HEALTH Florida Doctor: Families Sneak Ivermectin To Loved Ones In Hospitals With COVID-19, See Improvement

paul bunyan

Frostbite Falls, Minnesota
Reading Time: Depends on your comprehensions ;)

Did I not suggest this life saving strategy over a year ago??

Florida Doctor: Families Sneak Ivermectin To Loved Ones In Hospitals With COVID-19, See Improvement

Tyler Durden's Photo

by Tyler Durden
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2022 - 08:45 PM
Authored by Nanette Holt via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
A Florida doctor says families of loved ones hospitalized with COVID-19 are resorting to desperate measures when approved treatments have failed.
File photo: A package of ivermectin tablets. (Natasha Holt/The Epoch Times)
And when it’s not too late, some have seen tremendous success by sneaking medications prohibited by hospitals to patients, says Eduardo Balbona, an independent internist in Jacksonville.
He’s helped dozens of seriously ill patients recover using ivermectin and other drugs and supplements not officially approved in the treatment of COVID-19, he says.
Hospitals receive payments from the federal government for treating patients with COVID-19. But those payments are tied to their use of approved treatments only, as outlined in the CARES Act. When there’s nothing left to try under those protocols, families naturally research alternatives, Balbona says, often learning about treatments touted by independent physicians around the country.
Hoping to try anything that might work, families around the country have filed lawsuits asking judges to intervene.
In some cases, judges have ordered hospitals to allow the use of other treatments, such as ivermectin. Some of those seriously ill patients have recovered. In other cases, judges have sided with hospitals and declined the families’ requests to try.
Meanwhile, independent physicians like Balbona watch helplessly, feeling that when families ask, they should be allowed to try medications they believe can turn critically ill patients around. But independent doctors often have limited hospital privileges and may be banned from seeing their own patients in some hospitals.
That was the case recently for Balbona, who was contacted by a worried wife after she read in The Epoch Times about his involvement in another family’s lawsuit seeking to try his recommendations.
Based on what the woman told him, Balbona said he felt strongly her husband could recover if treated with the regimen he prescribes for seriously ill COVID-19 patients. The treatment protocol he follows, with slight modifications based on each patient’s needs, was developed by the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance.
“The husband was very ill,” Balbona said. “He’s in his 50s, a big strong guy. She called me desperate because they gave him remdesivir [in the hospital] and she made them stop it, and he started getting worse and worse. And his oxygen demand went up.
By the time she called Balbona for help, her husband needed 60 liters of oxygen per minute. That’s too high to manage at home, even with rented medical equipment, Balbona said.
“If you can get them down to 40 or 50 [liters per minute] you can do high-flow oxygen at that level,” Balbona told The Epoch Times. “That’s a lot of oxygen.”
He said he promised he’d try if her husband improved enough to go home. And then he’d take over managing his care. Meanwhile, he said, he gave her prescriptions, so she could collect the medications she’d need at home. That was on a Friday.
He learned later that she’d filled the prescriptions, took the medications to the hospital, and gave them to her husband. By Tuesday, the man was discharged and fully following the protocol Balbona prescribed. A few days later, he was off the oxygen. Now, he’s recovering, Balbona said. But they’re afraid to share their good news publicly.
A medical worker treats a non Covid-19 patient in the ICU ward at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, Massachusetts on Jan. 4, 2022. (JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images)
“The people who snuck in the ivermectin… they are scared to death,” Balbona said. “She is sure that the government is going to find out who she is” and possibly arrest her for giving medications not approved by the hospital.
He said she told him, “I did it. I knew it was wrong. I don’t know what the penalties are. What could they do to me?
And that’s the real crime, Balbona believes.
In New Hampshire, lawmakers now are considering legislation that would make the state the first in the country to make Ivermectin available as an over-the-counter medicine, and sanction it as a protected treatment for COVID-19. Similar bills in three other states have failed.
The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Leah Cushman (R) is a registered nurse, who told The Epoch Times, “I have absolutely no doubt lives will be saved if human grade ivermectin was available to COVID patients.”
Two doctors testified about her proposed bill, warning the legislation could lead to dangerous side effects for people who use the drug. But Cushman believes she’ll have the votes to keep the bill moving toward becoming law.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not approved the use of ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19, though the drug is used in humans to treat a variety of conditions.
An FDA web page warning against using ivermectin for COVID-19 also mentions that clinical trials investigating it as a treatment are ongoing.
The FDA has not responded to a Freedom of Information Act request (FOIA) asking for details about any reports of side effects related to the use of ivermectin — formulations for animals and humans — to treat COVID-19. The agency also has not responded to a FOIA request for details about clinical trials and when the drug could reach the stage when its use under the Right To Try Act could be allowed.
Studies about the safety and efficacy of using ivermectin in the treatment for COVID-19 have led to all or part of 22 countries approving its use. But in the United States, doctors who rely on payments from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services aren’t allowed to use it.
When Balbona heard about the proposed legislation, he immediately called two state senators, and two attorneys who are patients, suggesting that they propose similar legislation in Florida. Florida lawmakers currently are in session in Tallahassee through March 11.
“If we can get legislation to say, ‘Let the doctor do what he thinks is best,’ I think that would be wonderful,” Balbona said. “If New Hampshire can do this, why can’t we?”
Alice Giordano contributed to this report.
 

BUBBAHOTEPT

Veteran Member
And THEY just removed monoclonal antibody treatments. Of all the things to get rid of, that’s what they choose to ration and then restrict. Something everyone, even begrudgingly agreed worked. Omicron shows up in December and magically they found something that was a great therapeutic didn’t work for Omicron. But everything else keeps it’s EUA status, even the Pfizer shot…. :bhd:
 

bethshaya

God has a plan, Trust it!
So I have a question. What Big Pharma makes the "approved treatments" that they get paid for? It would be super lucrative to make people sick by getting paid to deliver the sickness via a vaccine, then also get paid to make them better, shutting out better treatments made by other manufacturers (or other sources all together).
 

JMG91

Veteran Member
The most terrifying thing of all is that, that wife is afraid of what authorities will do to her for helping cure her husband. I have so many thoughts in my head regarding what those authorities can do with their mandates, but I'll refrain, as it isn't very nice.
 

Chance

Veteran Member
I gave my mom a necessary drug when she was in the hospital after hip surgery. BP was up 203/92 and climbing. She called me and said they weren't treating her per the Mayo clinic protocol that we had explained in detail to the hospitalist on day one.

I told her nurse about the extra meds. (The hospitalist blew us off, we guess). They were pissed and called in some floor manager and she demanded I turn over my mom's personal blood pressure machine that she carries with her everywhere because of this condition. I told her no. And I told her I'd be giving her more meds if the BP didn't start dropping. I told her I just saved them a major lawsuit if my mom stroked out or died....she was so angry I thought they were going to have me removed from the room by force.

I stayed with my mom giving her more of the drug until her BP dropped. Next day I called a friend in QA at that hospital and told her about this..she said she would have done the same thing. Hospitalist called me, apologized and rewrote the order for the protocol for future problems. They could have killed my mom.

They tried to bully me. Not my first run in with nurses, doctors because of my mom. Probably won't be the last.

I've worked in hospitals for years. They aren't suppose to be concentration camps.

I'd have no problem taking in ivermectin and giving it to family/friend in hospital. And no remdesivir/vent. Heard that the 2nd dose of remdesivir lowers your survival to 25% .
 

marymonde

Veteran Member
I was listening to a man on a podcast who was taking ivermectin at home at the onset of covid, but his O2 sats went down, even though most of his original symptoms were gone. He went to the ER, and was admitted. Of course he was a bit freaked, and he admitted to his nurse had started a course of ivermectin at home. She asked him, do you have a back pack? He nodded. She said, you know, if someone you know brings a backpack for you here, no one will check it. He said, my son can. She replied, call him now. Son dropped off backpack, he got what was out of the backpack, next day his O2 sats were much improved. He was discharged. There’s probably more of this going on than we know. There ARE good nurses out there circumventing the will of the hospital death masters.
 

savurselvs

Veteran Member
So I have a question. What Big Pharma makes the "approved treatments" that they get paid for? It would be super lucrative to make people sick by getting paid to deliver the sickness via a vaccine, then also get paid to make them better, shutting out better treatments made by other manufacturers (or other sources all together).
The polytitions own lots of the stock of the phizer and moderna
 

Babs

Veteran Member
I gave my mom a necessary drug when she was in the hospital after hip surgery. BP was up 203/92 and climbing. She called me and said they weren't treating her per the Mayo clinic protocol that we had explained in detail to the hospitalist on day one.

I told her nurse about the extra meds. (The hospitalist blew us off, we guess). They were pissed and called in some floor manager and she demanded I turn over my mom's personal blood pressure machine that she carries with her everywhere because of this condition. I told her no. And I told her I'd be giving her more meds if the BP didn't start dropping. I told her I just saved them a major lawsuit if my mom stroked out or died....she was so angry I thought they were going to have me removed from the room by force.

I stayed with my mom giving her more of the drug until her BP dropped. Next day I called a friend in QA at that hospital and told her about this..she said she would have done the same thing. Hospitalist called me, apologized and rewrote the order for the protocol for future problems. They could have killed my mom.

They tried to bully me. Not my first run in with nurses, doctors because of my mom. Probably won't be the last.

I've worked in hospitals for years. They aren't suppose to be concentration camps.

I'd have no problem taking in ivermectin and giving it to family/friend in hospital. And no remdesivir/vent. Heard that the 2nd dose of remdesivir lowers your survival to 25% .

This is utterly disgusting! The nurses are supposed to be the PATIENT'S advocate, NOT the Corporate advocate!!
This is the FIRST thing one learns in nursing school!! You are to call out the doctors or anyone else that is
either giving the patient something that could be potentially harmful, or withholding something that could be
beneficial. The nurses are responsible for making recommendations to the doctors, for their patients.

Makes me wonder if your nurse was a traveling nurse, or just a really shitty human being.
 

meandk0610

Veteran Member
So I have a question. What Big Pharma makes the "approved treatments" that they get paid for? It would be super lucrative to make people sick by getting paid to deliver the sickness via a vaccine, then also get paid to make them better, shutting out better treatments made by other manufacturers (or other sources all together).
Make money making them sick via government-approved medicines, “treat” them using government-approved medicines, then use a government-approved medicine and procedure with a high probability of removing the patient from the government payment system (SS) while garnering a sweet bonus payment from the government.
*chef’s kiss*
 

DazedandConfused

Veteran Member
I know when I had cv had it not been for the horsey paste I would have been in the hospital. The two days that I didn't take it because I ran out My fever was 104. My friends found me two 50ml bottles of the 1% and got it too me. fever broke 8 hrs never to go that high again.
 
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summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
While I can't prove it, I'm almost sure the same happened to a family member of mine.

I know its easy to say, but I think it can't be stated enough, that people do everything they possibly can to stay out of hospitals. Your options of treatment go way down when you get there
It's just so insane to me! We have (HAD!) one of the most amazing medical systems in the world. And they've brought it back to the 17th century, where you only went to the hospital to die...

Summerthyme
 
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