. In a drug repurposing study at Univ. of Florida it was found to kill the Covid virus in vitro in nasal cell cultures at a dilution 20% of the normal dose. Its a potent anti inflammatory and interleukin 6 inhibitor. I did a science project in my house. I unknowingly got Covid but my wife and parents were on Azelastine for atopic rhinitis. None of them got sick. And my wife is antibody negative. There are no side effects.”
  • Existing antihistamine drugs show effectiveness against COVID-19 virus in cell testing
    • Hydroxyzine, azelastine & Benadryl … work by either disrupting the viruss interactions with ACE2 or by binding with another protein that may interfere with viral replication.
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MASKS https://worldview.dhw6358.com/masks/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/masks/#respond Sat, 18 Sep 2021 13:11:39 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10790
  • Government Advisor Admits Masks Are Just “Comfort Blankets” That Do Virtually Nothing, July 21, 2021
    “But now it is entrenched, and we are entrenching bad behaviour.”
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    Ivermectin https://worldview.dhw6358.com/ivermectin/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/ivermectin/#respond Wed, 15 Sep 2021 03:12:24 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10690 https://ivmmeta.com/

    Ivermectin ‘Safe’ and ‘Effective’ for Treating Omicron: Japanese Company By Naveen Athrappully January 31, 2022

    Possible natural alternative or supplement to Ivermectin: Sweet wormwood, also known as Artemisia annua

    THE RESULTS OF IVERMECTIN TREATMENT IN INDIA

    The Undeniable Ivermectin Miracle in India’s 240m Populated Largest State, Uttar Pradesh – Horowitz By NewsRescue -September 15, 2021
    India’s Ivermectin Blackout: The Secret Revealed, Authored by Justus R, Hope via TheDesertReview.com

    RESEARCH STUDIES & TESTIMONY BY DOCTORS

    International Ivermectin Report Of 64 Studies Shows 86% Success As Prophylaxis And 67% Success In Early Treatment
    (The results mirror the over 290 studies on hydroxychloroquine that have been reported over the past year.)

    US SENATE HEARING – “IVERMECTIN IS 100% CURE FOR COVID-19” DR. PIERRE KORY (video of testimony)

    Ivermectin is on the  WHO Model List of Essential Medicines – Wikipedia

    “Follow the science” on Ivermectin:

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3043740/

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8417612/

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18037274/

    THE IVERMECTIN STORY: https://rumble.com/vm5138-the-ivermectin-story.html

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    Various Preventative Covid Therapies which have been suggested by others. https://worldview.dhw6358.com/various-preventative-covid-therapies/ https://worldview.dhw6358.com/various-preventative-covid-therapies/#respond Wed, 15 Sep 2021 03:05:31 +0000 https://worldview.dhw6358.com/?p=10687

    Vitamin D3 4000iu, vitamin C 1000mg, 500mg of quercetin, 40mg of zinc, with a quality multiple DAILY, and melatonin at night. Will absolutely defeat/protect you from the covaids, but they MUST be taken daily.

    Zero Hedge Commentor JD59 on 4/2021, 7:13:22 PM (Edited)

    I had CV19 (Delta) and put me in the hospital for 5 days. They put me on Remdesivir and released me without testing me. The wife took me to get tested and I was till positive (still felt bad too). Jumped on Ivermectin and was clear of CV19 after 2nd day of treatment. Continued protocol for a total of 5 days. I used 0.6mg/kg on days 1 and 2, and 0.4mg/kg on days 3, 4, and 5. Also took Zinc, Vit-D, Vit-C, Aspirin, PepCid, and Quercetin (pet FLCCC). 

    Took Ivermectin before going to hospital, but at 0.2mg/kg for 5 days. Felt great and thought I was clear. CV19 came back after 3days. I should have gotten tested. FLCCC Protocol changed for Delta on September 24th to double minimum Ivermectin dosage. I wasn’t aware. However my wife also had CV19, during same time period, and she cleared it by taking 0.4mg/kg. The FLCCC Protocol from April/May was 0.2-to-0.4mg/kg. I took the minimum… she took the maximum. The maximum turned out to be the minimum for the Delta variant (updated Sept 24th)  My mistake for not checking FLCCC for updates,  which they state you should do.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/navy-shipbuilder-backpedals-vaccine-mandate-after-flood-employees-threaten-quit comment by That user name is already taken, November 20, 2021

    Zelenko Covid-19 Treatment Protocol, 0420

    1. Any patient with shortness of breath regardless of age is treated.
    2. Any patient in the high-risk category even with just mild symptoms is treated.
    3. Young, healthy and low risk patients even with symptoms are not treated (unless their circumstances change and they fall into category 1 or 2).

    Out-patient treatment regimen is as follows:

    1. Hydroxychloroquine 200mg twice a day for 5 days
    2. Azithromycin 500mg once a day for 5 days
    3. Zinc sulfate 220mg once a day for 5 days
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