Yuck. Again the on the fly information coming out tells us that we must rely first on symptoms and this means a fully developed case. From that we go immediately to IV vitamin C. This is otherwise harmless but will confront the virus and strengthen the immune system to produce superior results.
I am now hopeful that the massive application of vitamin C in Wuhan will collapse the infection there. so far the noise is positive.
For the general population Costco is selling 1000mg vitamin C which is also slow re4lease. This should help protect those asymptomatic. right response now.
Untrustworthy Coronavirus Tests and Statistics
Published on March 2, 2020
https://drsircus.com/general/untrustworthy-coronavirus-tests-and-statistics/
What we are being told everyday about the virus and its victims
would not hold up in a court of law. Medical authorities though are
having a field day coming up with the best arguments for throwing
everything at the coronavirus, even if it means closing the world down,
keeping everyone in their houses, crashing the economy; pretty much
stopping as much human activity as possible. The world is panicking as
60 countries report coronavirus infections and as I write, the stock
market is set to crash again.
Yet all of this is based on the testing for coronavirus, which is
touch and go all the way. Stories in several countries suggest people
are having up to six negative results before finally being diagnosed.
Meanwhile, officials in the epicentre of the epidemic, Hubei province,
China, “have started counting people with symptoms rather than using the tests for final confirmation,” according to the BBC. Meaning we do not know if the deaths are due to other causes like regular forms of pneumonia and flu.
The New York Times
hit piece on the viral epidemic and the Trump administration said,
“the coronavirus isn’t like the common cold. In fact, early indications
are that the virus may be as lethal as the 1918 Spanish Flu, which
killed as many as 50 million people.”
[ this is known as crazy talk and the New York Times has fallen to a new low - arclein ]
[ this is known as crazy talk and the New York Times has fallen to a new low - arclein ]
But will the self righteous Times report that 25 million of those
could be saved with sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) another 5 million
with intravenous magnesium, another 5 million with IVs of vitamin C, 5
million with iodine and another 5 million with an injection of
pharmaceutical sourced selenium.
If 50 million die from the coronavirus whose fault will it be? Is it
a mean spirited virus, the reported preconditions among the critically
ill, or the arrogance of medical officials who have been huffing and
puffing for decades yet still do not know how to treat critical lung
disease. They want to frighten us with worst case scenarios while
refusing to look at the most basic answers that would help doctors save
people.
One woman in prison in Iran said she believed she had the virus and
wanted to be tested but what is the point if doctors confess they have
no treatment that works. There are innovative treatments for patients
hospitalized for pneumonia or the common flu but most doctors stick to
the lockstep of medical thinking, which is quite limited.
Hard to tell yet if the medical response is actually more of a
threat than the virus itself, which is reported to be quite mild for at
least 80 percent of the population and especially mild for children.
It is impossible to keep up with the fast-changing coronavirus
statistics: the number of confirmed cases in new countries seems to roll
like ticker tape and yet there is no accountability for the quality
of the information.
“It works like this – the manipulating body covertly creates a problem and then directs the media to incessantly focus on it without recourse. The problem could be anything – a war, a financial collapse, a rash of child abductions, or a terrorist attack. The power of the media can create the false perception that a big problem exists, even if it doesn’t.” Paul Joseph Watson, Order Out of Chaos, pg. 13.
World governments are obligated to follow world medical institutions
responses to the coronavirus pandemic. They have no choice and neither
do we if we are ordered to close down our lives in quarantine. The
doctors and their parent medical organizations get to play God, tough
luck if you do not like it. In a pandemic medical truth becomes divine
truth even if there is little truth in the narrative.
The Quicksand of Coronavirus Tests
A study in the journal Radiology showed five out of 167 patients
tested negative for the disease despite lung scans showing they were
ill. They then tested positive for the virus at a later date. Doctors
like to assume patients like these have the coronavirus forgetting to
mention that lung scans show up the same for regular pneumonia
patients, as well as from the flu and fungus infections in the lungs,
all of which will show up on lung scans.
Patients with pneumonia due to other viruses, bacterial and fungus
infections as well as to the effects of heavy pollution are potentially
being counted as coronavirus victims. Thousands of patients die
everyday from these other causes but when the coronavirus shows up we
are ready to suicide our economy and our collective lives because the
medical establishment knows whats best.
The BBC said Chinese journalists have uncovered other cases of people
testing negative six times before a seventh test confirmed they had
the disease. And similar issues have been raised in other affected
countries, including Singapore and Thailand. In the US, meanwhile, Dr Nancy Messonnier, of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says some of its tests are producing “inconclusive” results.
Thus the question is being raised that the RT-PCR test for the new
coronavirus is based on flawed science. False-negatives in diagnostic
testing lead to the release of infected people, motivate extreme
containment measures that have been implemented. False-negatives can
explain why official figures are too low. Or that patients with other
diseases are not being diagnosed with coronavirus but eventually after
enough tests doctors finally get what they are looking for or what are
called false-positives.
Hawaii announced its coronavirus tests from the CDC were faulty. The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that some of its
coronavirus test kits sent to laboratories across the U.S. have
reported that they are not “working as expected.”
Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for
Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said that when various state
laboratories performed quality control tests on the kits, the labs “identified some inconclusive results.”
“Specifically, some public health labs at states were getting
inconclusive results and what that means is that test results were not
coming back as false positive or false negatives, but they were being
read as inconclusive,” said Messonnier.
The CDC designed a flawed test for COVID-19, then took weeks to
figure out a fix so state and local labs could use it. New York still
doesn’t trust the test’s accuracy and neither should we. ‘Confusion
breeds distrust,’ which is growing each time China changes how it
counts coronavirus cases. China’s lost a lot of credibility and faith in
the accuracy of its data with its swift and frequent changes,
international researchers say.
The changes in reporting signaled that Chinese health providers were
likely struggling to efficiently administer the official COVID-19 test
kits, director of global health studies at Seton Hall University
Yanzhong Huang said. These tests are a form of nucleic acid test, which
are often used to detect viruses like Hepatitis and Ebola. Such tests can have as low a rate of accurate diagnosis as 50%,
Huang said, and that figure could be even worse in a city like Wuhan
that has such a stressed health-care system amid the outbreak.
“When you’re facing an outbreak like what is happening in Wuhan, it
can be so overwhelming that it may basically overwhelm their capability
to provide even the testing services,” he said. “If you don’t handle
it well, or you are not adequately trained, that kind of test leads to a
false negative or positive.”
If healthcare workers across Hubei province don’t have the resources or time to properly administer the tests, Huang said it’s better to rely on symptoms for official counting so that more people can receive treatment. However, this would lead to counting patients with other forms of pneumonia of regular influenza victims.
Zhang said his company’s tests are able to directly detect the
COVID-19 pathogen, but require a special machine called a
“thermocycler,” which can cost thousands of U.S. dollars. He
acknowledged also that the “pathogen is not detectable when its volume
is very low.” “This detection requires reagents, machines and skilled
personnel,” he said. So are we to believe that these expensive machines
and skilled personnel are available everywhere in the world?
What are the consequences of inconclusive test results? A false
positive could theoretically expose someone without coronavirus to a
hospital setting where they run the risk of being exposed to other
types of illnesses, or far worse, a quarantine setting with other
patients who have tested positive for coronavirus, where (given how
contagious it is) they would most certainly catch it.
A false negative means that someone with COVID-19 is theoretically
released back into the world to expose otherwise healthy people to the
virus, putting entire swaths of the world on edge. “Testing for
coronavirus is not available yet in New York City,” city Department of
Health spokeswoman Stephanie Buhle said at the very end of February.
“The kits that were sent to us have demonstrated performance issues and
cannot be relied upon to provide an accurate result.”
Conclusion
Currently, most pandemic-prone diseases, including coronavirus, are
diagnosed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a molecular technique
that often requires special laboratory machines and highly trained
technicians to operate them. PCR tests are difficult to scale or
decentralize. Bill Gates points out that
portable versions of these molecular diagnostic machines need to be
distributed throughout Africa to prevent the spread of coronavirus. We
do not read about anyone gearing up to provide such equipment.
Running the test machines also requires a consumable test kit, and
the number of coronavirus cases in China has exceeded its laboratory
testing capacity due to a shortage of PCR testing kits. Consequently, China has had to resort to using CT scans as a hospital-based rapid test to
screen infected patients for coronavirus, followed up by
laboratory-based testing for confirmation. Many clinics do not have the
expensive machines to do CT scans and good thing because these scans
do not test for the virus. They can only report on the state of the
lungs but not what is causing any infection.
In our age of evidence-based medicine, nothing is more important
than the quality of laboratory tests. It is commonly thought that
laboratory tests provide two-thirds to three-fourths of the information
used for making medical decisions. If so, test results had better tell
the truth about what is happening with our patients.
A study five years ago estimates that in the United States, some
251,000 deaths per year occur because of errors in medical care. This
makes medical errors the third leading cause of death, only after heart
disease and cancer. Lab test failures contribute to delayed or wrong
diagnoses and unnecessary costs and care. For context, a 2014 study
estimated that diagnostic errors happen about 12 million times per year
in U.S. outpatients.
I am not saying the Chinese did the wrong thing and that a disaster
is not unfolding but what I am saying is that the entire story is like a
house of cards. There is nothing secure in the official statistics.
Alexander Aston writes, “The virus is serious, and will have dramatic consequences, but it is no black death. The virus is a catalyst, something beyond our agency to control which is triggering cascading changes in a system that has been rotting for some time. The virus is a spark, not the cause, and it is breaking down the last reinforcing bonds holding the global system together.”
Alexander Aston writes, “The virus is serious, and will have dramatic consequences, but it is no black death. The virus is a catalyst, something beyond our agency to control which is triggering cascading changes in a system that has been rotting for some time. The virus is a spark, not the cause, and it is breaking down the last reinforcing bonds holding the global system together.”
We all now have front row seats to seeing how corrupt the medical establishment is and it will not be pretty.
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