For the dumb Ivermectin cultists

Two Oklahoma hospitals differ on doctor's claims over Ivermectin overdoses
https://okcfox.com/news/local/two-o...r-on-doctors-claims-over-ivermectin-overdoses

GROVE, Okla. (KOKH) — On Sunday, an Oklahoma doctor made a claim in a Rolling Stone article that Ivermectin overdoses are sending people to the hospital.

The article spread like wildfire Sunday and Monday on social media.

Now, two hospitals the doctor works inside of through a medical staffing agency have issued statements about the claims.

Integris admitted Jason McElyea, D.O., is an employee of an agency that staffs emergency departments through the United States. The statement said he has privileges at Integris Grove Hospital.

"There is a lot of media attention surrounding remarks reportedly made by Dr. McElyea. While we do not speak on his behalf, he has publicly said his comments were misconstrued and taken out of context," the statement from Integris went on to read.

Integris said they can confirm the hospital has seen a handful of Ivermectin patients in its emergency rooms, including at Integris Grove.

"And while our hospitals are not filled with people who have taken ivermectin," the statement reads, "such patients are adding to the congestion already caused by COVID-19 and other emergencies."

Another hospital, Northeastern Health System - Sequoyah, posted a statement from the administration on its website.

"Although Dr. Jason McElyea is not an employee of NHS Sequoyah, he is affiliated with a medical staffing group that provides coverage for our emergency room," the statement reads. "With that said, Dr. McElyea has not worked at our Sallisaw location in over 2 months."

The hospital system also said it had not treated any patients due to complications related to taking Ivermectin. The hospital has also not treated Ivermectin overdose patients.

"All patients who have visited our emergency room have received medical attention as appropriate. Our hospital has not had to turn away any patients seeking emergency care," the hospital's statement went on to read.

Ivermectin is a controversial drug that has not been approved by the FDA or CDC for use in treating COVID-19. Many have wiped out shelves at feed stores across the U.S. since it is a common, over-the-counter treatment for worms and parasites in cattle and horses.

Two court cases have come about over its use on COVID-19 patients.

On Monday, a judge in the Houston area ruled a hospital can treat a patient with the drug after first denying the family's request. The hospital has yet to give the man Ivermectin.

The same day, a judge in Ohio denied a woman's request to require a hospital to give her husband Ivermectin for his COVID-19 diagnosis.

I mean, I told you that a few weeks ago
 
The real dumbness with respect to using ivermectin is when it is intentionally used in lieu of a vaccine.

Taking all sorts of things might help with covid, to varying degrees, and for varying durations. Vitamin B might help. So might Vitamin D. And Zinc. All sorts of stuff might help a little.

The message should be to not opt for the less effective solutions in lieu of much more effective and safe options--vaccines.
 
Wait till they find out about the tracking chips we put in the horse paste.... genius move.

Well get ready for the I don't care cos I'm old, I don't care coz my psychiatrist said I should be sterilised anyway, I don't care because human women find me repellent and won't breed with me etc. etc.

Well knowledge of this could contribute to why in Peru the government was dosing rural indigenous people in huge numbers but avoided major white population centres like Lima entirely.
 
The real dumbness with respect to using ivermectin is when it is intentionally used in lieu of a vaccine.

Taking all sorts of things might help with covid, to varying degrees, and for varying durations. Vitamin B might help. So might Vitamin D. And Zinc. All sorts of stuff might help a little.

The message should be to not opt for the less effective solutions in lieu of much more effective and safe options--vaccines.

Vaccines and vitamin supplements are proactive healthcare sometimes known as preventive medicine.
  • Approved FDA therapeutic treatments are known as reactive healthcare.
Proactive Healthcare tends to be much cheaper and has minimum strain on the healthcare system in comparison to Reactive Healthcare.

Unhealthy societies have been targeted by Covid. I tend to view Covid as a way to cleanse out those that are a burden on society but I think it's not fair that children are now a target of Covid Delta Variant due to the decisions of their parents being unvaccinated...as in the parents or adults infecting the children.

wrbtrader
 
QAnon Is Harassing a Hospital Into Giving Bogus COVID ‘Cure’ Ivermectin
Veronica Wolski, who is known for boosting anti-vaccine and QAnon conspiracies from a bridge in Chicago, was hospitalized two weeks ago.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/bvz...pital-into-giving-bogus-covid-cure-ivermectin

Some of the most powerful QAnon influencers are urging their hundreds of thousands of followers to harass a Chicago hospital into treating an anti-vaccine activist with ivermectin.

Veronica Wolski, who’s known for boosting anti-vaccine and QAnon conspiracies from a bridge in Chicago, was hospitalized two weeks ago after contracting COVID-19. She is a patient at Amita Resurrection Hospital in Chicago, according to posts on her Telegram channel.

Wolski’s supporters claim that after two weeks she had convinced a doctor in the hospital to administer ivermectin, but she was then told that the hospital system would not allow any doctor to prescribe the drug to treat COVID-19 because regulatory agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have not approved it.

This did not sit well with Wolski and her followers, so Wolski’s friends launched a campaign to force the hospital authorities to relent.

The campaign, organized via her Telegram channel, which is now being run by her friends, said that Wolski “is being held as a medical hostage” and that her “advocatives” have been barred from the premises.

Wolski’s friends urged supporters to turn up on Tuesday night to protest in person. The campaign even suggested possible slogans to put on posters, including “Ivermectin Now,” “Feed Veronica” and “CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY.”

Disgraced former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who’s a central figures in the QAnon movement and has 285,000 followers on the messaging app, has boosted the campaign. Flynn had previously met Wolski, whom he called “a friend and patriot.”

But another QAnon influencer took things a step further.

Lin Wood, the pro-Trump lawyer who is one of the most prominent proponents of QAnon and who has a Telegram channel with 815,000 subscribers, urged his followers to follow his lead and harass the staff by calling the hospital directly.

“I called Amita Resurrection Hospital and spoke with a male care provider in ICU. I gave him Veronica’s name and stated that she had a legal right to try Ivermectin. He informed me that Ivermectin was not on the Amita protocol and Veronica would not receive it. When I tried to respond, he was rude, talked over me, and hung up on me,” Wood wrote on Telegram Tuesday evening.

Wood then urged his followers to “let your voices be heard,” calling the situation “medical tyranny. This is genocide. We cannot tolerate crimes against humanity.”

Wood then shared another post which provided the number for the hospital and told people to tell the hospital staff “what you think of communists who violate Nuremberg and tell them what’s coming for them.”

Numerous people in Wood’s channel, and in Wolski’s, reported that they had called the hospital, many of them complaining that the minute they mentioned the anti-vaxxer’s name, the staff at the hospital hung up on them.

“I called them. When I got a voice on the line I just said Veronica needs Ivermectin. Was immediately hung up on,” one Telegram user wrote. “Nuremberg trials will be needed soon for more crimes against humanity.”

Another woman in Wolski’s channel wrote: “I spoke to [the] receptionist and said I’m calling about Veronica Wol… (didn’t even get last name out) and she hung up on me.”

But some people did get through. “After speaking to the receptionist of that hospital and she was a wonderful woman that believes the same as we do, people are calling up and calling her all sorts of names,” a man called Des wrote.

A Telegram user called Pannada reported that a nurse she spoke to at the hospital said: “People are just calling all day and threatening them.”

The hospital did not immediately respond to VICE News’ request for comment about the situation.

Ivermectin is typically used as a dewormer in livestock animals, but it can also be prescribed in smaller doses to humans. There is no evidence to show that it effectively treats COVID-19, but conspiracy theorists and the anti-vaxx community glommed onto the drug after the publication of a study that seemed to support its effectiveness against COVID-19.

That study was subsequently pulled due to “serious problems with their raw data” as well as plagiarism.

The CDC recently issued a warning about the increased use by COVID-19 patients of veterinary formulations of ivermectin, as well as increased reports of resulting illnesses.

The agency cited a case of a man who suffered hallucinations, confusion, and tremors after he drank an injectable form of ivermectin intended for cattle. He was hospitalized for nine days.
 
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