nordicwarrior
Banned
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Couple points:
In the U.S. our Center for Disease Control came out either today or yesterday with a statement saying they had been over-emphasizing the significance of viral transfer through surface contact. Knew it! I was going to make a comment on this thread about this very subject but I didn't want to get dinged for "non-scientific" contribution. In fact I had even finished typing it out but did not post because I didn't want to raise a ruckus. I won't do that again. My observational skills are solid enough that I will put them out in the future... they have value and might even help people.
Covid 19 is primarily a respiratory disease and the most common vector of transfer will be shown to be shared breathing areas. It's common sense. I encourage everyone to continue to wash hands, spray bottom of shoes, spritz groceries when bringing them into the house... BUT this is a breathing thing. What do airplanes, passenger ships, jails, old folks homes have in common?-- SHARED AIR.
Wish we would have been told this minor tidbit (sarcasm) earlier by the authorities. I guess I can't blame them because releasing such grim news initially could have caused real panic, on a global scale even-- and this obviously would be more deadly than the virus. Herds of people moving out of their apartment buildings in Chicago, London, Moscow, etc.-- in February-- and then sleeping in a van... down by the river... not good.
Anyway, we all know now. For weeks if not months I have been opening every door and uncovering all through building portals at work (I'm usually one of the first on site) because I figured intuitively fresh air circulation would be kryptonite to Corona. To date, we've had no Covid spread through our project. Of note though is that project Superintendent also provided 10 gallons of industrial sanitizer/hand soap (73% alcohol ) for all to use and this probably helped too.
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Secondly, I heard a young doctor being interviewed on the radio when I was flipping through the channels. I will try to include his name on an edit, but his insight is brilliant so I will go with what I have now... he is on the front lines and he and his teams are starting to have huge success because they realized you have to separate Covid the disease from the body's natural response.
Mystery doctor said the first week of a patient's stay is all about helping the patient breath successfully. Focus on the lungs. get them past crucial infection. However, during the second week of the patient's fight... all gears must switches over to knocking down patient's immune system, because invariable it will be out -of -whack. He said it is completely counter-intuitive, but week two is spent shutting down immune system because of the resulting cytokine storm left behind by the initial viral hordes.
As soon as I heard this, it instantly made sense. This is why CQ would be helpful to patients who take it EARLY. CQ is used in Lupus because Lupus is basically an auto-immunity thing... body attacking itself... and CQ (when paired with zinc) for whatever reason knocks down immune system glitches. Especially helps with inflammation. Also, when someone has Lupus, they are looking at talking 400 mg. of CQ a day, then when Lupus is stable (usually after a number of years) it can drop to 200 mg. a day. With Covid, the first day on CQ is a "Loading Day" and you take 60 mg. After that, the typical dose drops to 40 mg. a day. This is a small fraction of what someone on Lupus takes.
In the U.S. our Center for Disease Control came out either today or yesterday with a statement saying they had been over-emphasizing the significance of viral transfer through surface contact. Knew it! I was going to make a comment on this thread about this very subject but I didn't want to get dinged for "non-scientific" contribution. In fact I had even finished typing it out but did not post because I didn't want to raise a ruckus. I won't do that again. My observational skills are solid enough that I will put them out in the future... they have value and might even help people.
Covid 19 is primarily a respiratory disease and the most common vector of transfer will be shown to be shared breathing areas. It's common sense. I encourage everyone to continue to wash hands, spray bottom of shoes, spritz groceries when bringing them into the house... BUT this is a breathing thing. What do airplanes, passenger ships, jails, old folks homes have in common?-- SHARED AIR.
Wish we would have been told this minor tidbit (sarcasm) earlier by the authorities. I guess I can't blame them because releasing such grim news initially could have caused real panic, on a global scale even-- and this obviously would be more deadly than the virus. Herds of people moving out of their apartment buildings in Chicago, London, Moscow, etc.-- in February-- and then sleeping in a van... down by the river... not good.
Anyway, we all know now. For weeks if not months I have been opening every door and uncovering all through building portals at work (I'm usually one of the first on site) because I figured intuitively fresh air circulation would be kryptonite to Corona. To date, we've had no Covid spread through our project. Of note though is that project Superintendent also provided 10 gallons of industrial sanitizer/hand soap (73% alcohol ) for all to use and this probably helped too.
-----------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------
Secondly, I heard a young doctor being interviewed on the radio when I was flipping through the channels. I will try to include his name on an edit, but his insight is brilliant so I will go with what I have now... he is on the front lines and he and his teams are starting to have huge success because they realized you have to separate Covid the disease from the body's natural response.
Mystery doctor said the first week of a patient's stay is all about helping the patient breath successfully. Focus on the lungs. get them past crucial infection. However, during the second week of the patient's fight... all gears must switches over to knocking down patient's immune system, because invariable it will be out -of -whack. He said it is completely counter-intuitive, but week two is spent shutting down immune system because of the resulting cytokine storm left behind by the initial viral hordes.
As soon as I heard this, it instantly made sense. This is why CQ would be helpful to patients who take it EARLY. CQ is used in Lupus because Lupus is basically an auto-immunity thing... body attacking itself... and CQ (when paired with zinc) for whatever reason knocks down immune system glitches. Especially helps with inflammation. Also, when someone has Lupus, they are looking at talking 400 mg. of CQ a day, then when Lupus is stable (usually after a number of years) it can drop to 200 mg. a day. With Covid, the first day on CQ is a "Loading Day" and you take 60 mg. After that, the typical dose drops to 40 mg. a day. This is a small fraction of what someone on Lupus takes.