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Traditional Catholic Faith => Health and Nutrition => Topic started by: Mark 79 on September 21, 2021, 09:59:46 AM

Title: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 21, 2021, 09:59:46 AM
Deniers and Ravers are welcome to their own threads, hundreds of them. 

I am attaching the AAPS home treatment guide for the use of those who choose to use it. The AAPS (American Association of Physicians & Surgeons) was organized to oppose the hegemony of the Communist AMA.

I will ignore any and all comments, videos, insults, argumentation from Deniers and Ravers—though not for a nanosecond do I imagine the deniers will desist. "Deniers gonna deny." "Ravers gonna rave."

That is all.

"Mark 7:9"

(https://judaism.is/images/conspiracy%20theories%20obvious.jpg?crc=3827200054)

Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Last Tradhican on September 21, 2021, 10:36:12 AM
No link, am I missing something? 
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Marion on September 21, 2021, 10:46:33 AM
No link, am I missing something?

See the attached docuмent.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Matthew on September 21, 2021, 10:49:01 AM
Thank you for this important resource.

Spike proteins, graphene poisoning, or a virus -- whatever it is, there are real and natural ways to treat it, which do NOT involve experimental gene therapy or untested "vaccines" that don't work.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: josefamenendez on September 21, 2021, 10:53:13 AM
Nor a raver or denier, but Dr Mccullough ,whom I like, is pushing monoclonal antibodies ( I suspect regeneron) which works very well, but is produced with fetal cells. How do we reconcile that?
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Last Tradhican on September 21, 2021, 11:04:29 AM
Nor a raver or denier, but Dr Mccullough ,whom I like, is pushing monoclonal antibodies ( I suspect regeneron) which works very well, but is produced with fetal cells. How do we reconcile that?
If I remember correctly, Regeneron causes serious kidney problems, while ivermectin has been proven for years to be safe.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 21, 2021, 11:18:13 AM
If you have difficulty downloading the file I attached in the Original Post, this link will take you to the AAPS page: https://aapsonline.org/covidpatientguide/ (https://aapsonline.org/covidpatientguide/)

"Safety" is a relative concept. "Risk/Benefit Ratio" is a calculation we make every day: "Should I drive to the grocery store? I might get killed in a car crash."

As I best understand the moral theology, it is forbidden to Catholics to use aborted tissue derivatives except as a last resort. Hence, early stage treatment with aborted tissue derivatives are forbidden, but as a patient declines to ICU levels and has failed alternatives, aborted tissue derivatives become a consideration.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: B from A on September 21, 2021, 12:48:54 PM
If I remember correctly, Regeneron causes serious kidney problems, 
I've heard this about Remdesivir.  Is it also the case with Regeneron?  
In any case, I'd stick with natural remedies & Ivermectin over drugs with any doubt about them. 


Remdesivir and Acute Renal Failure: A Potential Safety Signal From Disproportionality Analysis of the WHO Safety Database (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33340409/)
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: josefamenendez on September 21, 2021, 01:49:07 PM
Regeneron is a monoclonal antibody that uses fetal cells in its manufacture.
It works well- Trump supposedly took it.
Remdesivir (sp) is an antiviral  that causes severe acute kidney failure.

I wouldn't take either but the Regeneron I gather is in Dr McCullough's protocols posted
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: TKGS on September 21, 2021, 04:10:53 PM
Why does everyone recommend acetaminophen and never aspirin to reduce fever?  Acetaminophen usually does nothing for me, but aspirin reduces fever, reduces aches and pains, etc.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: B from A on September 21, 2021, 04:19:01 PM
Why does everyone recommend acetaminophen and never aspirin to reduce fever?  Acetaminophen usually does nothing for me, but aspirin reduces fever, reduces aches and pains, etc.

I don't know who does, but I don't recommend acetaminophen for anything.  If I were to resort to a drug for a fever (which I generally don't), I would take aspirin.  
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: TKGS on September 21, 2021, 04:21:46 PM
I don't know who does, but I don't recommend acetaminophen for anything.  If I were to resort to a drug for a fever (which I generally don't), I would take aspirin. 
Further into the pamphlet, aspirin is recommended, but for blood thinning properties.  
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 21, 2021, 07:23:45 PM
Why does everyone recommend acetaminophen and never aspirin to reduce fever?  Acetaminophen usually does nothing for me, but aspirin reduces fever, reduces aches and pains, etc.
Why? In children and teens, "Reye's Syndrome" has been linked to aspirin use. Not a problem for adults.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 21, 2021, 08:48:19 PM
Re: Regeneron

https://www.barnhardt.biz/2021/09/17/regeneron-monoclonal-antibody-therapy-is-made-of-murdered-children-confirmed/ (https://www.barnhardt.biz/2021/09/17/regeneron-monoclonal-antibody-therapy-is-made-of-murdered-children-confirmed/)

Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Seraphina on September 22, 2021, 12:02:25 AM
Reyes Syndrome?  The chances of getting it are ???  All I know is that when we got sick as kids, my mother gave us one, two, three, or four Bayer Children’s Aspirin, depending upon age and weight.  They were pinkish orange, orange flavored; Mom used to put them on a large spoon in which she’d dissolve them in water, the down the hatch.  When we hit about 12 or 13, we took adult aspirin.  
I still use aspirin for fever, body aches, joint pain, headache.  I’ve tried Tylenol and find it doesn’t work as well as aspirin.  Ibupfofen also works well. I’ve never tried naproxen sodium.   Some people take Tylenol because the other OTC pain relievers are said to irritate many people’s stomachs.  If I use these drugs, I have to be careful to read the inactive ingredients. I’ve been known to break out in hives and get wheezy from a petroleum based additive called polypropylene glycol, sometimes written, PEG.  I’m more apt to the kind billed as hypoallergenic, no dyes, flavorings added. 
I don’t recommend using OTC meds as a regular thing unless under an expert’s advice. In the past, I’ve gone to an osteopath who recommends plain aspirin except if you have digestive problems or are under age 12.  I’d try a naturopath, but they are not recognized in my state and therefore, you must pay out of pocket.  Mine are pretty much empty!  The only doctor I’ve been to of late is an ophthalmologist due to an eye injury.  I have to return in November for a check up.  He said to use Tylenol if it was painful, but I used aspirin.  
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 22, 2021, 02:39:36 AM
Reyes Syndrome?  The chances of getting it are ???  All I know is that when we got sick as kids, my mother gave us one, two, three, or four Bayer Children’s Aspirin, depending upon age and weight.  They were pinkish orange, orange flavored; Mom used to put them on a large spoon in which she’d dissolve them in water, the down the hatch.  When we hit about 12 or 13, we took adult aspirin. …
Small chance, but some of those moms ended up with dead or brain-damaged kids, a preventable outcome simply by using acetaminophen without exceeding recommended doses.

Being risk averse I have relied upon acetaminophen in our children and aspirin for our adults.

YMMV • your kids, your call.
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: Mark 79 on September 22, 2021, 02:42:32 AM
I have done much investigation regarding COVID VACCINE EXEMPTIONS.

Anyone interested is welcome to visit my NEWS web page: http://judaism.is/news.html (http://judaism.is/news.html) 
Title: Re: AAPS self-treatment guide for COVID
Post by: TKGS on September 22, 2021, 06:22:57 PM
Reyes Syndrome?  The chances of getting it are ???  All I know is that when we got sick as kids, my mother gave us one, two, three, or four Bayer Children’s Aspirin, depending upon age and weight.  They were pinkish orange, orange flavored; Mom used to put them on a large spoon in which she’d dissolve them in water, the down the hatch.  When we hit about 12 or 13, we took adult aspirin. 
I still use aspirin for fever, body aches, joint pain, headache.  I’ve tried Tylenol and find it doesn’t work as well as aspirin.  Ibupfofen also works well. I’ve never tried naproxen sodium.  Some people take Tylenol because the other OTC pain relievers are said to irritate many people’s stomachs.  If I use these drugs, I have to be careful to read the inactive ingredients. I’ve been known to break out in hives and get wheezy from a petroleum based additive called polypropylene glycol, sometimes written, PEG.  I’m more apt to the kind billed as hypoallergenic, no dyes, flavorings added.
I don’t recommend using OTC meds as a regular thing unless under an expert’s advice. In the past, I’ve gone to an osteopath who recommends plain aspirin except if you have digestive problems or are under age 12.  I’d try a naturopath, but they are not recognized in my state and therefore, you must pay out of pocket.  Mine are pretty much empty!  The only doctor I’ve been to of late is an ophthalmologist due to an eye injury.  I have to return in November for a check up.  He said to use Tylenol if it was painful, but I used aspirin. 
You were lucky.  You got the children's aspirin.  My mother dissolved an aspirin (or half an aspirin) in a teaspoon and fed it to us.  Later, after Mary Poppins, she started adding a little sugar, which really did make the medicine go down!