Ivermectin is undergoing trials. First results indicate that it is harmless in human doses but harmful if animal variants are used. There is also initial evidence to suggest that it is useless.
Go to any Chemist (US drug store) and there will be a wall or three devoted to vitamins and minerals. One or two have been researched to demonstrate their efficacy. In Australia, they all have a declaration that they are only to overcome vitamin deficiencies. Of course, that that is fine print that is swamped by exaggerated claims. One or two manufacturers have been fined for making false claims. So they are more inclined to include phrases such as "may help" instead of snake oil type declarations that were commonplace.
People are used to taking vitamins, in spite of there being little evidence that they actually do any good for the average person. When someone starts spouting the virtues of Acacia berries, Cranberry juice and such, there is always a large number of people who swallow the baseless claims. Yes, terrible pun I know.
I was advised by my Urologist to drink Cranberry juice. It's expensive. It does not taste that good. And it did absolutely nothing to help. The latest research indicates that Cranberry juice has no practical protection against UTI's. I can confirm that experientially. It should work in theory. it does not in practice.
Ivermectin has yet to complete clinical trials. Initial research and anecdotal evidence suggests that it is useless against COVID or COVID's effects on the human body.
Go to any Chemist (US drug store) and there will be a wall or three devoted to vitamins and minerals. One or two have been researched to demonstrate their efficacy. In Australia, they all have a declaration that they are only to overcome vitamin deficiencies. Of course, that that is fine print that is swamped by exaggerated claims. One or two manufacturers have been fined for making false claims. So they are more inclined to include phrases such as "may help" instead of snake oil type declarations that were commonplace.
People are used to taking vitamins, in spite of there being little evidence that they actually do any good for the average person. When someone starts spouting the virtues of Acacia berries, Cranberry juice and such, there is always a large number of people who swallow the baseless claims. Yes, terrible pun I know.
I was advised by my Urologist to drink Cranberry juice. It's expensive. It does not taste that good. And it did absolutely nothing to help. The latest research indicates that Cranberry juice has no practical protection against UTI's. I can confirm that experientially. It should work in theory. it does not in practice.
Ivermectin has yet to complete clinical trials. Initial research and anecdotal evidence suggests that it is useless against COVID or COVID's effects on the human body.
It's redundant to even mention that. Every medication can be lethal or cause problems if given in massive doses.
That is why all prescription drugs come with dosage instructions for children & adults.
Even vitamans & minerals can cause health problems if taken in huge doses.
Avoiding Ivermectin which has been used to treat humans for years while rushing to take a new,
experimental vaccine is irrational.
That vitamins are good for people is not a baseless claim.
The human body needs nourishment to fight illness & God has provided that.
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