What's amazing is that in going with denial, this guarantees the worst possible outcomes. Essentially medicine and governments are complicit in making every possible decision at every possible opportunity to make the problem the absolute possible worst while at the same time doing everything they can to dismiss and bury it entirely. Not a damn spine in sight out of health care, countering this obviously insane plan, it's deliberate complicity. Borne out of incompetence, but still.The UK government have decided on a script and all the usual suspects are following it.
Back to normal, nothing happening anymore, just an exaggeration.
The UK government have decided on a script and all the usual suspects are following it.
Back to normal, nothing happening anymore, just an exaggeration.
Some information from research in France on Long Covid. Nothing ground-breaking but it aligns with early data, which is always useful. Lots of data and stats. More interest on neurological than is typical, which is very nice. Some discussion of ME, not bad overall. A national study, named COCOLATE, has been officially launched. The 20-40 peak is maintained, which is REALLY interesting considering it has been consistent for ME.
Article: https://www.lejdd.fr/Societe/Sante/...-sur-les-formes-longues-de-la-maladie-4011338.
Translation: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=auto&tl=en&u=https://www.lejdd.fr/Societe/Sante/covid-19-ce-que-lon-sait-sur-les-formes-longues-de-la-maladie-4011338.
Alternative URL from The Conversation: https://theconversation.com/covid-1...it-on-des-formes-longues-de-la-maladie-142929.
Thread:
Some emphasis that this is not psychological, which is unfortunately necessary. Not much awareness of dysautonomia.
Because if you don't study a problem does it even exist? You can certainly say it doesn't, or it would have been studied.Cocolate2 could not start due to lack of budget, Pr Salmon launched with @institutpasteur the persicot study that started to be able to study innate and adaptive immunity before everyone is vaccinated. A point will also be made after vaccination
I'm not at all sold on the BC007 thing, just from the assumption of how hard it is to find a treatment that works without understanding the pathology and how historically it never pans out for us, but apparently they did research some years ago with pwME and found the same (GPCR-AABS?) antibodies.Supposed success story treating long covid with a med called BC007, “directed against g-coupled antibodies”, developed by a group called BerlinCures. Anyone know anything about this? Being discussed on Twitter under hashtag #bc007.
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=de&tl=en&u=https://www.br.de/nachrichten/wissen/erlanger-aerzte-heilen-erstmals-einen-long-covid-patienten,Sc0sNcQ
https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=&sl=de&tl=en&u=https://www.nordbayern.de/region/durchbruch-in-erlangen-weltweit-erster-patient-mit-long-covid-syndrom-erfolgreich-geheilt-1.11188786?fbclid=IwAR2M87Bh7cjJK16hQnRSQ58sVrOrCRYZhPiqSElK5Dw8Z2q24xU0GCUVN2w
One of the founders apparently developed immunoadsorption as well:
https://berlincures.de/the-team/
“Dr. Johannes Müller is an accomplished physician, researcher, innovator and entrepreneur with over 20 years of clinical and executive leadership experience in biotechnology and medical device companies.
He pioneered the development of immunoadsorption, a process for purifying the blood of autoantibodies implicated in heart failure, and led the first clinical trial to evaluate the effectiveness of immunoadsorption as a heart failure treatment.
Today at Berlin Cures, Dr. Müller leads the development of BC007, a DNA aptamer compound designed to more efficiently achieve the same results as immunoadsorption by binding to autoantibodies and removing them to improve heart function and to reduce the need for heart transplantation.”
Patient advocate Vlad appeals to dr. John Campbell to talk about Long Covid and ME. Starts at 9.40
Auto-translate said:Half of them did not know that they had had corona, while half had had a mild illness 4-6 weeks earlier.
- None of those who developed MIS-C had severe corona, Kahn points out.
The youngest children are less than one year old, but the average age is nine. They have high fever, and may have swollen and red hands, patches on the body, stomach pain and vomiting. Ten-year-olds get most seriously ill.
- Internationally, the mortality rate is around 2 percent. We've had children who have been very sick and who have hovered between life and death, he says.
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
Auto-translate said:Serious condition
Usually, children do not get very sick from covid-19 and recover quickly. However, 2-6 weeks afterwards they may suffer from MIS-C. Children admitted to hospital with MIS-C are severely ill with high fever, abdominal pain, sometimes a rash on the body and breathing difficulties.
- They feel really bad and often need intensive care or intermediate care during the hospital stay," says Helena Elding Larsson, head of operations at the Paediatric Medicine Unit at Skåne University Hospital.
MIS-C is a serious condition, but the prognosis is good if the child gets to hospital in time and is treated with powerful anti-inflammatory drugs.
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
Auto-translate said:* MIS-C is an acronym for Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children.
* The disease is rare and can affect children of all ages. Most often, children become ill within 2-6 weeks of a covid infection.
* The condition involves severe inflammation of the body, with the child having a high fever and affecting one or more organs in the body.
* There are no specific risk groups for MIS-C; most of those affected have been healthy children.
* Children can also develop post-covid or PASC, Post-Acute Sequalae of SARS-COV-2 infection, after covid-19. The condition is distinct from MIS-C and can be described as a prolonged infection with diffuse symptoms such as fever, fatigue, headache or sleep disturbances. There are no statistics on the number of children affected.
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDSioe4b68E
Just adding a few quotes from the article.This just came up in my news feed:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-9775925/Can-long-Covid-cured-monthly-dose-vaccine.html
Dr David Strain (AfME's new medical adviser) is planning a trial to determine if repeated vaccination alleviates the symptoms of long COVID.
Dr. Rehan Mustafa, a respiratory medicine consultant running a long Covid Clinic says patients with swollen joints should be treated with anti-inflammatory drugs and those with brain fog may need to see a psychiatrist. He further says that the approach used in long Covid clinics already has a positive impact and that "treating long Covid is about holding the patient's hand as they slowly move back towards full health".Quotes:
Dr Stain said: 'The plan would be to recruit patients whose symptoms are so severe their lives are severely limited by the condition. Those, for example, who can't go to work or pack their child's lunch in the morning because they feel so fatigued.
'We would offer them the jab at a long Covid clinic and they'd return for another the following month.
'The jabs cost roughly £15 a dose, and if it can get hundreds of thousands of Britons back to normality then it would be a very cost-effective treatment.'
The trial will be the first time in the world a Covid-19 vaccine will be used for any purpose other than protecting people against the virus itself.
At a time when vaccines are in short supply, it is expected to raise ethical questions.
But Dr Strain is clear the vaccines being used will not have been taken out of the supply chain. Instead, manufacturers have offered to provide 'outdated' jabs.
He said: 'Right now all the manufacturers are designing their second-generation vaccine. These will be designed to combat the Delta [Indian] variant, as well as the South Africa variant, which many worry is highly resistant to current jabs.
....
Another popular theory is that the virus destabilises the immune system – some studies suggest that Covid can affect the mitochondria, the power-house within cells which supplies them with energy.
Experts say this can cause the immune system to malfunction and attack healthy cells.
Similar mitochondrial dysfunction has been observed in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, which shares many symptoms with long Covid.
Dr Strain believes this is the most likely theory, and argues the vaccines are, even temporarily, shutting off this overactive immune response.
He said: 'It's possible that, by focusing the immune system on the act of developing Covid antibodies, it can reset the cells which are misfiring. It's akin to turning a faulty computer off at the plug and restarting it.'