88planoAg said:
megadose vitamin D
get a pulse ox, keep an eye on your o2
look at Rev's supplements, take those
And get sunlight.
Vitamin D alone may not help by itself. You need the sulfated version which can only be obtained through exposure to sumlight.
Dr Seneff at MIT has written extensively on this topic for numerous conditions and I believe covid fits as well.
People need to get outside and get the healing power of a little bit of sun and avoid sunscreens that stop the D from being sulfated.
https://people.csail.mit.edu/seneff/sulfur_obesity_alzheimers_muscle_wasting.htmlQuote:
The skin produces vitamin D3 sulfate upon exposure to sunlight, and the vitamin D3 found in breast milk is also sulfated. In light of these facts, it is quite surprising to me that so little research has been directed towards understanding what role sulfated vitamin D3 plays in the body. It is recently becoming apparent that vitamin D3 promotes a strong immune system and offers protection against cancer, yet how it achieves these benefits is not at all clear. I strongly suspect that it is vitamin D3 sulfate that carries out this aspect of vitamin D3's positive influence.
Even if sick people should try to get exposure to sunlight rather than lay in bed. 20 minutes is enough IMO.
Another good discussion:
https://www.westonaprice.org/health-topics/sunlight-and-vitamin-d-theyre-not-the-same-thing/Quote:
ARTICLE SUMMARY
Sulfate synthesis in the skin captures the sun's energy. Adequate sunlight exposure to both the skin and the eyes is vital to our long-term health.
Among other functions, sulfate supports blood vessel health, the body's electrical supply and the delivery system for important molecules such as cholesterol, vitamin D, dopamine and melatonin.
Evidence indicates that sunlight protects against cancer, heart disease, hypertension and bone fractures.
The benefits of sunlight exposure are about much more than vitamin D.
Many studies show that vitamin D supplementation cannot reproduce sunlight's health benefits. Moreover, excessive vitamin D supplementation can aggravate systemic sulfate deficiency, which will drive calcium buildup in the arteries.
Both sunscreen and glyphosate interfere with synthesis and production of melaninthe body's natural mechanism of sun protection. Aluminum in sunscreen disrupts sulfate synthesis. These disruptions may explain why melanoma prevalence has steadily risen in tandem with the increased use of higher sun-protection-factor sunscreens over the past two decades.