This has been discussed on here before but this doctor seems pretty convinced Ivermectin is the real deal
bigtruckguy3500 said:
Interesting indeed. I'll have to look up the actual data and paper.
That being said, ivermectin is not a common drug. Drug companies would have to start pumping it out 24/7 for any meaningful supply to be available for use in this country.
you don't need an Rx to get it from the feed store.AgResearch said:bigtruckguy3500 said:
Interesting indeed. I'll have to look up the actual data and paper.
That being said, ivermectin is not a common drug. Drug companies would have to start pumping it out 24/7 for any meaningful supply to be available for use in this country.
Just get a scrip from the local vet.
TexasAggie_02 said:you don't need an Rx to get it from the feed store.AgResearch said:bigtruckguy3500 said:
Interesting indeed. I'll have to look up the actual data and paper.
That being said, ivermectin is not a common drug. Drug companies would have to start pumping it out 24/7 for any meaningful supply to be available for use in this country.
Just get a scrip from the local vet.
Paul Marik's fall from grace is strange, but seemed inevitable. He made his name as a controversial skeptic of critical care dogma. He was never much of a researcher, and most of his contributions to medicine came from lectures and opinion pieces. He frequently criticized trials for poor science, and was famously quoted as stating "In the hierarchy of scientific evidence, before and after studies are just above wives' tales and anecdotes". His fall from grace then came in 2017 when he published his much maligned before and after study on vitamin therapy for severe sepsis where he absurdly claimed that he had found the cure for sepsis, and made ridiculous claims about how after he started his protocol, not a single patient of his died from sepsis (what he failed to mention is that they still died, but his claim was their deaths were due to multi-organ failure...which is how septic patients typically die).robdobyns said:
Dr Marek presents compelling evidence that shows ivermectin is very effective.
The issue isn't the vitamin protocol, it's the claims without evidence.bigtruckguy3500 said:
Yeah, I last worked/trained under him in 2018. He'd look for any excuse to put someone on his vitamin C protocol. It was funny, the ICU there had pictures of oranges all over the walls, the nurses had shirts with oranges on them, etc.
I personally think he's fishing for a Nobel prize. Go big or go home. To be fair, medicine is full of people who were seen as crazy for their ideas at the time, and eventually the evidence came to support them.
So asking for a friend...TexasAggie_02 said:you don't need an Rx to get it from the feed store.AgResearch said:bigtruckguy3500 said:
Interesting indeed. I'll have to look up the actual data and paper.
That being said, ivermectin is not a common drug. Drug companies would have to start pumping it out 24/7 for any meaningful supply to be available for use in this country.
Just get a scrip from the local vet.
I've seen pour on and injectable. I do not know if you can get it in a pill form. FYI the dosage for livestock is based upon weight, I do not know if that would translate to people.jpb1999 said:So asking for a friend...TexasAggie_02 said:you don't need an Rx to get it from the feed store.AgResearch said:bigtruckguy3500 said:
Interesting indeed. I'll have to look up the actual data and paper.
That being said, ivermectin is not a common drug. Drug companies would have to start pumping it out 24/7 for any meaningful supply to be available for use in this country.
Just get a scrip from the local vet.
I have only seen it as a topical. Does it also come in pill form? Would you just follow the dosage per weight on the bottle, even though it would be 100 to 200 lbs versus 1000 lbs? Would this only be taken IF you had it? If so, for how long?
Edit: So read the protocol linked above. So can you get it in this table form from the feed store or vet?
robdobyns said:
There are 4 RCTS and 3 observational studies showing statistically significant efficacy for Ivermectin in Covid.
Ivermectin is also in the outpatient treatment algorithm used at Baylor in Dallas. It's also at Memorial Hosiptal in Houston.
Are all these doctors quacks too? I think not.
What is the risk/benefit ratio of using ivermectin in Covid ?
That's the question to ask.
Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Most doctors haven't gotten on board because the RCTs mentioned that are available for perusal are very small, demonstrate contradictory evidence, and are overall of low quality. That along with major institutions like NIH, CDC, WHO recommending against its use until convincing data is available explains why you will not find many doctors jumping on board the ivermectin bandwagon just yet.
It seems these doctors are really hammering the same talking points the HCQ proponents were early on: "there's no money in repurposed drugs" (ignoring that dexamethasone is standard of care now), "what's the harm in its use?", "it would be unethical to run a placebo controlled RCT in a pandemic".
There is certainly the possibility that it works, but we just don't have enough evidence to claim a "cure" quite just yet. I fully support any doc that reads the evidence, weighs the risks of initiating this therapy, and decides to start prescribing it; however, I am strongly against poor scientific literacy and over exaggerations of treatment efficacy based on low quality evidence.
robdobyns said:
There are 4 RCTS and 3 observational studies showing statistically significant efficacy for Ivermectin in Covid.
Ivermectin is also in the outpatient treatment algorithm used at Baylor in Dallas. It's also at Memorial Hosiptal in Houston.
Are all these doctors quacks too? I think not.
What is the risk/benefit ratio of using ivermectin in Covid ?
That's the question to ask.
Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
Most doctors haven't gotten on board because the RCTs mentioned that are available for perusal are very small, demonstrate contradictory evidence, and are overall of low quality. That along with major institutions like NIH, CDC, WHO recommending against its use until convincing data is available explains why you will not find many doctors jumping on board the ivermectin bandwagon just yet.
It seems these doctors are really hammering the same talking points the HCQ proponents were early on: "there's no money in repurposed drugs" (ignoring that dexamethasone is standard of care now), "what's the harm in its use?", "it would be unethical to run a placebo controlled RCT in a pandemic".
There is certainly the possibility that it works, but we just don't have enough evidence to claim a "cure" quite just yet. I fully support any doc that reads the evidence, weighs the risks of initiating this therapy, and decides to start prescribing it; however, I am strongly against poor scientific literacy and over exaggerations of treatment efficacy based on low quality evidence.