PAXLOVID - How is it still going on? MORE Pfishy Pfarma Pfraud for Pfrofit from Pfizer
Paxlovid is NOT the way to go. Just taking Vitamin D would be better, in the words of one expert doctor I know who’s treated many hundreds of COVID patients.
BS”D
⚠️PAXLOVID- YAY OR NAY?
If you know anyone who is in danger of taking Paxlovid, please tell them: STAY AWAY!
I updated this article and I’m reposting it, because so many people are being given Paxlovid, and have no clue of the dangers involved.
Here are some informative articles and recordings about the problems with Paxlovid. In summary:
1) Paxlovid has only has ONE of the TWENTY mechanisms of action of ivermectin, so it’s much less effective.
2) Paxlovid has a BLACK BOX (danger) warning on it because one of the components is Ritonavir, a dangerous HIV drug.
3) Paxlovid often causes a rebound of covid, with the patient much sicker than before, for a prolonged time.
4) Paxlovid can have extremely dangerous interactions with other common drugs that patients may be on.
5) Paxlovid can cause deadly blood clots when taken by patients who are taking certain medications.
6) Paxlovid can be dangerous for people with impaired kidney function.
Plus, we don’t know what dangerous mutations Paxlovid will create.
(See articles below for sources for the above statements.)
Please see this article for a list of the most dangerous drug interactions with Paxlovid:
Quote from Igor’s Newsletter below:
“Mind you, Paxlovid is not a little harmless vitamin pill. It is a repackaged HIV/AIDS medication blocking certain liver functions, combined with a radically novel protease inhibitor affecting intricate intracellular processes.”
There are many, many reports of people taking Paxlovid at first improving, and then relapsing with covid symptoms again several days later, and even infecting others during their relapse. THIS ISN’T NORMAL.
But it’s a great cash cow for Pfizer!
One of the red flags about trusting government and Pharma here is that pharmacists are allowed to prescribe (and dispense) Paxlovid. I never heard of that exception to the law for any other drug, no matter how safe and routine. What’s frightening is that Paxlovid has so many possible dangerous interactions with other drugs, that you really would not want someone prescribing it on the fly.
Another anomaly is that Pfizer excluded vaccinated people from the Paxlovid trial - but then, of course, turned around and marketed the drug to them. How does Pfizer know about the safety and efficacy of the drug in covid-vaccinated individuals?
Thirdly, Pfizer did not test Paxlovid in kids, but the FDA approved it for kids anyway!
Please try to make sure your loved one gets ivermectin and the rest of the effective treatment protocol instead (as opposed to just doing nothing!)
In case anyone is ill, G-d forbid, I want to give you the contact for a wonderful PA I have referred many people to, who will prescribe effective treatment by Telehealth. She’s treated many hundreds of people successfully since the start of covid, including a large number of elderly and high risk patients. (I don’t get paid to refer patients to her, but I’m thrilled to help people get proper care.)
Machla Lopian, PA 734-855-5371
Of course, there are many other qualified providers as well. Be sure you are cared for by someone who knows the correct dose of ivermectin to prescribe (it’s often given in too low a dose by uneducated providers.)
Ivermectin needs to be dosed by weight, and a typical dose is usually 0.4 mg/kg/day.
The FLCCC has excellent treatment protocols. https://covid19criticalcare.com/treatment-protocols/
Make sure your provider gives you a complete drug/vitamin protocol, not just one or two pieces of it.
More sources about the dangers of Paxlovid:
Link below:
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/nih-relapse-pfizers-covid-antiviral-pill-paxlovid/
Excerpts from The Blaze:
We already know that every drug the FDA has approved so far for inpatient treatment has an FDA “black box warning” for serious adverse events. At present, the only approved drugs in-patient are remdesivir, baricitinib, and tofacitinib. None of them have demonstrated any efficacy over a year of their use, and remdesivir is known to cause liver toxicity and renal failure. Baricitinib (brand name Olumiant) has an FDA black box warning for blood clots, of all things! Tofacitinib (brand name Xeljanz) has a black box warning for “serious infections and malignancy.” Now, let me introduce you to the first candidates for outpatient treatment: Merck’s molnupiravir (brand name Lagevrio) and Pfizer’s Paxlovid.
Unlike Merck’s drug, which has a known dangerous mechanism of action as a nucleotide analogue, Paxlovid is more of a defensive drug as a 3CL protease inhibitor. Dr. Ryan Cole, a clinical and anatomic pathologist who has studied the replication process of SARS-CoV-2 and its treatments in more depth than almost anyone on the planet, explains the mechanism as follows:
When COVID replicates inside our cells, part of the process is formation of a long string of amino acids within our cell’s ribosome (hijacked by the virus to use as a protein manufacturing site), forming a chain of proteins called a polyprotein. In order for the proteins to form the parts of the virus, this chain must be clipped and broken down into the viral protein parts. An enzyme called a protease does this cutting and clipping. Paxlovid is a protease inhibitor, meaning it binds to this enzyme “scissors” and keeps the cutting from happening, so the virus cannot reassemble.
Sounds terrific, right?
Here’s the problem. Do you know what else is also the most effective protease inhibitor on the market? Ivermectin. And it also has at least 19 other mechanisms of action, which include anti-coagulant (inhibits CD147 receptor binding) and anti-inflammatory (decreases IL-6 and other inflammatory cytokines) modes of action. Paxlovid has none of these mechanisms. So why would we rely on an expensive drug with one of ivermectin’s 20 mechanisms of action – yes, 20 – that does not have an established safety profile when we can use an off-patent drug with the safest profile imaginable and mechanisms that work even in advanced stages? Also, Cole explains that because Paxlovid only has one mechanism of action, “viruses can eventually mutate around this mechanism.” Dr. John Campbell offers a superb presentation on the similarities and differences, showing why ivermectin is superior to Paxlovid.
Consider that earlier this year, a study in Nature of dozens of potential protease inhibitors against SARS-CoV-2 found ivermectin to be the only one to fully bind the 3LC enzyme. Out of 13 off-target drugs tested, “only ivermectin completely blocked (>80%) the 3CLpro activity at 50 µM concentration.”
So now that we are championing this mode of action, why wouldn’t we exalt the cheaper, more established medicine that is also an anti-coagulant and anti-inflammatory and that has shown the ability to turn around even some patients on ventilators? At best, Paxlovid would likely only work during the first three days of onset of symptoms, which is how the trial was conducted.
For full article, here is the source link:
Additional informative articles about the problems with Paxlovid:
https://greatgameindia.com/pfizer-covid-drug-paxlovid/
Recording of December 30 event with Dr. Cole: In this zoom event for our community, COVID treatment expert Dr. Ryan Cole MD, (Board Certified Pathologist, with training in immunology and virology), discussed effective COVID treatments and explained why Paxlovid is a bad idea.
☝🏼Need to enter Passcode: UEy$U*7#
https://odysee.com/@FrontlineCovid19CriticalCareAlliance:c/weekly_webinar_May11:0
Disclaimer: I’m not a doctor, and I simply share the information I have learned from research and conversations with experts (the type of experts who truly care, are brave enough to speak against the narrative, and aren’t in this for money.)
Sharing.
And Bibi is proud of turning Israel into Pfizrael. I still can't decide whether he was duped like Trump or if he was bribed/coerced.