Infection The rise of Candida auris, Spanning the Globe in a Climate of Secrecy

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DEADLY GERMS, LOST CURES

A Mysterious Infection, Spanning the Globe in a Climate of Secrecy
The rise of Candida auris embodies a serious and growing public health threat: drug-resistant germs.

By Matt Richtel and Andrew Jacobs - April 6, 2019

Last May, an elderly man was admitted to the Brooklyn branch of Mount Sinai Hospital for abdominal surgery. A blood test revealed that he was infected with a newly discovered germ as deadly as it was mysterious. Doctors swiftly isolated him in the intensive care unit.

The germ, a fungus called Candida auris, preys on people with weakened immune systems, and it is quietly spreading across the globe. Over the last five years, it has hit a neonatal unit in Venezuela, swept through a hospital in Spain, forced a prestigious British medical center to shut down its intensive care unit, and taken root in India, Pakistan and South Africa.

Recently C. auris reached New York, New Jersey and Illinois, leading the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to add it to a list of germs deemed “urgent threats.”

The man at Mount Sinai died after 90 days in the hospital, but C. auris did not. Tests showed it was everywhere in his room, so invasive that the hospital needed special cleaning equipment and had to rip out some of the ceiling and floor tiles to eradicate it.

“Everything was positive — the walls, the bed, the doors, the curtains, the phones, the sink, the whiteboard, the poles, the pump,” said Dr. Scott Lorin, the hospital’s president. “The mattress, the bed rails, the canister holes, the window shades, the ceiling, everything in the room was positive.”

C. auris is so tenacious, in part, because it is impervious to major antifungal medications, making it a new example of one of the world’s most intractable health threats: the rise of drug-resistant infections.

For decades, public health experts have warned that the overuse of antibiotics was reducing the effectiveness of drugs that have lengthened life spans by curing bacterial infections once commonly fatal. But lately, there has been an explosion of resistant fungi as well, adding a new and frightening dimension to a phenomenon that is undermining a pillar of modern medicine.

“It’s an enormous problem,” said Matthew Fisher, a professor of fungal epidemiology at Imperial College London, who was a co-author of a recent scientific review on the rise of resistant fungi. “We depend on being able to treat those patients with antifungals.”

Simply put, fungi, just like bacteria, are evolving defenses to survive modern medicines.

Yet even as world health leaders have pleaded for more restraint in prescribing antimicrobial drugs to combat bacteria and fungi — convening the United Nations General Assembly in 2016 to manage an emerging crisis — gluttonous overuse of them in hospitals, clinics and farming has continued.

Resistant germs are often called “superbugs,” but this is simplistic because they don’t typically kill everyone. Instead, they are most lethal to people with immature or compromised immune systems, including newborns and the elderly, smokers, diabetics and people with autoimmune disorders who take steroids that suppress the body’s defenses.

Scientists say that unless more effective new medicines are developed and unnecessary use of antimicrobial drugs is sharply curbed, risk will spread to healthier populations. A study the British government funded projects that if policies are not put in place to slow the rise of drug resistance, 10 million people could die worldwide of all such infections in 2050, eclipsing the eight million expected to die that year from cancer.

In the United States, two million people contract resistant infections annually, and 23,000 die from them, according to the official C.D.C. estimate. That number was based on 2010 figures; more recent estimates from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine put the death toll at 162,000. Worldwide fatalities from resistant infections are estimated at 700,000.

Antibiotics and antifungals are both essential to combat infections in people, but antibiotics are also used widely to prevent disease in farm animals, and antifungals are also applied to prevent agricultural plants from rotting. Some scientists cite evidence that rampant use of fungicides on crops is contributing to the surge in drug-resistant fungi infecting humans.

Yet as the problem grows, it is little understood by the public — in part because the very existence of resistant infections is often cloaked in secrecy.

With bacteria and fungi alike, hospitals and local governments are reluctant to disclose outbreaks for fear of being seen as infection hubs. Even the C.D.C., under its agreement with states, is not allowed to make public the location or name of hospitals involved in outbreaks. State governments have in many cases declined to publicly share information beyond acknowledging that they have had cases.

All the while, the germs are easily spread — carried on hands and equipment inside hospitals; ferried on meat and manure-fertilized vegetables from farms; transported across borders by travelers and on exports and imports; and transferred by patients from nursing home to hospital and back.

C. auris, which infected the man at Mount Sinai, is one of dozens of dangerous bacteria and fungi that have developed resistance.

Other prominent strains of the fungus Candida — one of the most common causes of bloodstream infections in hospitals — have not developed significant resistance to drugs, but more than 90 percent of C. auris infections are resistant to at least one drug, and 30 percent are resistant to two or more drugs, the C.D.C. said.

Dr. Lynn Sosa, Connecticut’s deputy state epidemiologist, said she now saw C. auris as “the top” threat among resistant infections. “It’s pretty much unbeatable and difficult to identify,” she said.

Nearly half of patients who contract C. auris die within 90 days
, according to the C.D.C. Yet the world’s experts have not nailed down where it came from in the first place.

“It is a creature from the black lagoon,” said Dr. Tom Chiller, who heads the fungal branch at the C.D.C., which is spearheading a global detective effort to find treatments and stop the spread. “It bubbled up and now it is everywhere.”

Candida Auris

A deadly, drug-resistant fungus is infecting patients in hospitals and nursing homes around the world. The fungus seems to have emerged in several locations at once, not from a single source.

‘No need’ to tell the public

In late 2015, Dr. Johanna Rhodes, an infectious disease expert at Imperial College London, got a panicked call from the Royal Brompton Hospital, a British medical center in London. C. auris had taken root there months earlier, and the hospital couldn’t clear it.

“‘We have no idea where it’s coming from. We’ve never heard of it. It’s just spread like wildfire,’” Dr. Rhodes said she was told. She agreed to help the hospital identify the fungus’s genetic profile and clean it from rooms.

Under her direction, hospital workers used a special device to spray aerosolized hydrogen peroxide around a room used for a patient with C. auris, the theory being that the vapor would scour each nook and cranny. They left the device going for a week. Then they put a “settle plate” in the middle of the room with a gel at the bottom that would serve as a place for any surviving microbes to grow, Dr. Rhodes said.

Only one organism grew back. C. auris.

It was spreading, but word of it was not. The hospital, a specialty lung and heart center that draws wealthy patients from the Middle East and around Europe, alerted the British government and told infected patients, but made no public announcement.

“There was no need to put out a news release during the outbreak,” said Oliver Wilkinson, a spokesman for the hospital.

This hushed panic is playing out in hospitals around the world. Individual institutions and national, state and local governments have been reluctant to publicize outbreaks of resistant infections, arguing there is no point in scaring patients — or prospective ones.

Dr. Silke Schelenz, Royal Brompton’s infectious disease specialist, found the lack of urgency from the government and hospital in the early stages of the outbreak “very, very frustrating.”

“They obviously didn’t want to lose reputation,” Dr. Schelenz said. “It hadn’t impacted our surgical outcomes.”

By the end of June 2016, a scientific paper reported “an ongoing outbreak of 50 C. auris cases” at Royal Brompton, and the hospital took an extraordinary step: It shut down its I.C.U. for 11 days, moving intensive care patients to another floor, again with no announcement.

Days later the hospital finally acknowledged to a newspaper that it had a problem. A headline in The Daily Telegraph warned, “Intensive Care Unit Closed After Deadly New Superbug Emerges in the U.K.” (Later research said there were eventually 72 total cases, though some patients were only carriers and were not infected by the fungus.)

Yet the issue remained little known internationally, while an even bigger outbreak had begun in Valencia, Spain, at the 992-bed Hospital Universitari i Politècnic La Fe. There, unbeknown to the public or unaffected patients, 372 people were colonized — meaning they had the germ on their body but were not sick with it — and 85 developed bloodstream infections. A paper in the journal Mycoses reported that 41 percent of the infected patients died within 30 days.

A statement from the hospital said it was not necessarily C. auris that killed them. “It is very difficult to discern whether patients die from the pathogen or with it, since they are patients with many underlying diseases and in very serious general condition,” the statement said.

As with Royal Brompton, the hospital in Spain did not make any public announcement. It still has not.

One author of the article in Mycoses, a doctor at the hospital, said in an email that the hospital did not want him to speak to journalists because it “is concerned about the public image of the hospital.”

The secrecy infuriates patient advocates, who say people have a right to know if there is an outbreak so they can decide whether to go to a hospital, particularly when dealing with a nonurgent matter, like elective surgery.

“Why the heck are we reading about an outbreak almost a year and a half later — and not have it front-page news the day after it happens?” said Dr. Kevin Kavanagh, a physician in Kentucky and board chairman of Health Watch USA, a nonprofit patient advocacy group. “You wouldn’t tolerate this at a restaurant with a food poisoning outbreak.”

Health officials say that disclosing outbreaks frightens patients about a situation they can do nothing about, particularly when the risks are unclear.

“It’s hard enough with these organisms for health care providers to wrap their heads around it,” said Dr. Anna Yaffee, a former C.D.C. outbreak investigator who dealt with resistant infection outbreaks in Kentucky in which the hospitals were not publicly disclosed. “It’s really impossible to message to the public.”

Officials in London did alert the C.D.C. to the Royal Brompton outbreak while it was occurring. And the C.D.C. realized it needed to get the word to American hospitals. On June 24, 2016, the C.D.C. blasted a nationwide warning to hospitals and medical groups and set up an email address, candidaauris@cdc.gov, to field queries. Dr. Snigdha Vallabhaneni, a key member of the fungal team, expected to get a trickle — “maybe a message every month.”

Instead, within weeks, her inbox exploded.


Coming to America


In the United States, 587 cases of people having contracted C. auris have been reported, concentrated with 309 in New York, 104 in New Jersey and 144 in Illinois, according to the C.D.C.

The symptoms — fever, aches and fatigue — are seemingly ordinary, but when a person gets infected, particularly someone already unhealthy, such commonplace symptoms can be fatal.

The earliest known case in the United States involved a woman who arrived at a New York hospital on May 6, 2013, seeking care for respiratory failure. She was 61 and from the United Arab Emirates, and she died a week later, after testing positive for the fungus. At the time, the hospital hadn’t thought much of it, but three years later, it sent the case to the C.D.C. after reading the agency’s June 2016 advisory.

Candida Auris by State

Most cases in the United States have been in nursing homes in New York City, Chicago and New Jersey.
map-600.png
Mass.

N.Y.

Conn.

N.J.

Ill.

Ind.

Md.

Calif.

Va.

Okla.

200

Tex.

100

Fla.

25

Confirmed and
probable cases,
2013–19

1




By The New York Times | Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

This woman probably was not America’s first C. auris patient. She carried a strain different from the South Asian one most common here. It killed a 56-year-old American woman who had traveled to India in March 2017 for elective abdominal surgery, contracted C. auris and was airlifted back to a hospital in Connecticut that officials will not identify. She was later transferred to a Texas hospital, where she died.

The germ has spread into long-term care facilities. In Chicago, 50 percent of the residents at some nursing homes have tested positive for it, the C.D.C. has reported. The fungus can grow on intravenous lines and ventilators.

Workers who care for patients infected with C. auris worry for their own safety. Dr. Matthew McCarthy, who has treated several C. auris patients at Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York, described experiencing an unusual fear when treating a 30-year-old man.

“I found myself not wanting to touch the guy,” he said. “I didn’t want to take it from the guy and bring it to someone else.” He did his job and thoroughly examined the patient, but said, “There was an overwhelming feeling of being terrified of accidentally picking it up on a sock or tie or gown.”

The role of pesticides?

As the C.D.C. works to limit the spread of drug-resistant C. auris, its investigators have been trying to answer the vexing question: Where in the world did it come from?

The first time doctors encountered C. auris was in the ear of a woman in Japan in 2009 (auris is Latin for ear). It seemed innocuous at the time, a cousin of common, easily treated fungal infections.

Three years later, it appeared in an unusual test result in the lab of Dr. Jacques Meis, a microbiologist in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, who was analyzing a bloodstream infection in 18 patients from four hospitals in India. Soon, new clusters of C. auris seemed to emerge with each passing month in different parts of the world.

The C.D.C. investigators theorized that C. auris started in Asia and spread across the globe. But when the agency compared the entire genome of auris samples from India and Pakistan, Venezuela, South Africa and Japan, it found that its origin was not a single place, and there was not a single auris strain.

The genome sequencing showed that there were four distinctive versions of the fungus, with differences so profound that they suggested that these strains had diverged thousands of years ago and emerged as resistant pathogens from harmless environmental strains in four different places at the same time.

“Somehow, it made a jump almost seemingly simultaneously, and seemed to spread and it is drug resistant, which is really mind-boggling,” Dr. Vallabhaneni said.

There are different theories as to what happened with C. auris. Dr. Meis, the Dutch researcher, said he believed that drug-resistant fungi were developing thanks to heavy use of fungicides on crops.

Dr. Meis became intrigued by resistant fungi when he heard about the case of a 63-year-old patient in the Netherlands who died in 2005 from a fungus called Aspergillus. It proved resistant to a front-line antifungal treatment called itraconazole. That drug is a virtual copy of the azole pesticides that are used to dust crops the world over and account for more than one-third of all fungicide sales.

A 2013 paper in Plos Pathogens said that it appeared to be no coincidence that drug-resistant Aspergillus was showing up in the environment where the azole fungicides were used. The fungus appeared in 12 percent of Dutch soil samples, for example, but also in “flower beds, compost, leaves, plant seeds, soil samples of tea gardens, paddy fields, hospital surroundings, and aerial samples of hospitals.”

Dr. Meis visited the C.D.C. last summer to share research and theorize that the same thing is happening with C. auris, which is also found in the soil: Azoles have created an environment so hostile that the fungi are evolving, with resistant strains surviving.

This is similar to concerns that resistant bacteria are growing because of excessive use of antibiotics in livestock for health and growth promotion. As with antibiotics in farm animals, azoles are used widely on crops.

“On everything — potatoes, beans, wheat, anything you can think of, tomatoes, onions,” said Dr. Rhodes, the infectious disease specialist who worked on the London outbreak. “We are driving this with the use of antifungicides on crops.”

Dr. Chiller theorizes that C. auris may have benefited from the heavy use of fungicides. His idea is that C. auris actually has existed for thousands of years, hidden in the world’s crevices, a not particularly aggressive bug. But as azoles began destroying more prevalent fungi, an opportunity arrived for C. auris to enter the breach, a germ that had the ability to readily resist fungicides now suitable for a world in which fungi less able to resist are under attack.

The mystery of C. auris’s emergence remains unsolved, and its origin seems, for the moment, to be less important than stopping its spread.

Resistance and denial

For now, the uncertainty around C. auris has led to a climate of fear, and sometimes denial.

Last spring, Jasmine Cutler, 29, went to visit her 72-year-old father at a hospital in New York City, where he had been admitted because of complications from a surgery the previous month.

When she arrived at his room, she discovered that he had been sitting for at least an hour in a recliner, in his own feces, because no one had come when he had called for help to use the bathroom. Ms. Cutler said it became clear to her that the staff was afraid to touch him because a test had shown that he was carrying C. auris.

“I saw doctors and nurses looking in the window of his room,” she said. “My father’s not a guinea pig. You’re not going to treat him like a freak at a show.”

He was eventually discharged and told he no longer carried the fungus. But he declined to be named, saying he feared being associated with the frightening infection.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/06/health/drug-resistant-candida-auris.html
 

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What You Need to Know About Candida Auris
By Matt Richtel - April 6, 2019

C. auris is a mysterious and dangerous fungal infection that is among a growing number of germs that have evolved defenses against common medicines. Here are some basic facts about it.

What is Candida auris?
Candida auris is a fungus that, when it gets into the bloodstream, can cause dangerous infections that can be life-threatening. Scientists first identified it in 2009 in a patient in Japan. In recent years, it has emerged around the world, largely in hospitals and nursing homes. There have been 587 C. auris cases reported in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, most of them in New York, New Jersey and Illinois.

Why is it so dangerous?
C. auris is often resistant to major antifungal drugs that are typically used to treat such infections. The C.D.C. says that more than 90 percent of C. auris infections are resistant to at least one such drug, while 30 percent are resistant to two or more major drugs. Once the germ is present, it is hard to eradicate from a facility. Some hospitals have had to bring in special cleaning equipment and even rip out floor and ceiling tiles to get rid of it.

Who is at risk?
People with compromised or weakened immune systems are the most vulnerable. This includes elderly people, and also people who are already sick; in at least one case, newborns were infected at a neonatal unit. People with weakened immunity are likely to have more trouble fighting off an initial invasion by C. auris and also are likely to be in settings, like hospitals and nursing homes, where the infection is more prevalent.

Why haven’t people heard about this?
The rise of C. auris has been little publicized in part because it is so new. But also, outbreaks have at times been played down or kept confidential by hospitals, doctors, even governments. Some hospitals and medical professionals argue that because precautions are taken to prevent the spread, publicizing an outbreak would scare people unnecessarily.

Can I do anything to protect myself?

The symptoms of C. auris — fever, aches, fatigue — are not unusual, so it is hard to recognize the infection without testing. The good news is that the threat of becoming sick with C. auris is very low for healthy people going about their daily lives. If you or a loved one is in a hospital or nursing home, you can ask if there have been cases of Candida auris there. If so, it is reasonable to request that proper “infection control” precautions are taken. In the United States, this question would be most relevant in New York, New Jersey and Illinois, specifically Chicago, where the germ has been concentrated.


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/06/...tion=click&module=RelatedLinks&pgtype=Article
 

ktrapper

Veteran Member
Full Documentary from Natural News. Adams is a bit over the top on some things but soot on, on others. I just saw it so I have not watched the video that is linked to in the article. I am on my phone as to why I dont copy and paste the article. There might be some need to know information in it for informational purposes only.
Regards,
Kevin
https://www.naturalnews.com/2019-04...-superbug-thats-already-too-late-to-stop.html
 

msswv123

Veteran Member
Going to add some dots to consider here:
Here's the list of hospitals and nursing homes that had CANDIDA AURIS right before the "outbreak" of Covid...had to take NY to court to reveal the locations. (California and Washington state had cases as well) Where did Cuomo stick the covid patients? What did they lock down first? Candida auris has a 50 to 60 percent death rate.

LIST OF HOSPITALS and LONG TERM CARE as of 6/28/2019 CHECK IT OUT:
PDF:
 
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msswv123

Veteran Member
See if any of this sound familiar to what we have heard the past year or so. Especially the "asymptomatic" and "colonized" parts.

APRIL 2019
1f448.png
: Nassau County infectious disease experts discuss the recent outbreak of the deadly, drug-resistant fungal infection Candida auris, which has spread quickly throughout New York State and the Tri-state area

Infections have been found in patients of all ages, from preterm infants to the elderly. .

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwbN4mYzhCA
 
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msswv123

Veteran Member
SEP 19, 2019 Through June 30, 2019, there have been 725 confirmed and 30 probable cases of C auris, mostly in hospitals and nursing homes in New York City, New Jersey, and Chicago. However, sporadic cases have been identified in 9 other states and involve up to 4 different clades. According to Bradley, this suggests that patients from other countries sought care inside US facilities since a patient can be asymptomatically colonized for up to 3 months.
Additionally, Bradley wrote that C auris may be viable on plastic devices for up to 14 days and moist surfaces for up to 7 days. Some common contamination sites can include furniture, catheters, and reusable equipment such as infusion pumps and temperature probes.

The State of Candida Auris
 

msswv123

Veteran Member
Covid doesn't scare me, but I've never heard of this and it sounds a lot more aggressive, deadly and dangerous. Yikes!

Makes you wonder why no health emergency. Seems with that many facilities infected it may have bankrupt the system in NY. Strange timing and if you listen to the video above it sounds EXACTLY like what they have been saying about the "china" virus. The states with the highest number of cases were the first states to have the virus cases as well. This candida appeared all over the globe at the same time and has never been isolated in the natural environment. A fungus that acts like a bacteria. Here's a CDC briefing from 2017



Abstract
In New Delhi, India, candidemia affected 15 critically ill coronavirus disease patients admitted to an intensive care unit during April–July 2020.
1f449.png
1f449.png
Candida auris accounted for two thirds of cases; case-fatality rate was high (60%). Hospital-acquired C. auris infections in coronavirus disease patients may lead to adverse outcomes and additional strain on healthcare resources.

 
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msswv123

Veteran Member
A very interesting recent perspective study on both candida auris (which means ear) and Corona.

Published online 2020 Jul 14. doi: 10.1016/bs.adgen.2020.04.002
PMCID: PMC7358766
PMID: 33081928
Origin of new emergent Coronavirus and Candida fungal diseases—Terrestrial or cosmic?

Remember as well that it is the "anti parasitic" drugs that have supposedly been working on this. Which are used for fungal infections too.


Text from the above linked study:

3.3. Link with a direct strike of meteorite over central-North East China, October 11, 2019
In the case of the current coronavirus epidemic in China it is interesting to note that an exceptionally bright fireball event was seen on October 11, 2019 over Sonjyan City in the Jilin Province of NE China (see Fig. 8 ). It is tempting to speculate that this event (although it happened hundreds of kilometers distant from Hubei) had a crucial role to play in what is now unfolding in and throughout China. Indeed, the match with the Johns Hopkins University case incidence patterns is so striking it is difficult to easily dismiss this as a chance correspondence of patterns, in both time and place (e.g., Fig. 7).

Fig. 8
Fig. 8

The public record of this meteorite strike can be found at the Space.com website in an article by Tariq Malik, on October 13, 2019 “Brilliant Midnight Fireball Lights Up Sky Over Northeast China”. The October event is described at: Brilliant Midnight Fireball Lights Up Sky Over Northeast China.
If a fragment of a fragile and loosely held carbonaceous meteorite carrying a cargo of trillions of viruses/bacteria and other primary source cells (for the cosmic replication of the COVID-19 virus), may have entered the mesosphere and stratosphere at high speed ~ 30 km/s, its outer, loosely-held envelope carrying a biological cargo may have got dispersed in the mesosphere stratosphere and troposphere. Indeed, a much larger original meteoroid could easily have been fragmenting and dispersing its contents before the ignition of the fireball event
 
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TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
Sprayed in chemtrails? Gates wants to increase the amount of chemtrails sprayed, under the guise of "blocking out the sun." Climate change, ya know.

Dang murderer/attempted murderer, not just him: all of them, the illuminati.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Fungal infections have always scared me silly. This story is not good news.

We're rapidly heading to the former reality of hospital care; you only went there to die, essentially. Before antibiotics, hospital borne infections were rampant, and even a healthy woman who only went to give birth often died of infection. Antibiotics changed that.

But now, we have less and less ammo against any of these infections. And its only going to get worse.

Summerthyme
 

vestige

Deceased
Fungal infections have always scared me silly. This story is not good news.

We're rapidly heading to the former reality of hospital care; you only went there to die, essentially. Before antibiotics, hospital borne infections were rampant, and even a healthy woman who only went to give birth often died of infection. Antibiotics changed that.

But now, we have less and less ammo against any of these infections. And its only going to get worse.

Summerthyme
Iatrogenic and nosocomial are words not good to hear.
 

moldy

Veteran Member
Fungal infections have always scared me silly. This story is not good news.

We're rapidly heading to the former reality of hospital care; you only went there to die, essentially. Before antibiotics, hospital borne infections were rampant, and even a healthy woman who only went to give birth often died of infection. Antibiotics changed that.

But now, we have less and less ammo against any of these infections. And its only going to get worse.

Summerthyme

And there seems to be more and more of them. A friend dropped a bottle of cleaner on her foot - had a small laceration that required stitches. Her doctor now believes she may have osteomyelitis (bone infection) from this and is on heavy-duty antibiotics.
 

xtreme_right

Veteran Member
Some alternative treatments for Candida. Not sure how effective for the strain in question.

How to Cure Candida


1. Hydrogen Peroxide
Hydrogen peroxide has an oxidizing effect on the body, which functions to kill off yeast. To implement this protocol, begin with just one drop of 35% food grade hydrogen peroxide in a large glass of distilled water. Take up to three glasses a day, slowly increasing the number of drops of hydrogen to 10.

2. Apple Cider Vinegar

ACV is a wonder home remedy that naturally restores the pH of the body and eliminates yeast overgrowth. Drink 1 tablespoon of ACV, organic if possible, in 8 ounces of water up to 3 times a day for best results.

3. Caprylic Acid
A supplement derived from coconut oil, caprylic acid actually pokes holes in the cell wall of yeast, causing it to die. This option can be found as a supplement or used by adding organic coconut oil to your daily diet.
 

TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
I decided to look it up, too. This site has been around a long time, used to be in the top 10 for alternative health items, years ago. Do not know if it still holds that honor, but a wealth of info.

Lists are here, three links to different pages. I imagine these would probably help:

Fungal Infection Treatment: Folk Medicine

You can find fungus everywhere in both indoor and outdoor environments, and half of these fungi can threaten our health. If you find yourself dealing with a fungal infection, many complementary and alternative remedies exist for fungal infection treatment. These home remedies can kill off the yeast or bacteria causing the fungal infections while reducing symptoms of the infection in the skin, lungs, sinuses, eyes, and other organs.

Exposure to fungus, mold, and other allergens can cause out of control immune system reactions in your body, the symptoms of which can include pain, headache, fevers, mucus production in the sinuses and/or lungs, and may in some cases may lead to death. More common symptoms include a fungal rash on the skin or some mild respiratory distress. More serious fungal infections include fungal pneumonia, fungal sinusitis, aspergillosis, fungal meningitis, and systemic candida albicans infections.

List is here, I imagine these would probably help:



Cure a Candida Infection with Herbal Remedies!


How to Cure Candida


 

msswv123

Veteran Member
This is a fungus that acts like a bacteria so nothing like the normal candida infection. HIGHLY contagious.. It is already drug resistant. Make sure you watch the CDC video and ABC video to get the full implications of this one. MOST disinfectants they have tried do not work. Like the original poster quoted one person had it and they literally had to tear out ceiling and floors in the room where they had been.

The man at Mount Sinai died after 90 days in the hospital, but C. auris did not. Tests showed it was everywhere in his room, so invasive that the hospital needed special cleaning equipment and had to rip out some of the ceiling and floor tiles to eradicate it.

“Everything was positive — the walls, the bed, the doors, the curtains, the phones, the sink, the whiteboard, the poles, the pump,” said Dr. Scott Lorin, the hospital’s president. “The mattress, the bed rails, the canister holes, the window shades, the ceiling, everything in the room was positive.”
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
A very interesting recent perspective study on both candida auris (which means ear) and Corona.

Published online 2020 Jul 14. doi: 10.1016/bs.adgen.2020.04.002
PMCID: PMC7358766
PMID: 33081928
Origin of new emergent Coronavirus and Candida fungal diseases—Terrestrial or cosmic?

Remember as well that it is the "anti parasitic" drugs that have supposedly been working on this. Which are used for fungal infections too.


Text from the above linked study:

3.3. Link with a direct strike of meteorite over central-North East China, October 11, 2019
In the case of the current coronavirus epidemic in China it is interesting to note that an exceptionally bright fireball event was seen on October 11, 2019 over Sonjyan City in the Jilin Province of NE China (see Fig. 8 ). It is tempting to speculate that this event (although it happened hundreds of kilometers distant from Hubei) had a crucial role to play in what is now unfolding in and throughout China. Indeed, the match with the Johns Hopkins University case incidence patterns is so striking it is difficult to easily dismiss this as a chance correspondence of patterns, in both time and place (e.g., Fig. 7).

Fig. 8
Fig. 8
The public record of this meteorite strike can be found at the Space.com website in an article by Tariq Malik, on October 13, 2019 “Brilliant Midnight Fireball Lights Up Sky Over Northeast China”. The October event is described at: Brilliant Midnight Fireball Lights Up Sky Over Northeast China.
If a fragment of a fragile and loosely held carbonaceous meteorite carrying a cargo of trillions of viruses/bacteria and other primary source cells (for the cosmic replication of the COVID-19 virus), may have entered the mesosphere and stratosphere at high speed ~ 30 km/s, its outer, loosely-held envelope carrying a biological cargo may have got dispersed in the mesosphere stratosphere and troposphere. Indeed, a much larger original meteoroid could easily have been fragmenting and dispersing its contents before the ignition of the fireball event
Coincidence? I have heard umpteen friends and acquaintances remark in the last year or so, “thee are NO coincidences”
this meteorite theory as a source of “gems” reminds me of a similar article sometime in the last 10 or so years, high speculated the very same idea, that bacteria from outer space ust might be the source of many of our diseases that have no known previous appearances.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
I decided to look it up, too. This site has been around a long time, used to be in the top 10 for alternative health items, years ago. Do not know if it still holds that honor, but a wealth of info.

Lists are here, three links to different pages. I imagine these would probably help:

Fungal Infection Treatment: Folk Medicine

You can find fungus everywhere in both indoor and outdoor environments, and half of these fungi can threaten our health. If you find yourself dealing with a fungal infection, many complementary and alternative remedies exist for fungal infection treatment. These home remedies can kill off the yeast or bacteria causing the fungal infections while reducing symptoms of the infection in the skin, lungs, sinuses, eyes, and other organs.

Exposure to fungus, mold, and other allergens can cause out of control immune system reactions in your body, the symptoms of which can include pain, headache, fevers, mucus production in the sinuses and/or lungs, and may in some cases may lead to death. More common symptoms include a fungal rash on the skin or some mild respiratory distress. More serious fungal infections include fungal pneumonia, fungal sinusitis, aspergillosis, fungal meningitis, and systemic candida albicans infections.

List is here, I imagine these would probably help:



Cure a Candida Infection with Herbal Remedies!


How to Cure Candida


I am very happy to see the NATURAL CURES FOR THIS ADDED.

FIRST OF ALL, NOTHING HAS BECOME RESISTANT TO COLLOIDAL SILVER, PERIOD.
& IT CAN BE MANUFACTURED in humongous quantities CHEAPLY, nothing needs to be added to it, AS A CLEANER, DISINFECTANT, HUMAN BATH WATER, SPRAY FOR FABRICS, walls, pourous surfaces, Colloidal silver laundry water, SPRAY WALLS, POUROUS SURFACES, THERE IS NO REASON TO TEAR UP A ROOM! DO NOT RINSE off the CS. Just dip clean curtains or venetian blinds in CS and hang up wet and drip dry. You can spray the air ducting if you choose to do so.



You just NEED COLLOIDAL SILVER WATER, AND LOTS OF IT, FOR BOTH PATIENT AND ROOM.

It wouldn't hurt for NURSING STAFF to take a Colloidal silver rinse shower (no soap) at the end of their shift also.

Make sure hair gets a good rinse in CS. You'll find out you dont need deodorant, you will clear up jock itch, or vaginal itch (external) a lot of skin conditions, and lose your athletes foot, fingernail fungus, and heal scrapes and scratches quicker.

Get a silverplated water pitcher and silverplate cup for the hospital room. Get one set of silverplated knife, fork and spoon for the patient. (CHEAP AT GOODWILL)
Teddy bears, curtains, bedding, towels, pajamas, in the hospital need a soaking and let dry without rinsing. THE REASON YOU DONT RINSE IS THAT THE SILVER IS STILL THERE, AND KEEPS KILLING THE FUNGUS, viruses, and bacteria, DAYS LATER! Even when it is dry!

By the way, if you have stinky sneakers, next time you wash them, dip them in Colloidal silver and let em dry.
No more stinky shoes.
 
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msswv123

Veteran Member

Fungus ‘superbug’ cases rise to highest levels in Nevada​

In October, there were 57 new clinical cases of the drug-resistant, potentially lethal fungus that can invade a person’s bloodstream, brain, heart or other organs, according to Nevada Division of Behavioral Health data. In the same month, 123 cases of colonization were reported in which individuals typically have the fungus in the folds of their skin, invisible to the eye, yet are not sick. Those people can still transmit the pathogen.

Fungus ‘superbug’ cases rise to highest levels in Nevada
 

rob0126

Veteran Member
Look into using chlorine dioxide.

It can kill just about anything, and at a specific dilution, can be ingested too. (Do your homework first!)

The 2 items you need to make it on the fly is citric acid (or hydrochloric acid) & sodium chlorite.
Jim humble's research can help you figure out how to use it.

A link to get someone started on learning about cd.

PM me if you want to know how I make it and use it.
 
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Griz3752

Retired, practising Curmudgeon
B.E. "scary" is such an understatement.

Happy New Year!

Stand by for more outrageous JB spending on this new killer; seeing as that erosion of the American $ fits so well into his overall agenda, it almost makes me wonder if . . . .

Nah even he can't be that low & slimy!

What am I saying?!!?
Of course he could be!
 

rob0126

Veteran Member
Found this link on the Q thread. (thanks to whoever posted it)

Interesting how someone uses CD (chlorine dioxide) to neutralize the spike protein.
Also, apparently NAC helps get rid of GO (Graphene Oxide) in the body.
 

msswv123

Veteran Member
I am very happy to see the NATURAL CURES FOR THIS ADDED.

FIRST OF ALL, NOTHING HAS BECOME RESISTANT TO COLLOIDAL SILVER, PERIOD.
& IT CAN BE MANUFACTURED in humongous quantities CHEAPLY, nothing needs to be added to it, AS A CLEANER, DISINFECTANT, HUMAN BATH WATER, SPRAY FOR FABRICS, walls, pourous surfaces, Colloidal silver laundry water, SPRAY WALLS, POUROUS SURFACES, THERE IS NO REASON TO TEAR UP A ROOM! DO NOT RINSE off the CS. Just dip clean curtains or venetian blinds in CS and hang up wet and drip dry. You can spray the air ducting if you choose to do so.



You just NEED COLLOIDAL SILVER WATER, AND LOTS OF IT, FOR BOTH PATIENT AND ROOM.

It wouldn't hurt for NURSING STAFF to take a Colloidal silver rinse shower (no soap) at the end of their shift also.

Make sure hair gets a good rinse in CS. You'll find out you dont need deodorant, you will clear up jock itch, or vaginal itch (external) a lot of skin conditions, and lose your athletes foot, fingernail fungus, and heal scrapes and scratches quicker.

Get a silverplated water pitcher and silverplate cup for the hospital room. Get one set of silverplated knife, fork and spoon for the patient. (CHEAP AT GOODWILL)
Teddy bears, curtains, bedding, towels, pajamas, in the hospital need a soaking and let dry without rinsing. THE REASON YOU DONT RINSE IS THAT THE SILVER IS STILL THERE, AND KEEPS KILLING THE FUNGUS, viruses, and bacteria, DAYS LATER! Even when it is dry!

By the way, if you have stinky sneakers, next time you wash them, dip them in Colloidal silver and let em dry.
No more stinky shoes.
One of the things I have noticed over the years is the silver used for bed sores. Seems to be one of the only things that helps them. More recently I just saw this commercial for sheets that have silver infused in them. Based on the stats for this "fungus" it is more deadly than the recent outbreak but for some reason they seem to want to keep it on the down low. I believe they didn't want all the hospitals and nursing homes (NY) getting sued in 2019 when they had to release the institutions that had it by court order. Very suspicious circumstances with this. Fungus that acts like a bacteria?? Never isolated in the environment. Showed up all over the globe. Found in the ear..........where were they sticking those test swabs the past few years? Strange how all the states with the fungus were the first to lockdown the nursing homes. Lots of things to ponder.
 
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