roger hao wrote:You would have to be suffering from sensory deprivation to not see
or hear the buzz about ivermectin.
Ivermectin supporters are claiming greed as the reason for suppression.
Bill needs that next billion - right?
Who needs a 90 day vaccine if there is a good cheap therapy?
India reported a global record of more than 314,000 new infections in a single day on Thursday, and its dramatic spike in new infections shows no signs of slowing down.
The past seven days has consistently brought more than 200,000 new daily infections, raising the total number of cases to more than 16 million. It's the fastest pace of spreading infections and the highest daily increase in coronavirus cases the world has seen yet, and it's pushing India further into a deepening and deadly healthcare crisis.
Let's put India's second wave in context: India's rolling seven-day average is currently more than 265,000. That's nearly three times what it was this time in February.
New cases have seen a steep increase since January, which is partly due to lockdowns being lifted, state elections, religious festivals, a new variant of COVID-19, as well as its massive 1.4 billion population.
Like in most countries, the pandemic in Brazil hit the elderly and immuno-compromised first and hardest. But in the past couple of months, the nation that has stood out as nearly a worst-case-scenario for caseloads, deaths and public policy, has shown where the global plague may be headed: for the young.
In March, 3,405 Brazilians aged 30 to 39 died from Covid, almost four times the number in January. Among those in their 40s, there were about 7,170 fatalities, up from 1,840, and for those 20-29, deaths jumped to 880 from 245. Those under 59 now account for more than a third of Covid deaths in Brazil, according to research firm Lagom Data. As the elderly get vaccinated, their deaths have fallen by half.
There are many causes for the alarming shift but one appears to be that the young have trouble accepting they are at risk.
“Because they’re young and the virus first infected the elderly population, they don’t believe or don’t want to believe that it can be serious,” said Dr. Suzana Morais, a cardiologist in Rio de Janeiro. “I’ve seen many young patients who are surprised. Others are aware but take risks.”
With it we can make the great reset smoothly
I had personal success with these things.
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