Yep.
I know in my system we are pushing for infusions ASAP. The order form does not ask vaccine status and my gut tells me that they likely don't need the infusion if they are vaccinated. I've been combing through my ER visits to pick up 12+ with any risk factors and getting them infused ASAP if not vaccinated.Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:This or those that have not developed antibodies. Most of the COVID patients that come to an ER are typically a week into their symptoms, which is much too late in the disease course to receive monoclonal antibody therapy. There appears to be legitimate benefit to early treatment with monoclonals, but it is certainly not a cure, and should not take the place of getting vaccinated.planoaggie123 said:
I will not pretend to fully grasp all that and you are 100% the doctor and I am not.
However, I think i found your survey and it seems, though could be wrong, the entire population for the study is people admitted to the hospital which sort of lends itself to limited benefits as it relates to the antibody treatment.
The benefits of this treatment are BEFORE hospital, right? Like 3 - 5 days after symptoms start and before oxygen is needed....
Edit: But yes, you are correct that the above information from the RECOVERY trial's RCT are in hospitalized patients.
I tend to fine videos to be less persuasive than the written word. As such, a video is unlikely to convince me of anything.snowdog90 said:Windy City Ag said:
Most people rightly listen to their doctor over rumble.com.
Watch the video.
Clearly, if you take Ivermectin and recover, then Ivermectin clearly helped -- even if you would have recovered without it.1876er said:Sandman98 said:
Lots of people around here say "listen to your doctor" but they don't really mean it. They say it because it sounds "sciency" but they really only want you to listen to your doctor if he/she says what they think he should say.
No, we say it because almost everybody'sPCP will tell them ivermectin doesn't help with Covid. Despite that people still believe Rumble videos over their doctor and buy horse paste because they have discovered the"real" truth.
Most people probably don't understand the difference between in vitro and in vivo and think that they are pretty much the same. It isn't unusual, is it, for a potential drug to look good in vitro but be a big disappointment in vivo?Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:
To preface what I am about to say, people have a right to their opinion and physicians have a right to prescribe what ever they feel appropriate and pharmacists also have the right to deny or fill prescriptions based on what they believe to be appropriate.
That said, this video ignores the in vitro study required markedly toxic levels of ivermectin to demonstrate its "anti-viral properties". It also ignores the highest quality study to date on the subject from JAMA which demonstrated ivermectin to be ineffective in early disease. The TOGETHER trial (see slide 21) has reported its results, and will soon publish their results of multiple repurposed drugs to fight against COVID. It will be the highest quality evidence once published, and its results are negative for the use of ivermectin for mild COVID.
People claiming ivermectin is only a horse dewormer are misinformed much like those claiming it to be a cure. Physicians and government health agencies generally prefer to base therapies on evidence. And of the high quality evidence available, ivermectin is ineffective. We don't make decisions based on Youtube or "rumble" videos.
It chooses only those studies which show what they want to show?snowdog90 said:1876er said:Sandman98 said:
Lots of people around here say "listen to your doctor" but they don't really mean it. They say it because it sounds "sciency" but they really only want you to listen to your doctor if he/she says what they think he should say.
No, we say it because almost everybody'sPCP will tell them ivermectin doesn't help with Covid. Despite that people still believe Rumble videos over their doctor and buy horse paste because they have discovered the"real" truth.
This doesn't help. You are knowingly misrepresenting the video. Or maybe you didn't watch it. Yes, it's a Rumble video - talking about many studies that show ivermectin works against covid. It references many doctors who prescribe it.
Watch the video. Refute it if you can. Otherwise, please don't misrepresent it. There's not one reference to horse paste in the video.
Quote:
Ivermectin is a safe, broad spectrum antiparasitic drug which is in wide use globally to treat parasitic infections.
Quote:
With known antiviral properties, ivermectin has been shown to reduce SARS-CoV-2 replication in laboratory studies.
Quote:
Small pilot studies show that early administration with ivermectin can reduce viral load and the duration of symptoms in some patients with mild COVID-19.
Quote:
Professor Chris Butler, from the University Oxford's Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, Joint Chief Investigator of the PRINCIPLE trial, said, 'Ivermectin is readily available globally, has been in wide use for many other infectious conditions so it's a well-known medicine with a good safety profile, and because of the early promising results in some studies it is already being widely used to treat COVID-19 in several countries.
You don't really need to watch it. You could have your beer and listen to it.eric76 said:I tend to fine videos to be less persuasive than the written word. As such, a video is unlikely to convince me of anything.snowdog90 said:Windy City Ag said:
Most people rightly listen to their doctor over rumble.com.
Watch the video.
With a video, it is going by at its own pace. Sure, we can pause it to check the accuracy of what it said, but that can be difficult to do. Put it in print, instead, and we have something that we can go through at our own pace and check each claim as we go.
It was like this in classes, too. If I had already read the material in advance and was ready to ask any questions you didn't understand in class, I got more out of the class. I could still get something out of class by listening to the lecture and then reading the material, but not as much. Just listening to the lecture without doing the reading and study was hardly any better than going to drink a beer.
If it comes down to watching the video, I'd rather go drink a beer.
Huh?Zobel said:
Most viruses have no treatment.
Prescribing medications that don't work is at best the same as doing nothing, at worst carries additional hazard.
For most people, there is no medication that's going to help. But that's ok, because for most people a full recovery is certain.
aggierogue said:Huh?Zobel said:
Most viruses have no treatment.
Prescribing medications that don't work is at best the same as doing nothing, at worst carries additional hazard.
For most people, there is no medication that's going to help. But that's ok, because for most people a full recovery is certain.
Something as simple as aspirin could be considered treatment.
There are treatments for the flu (Tamiflu), HIV, Cold sores (Valtrex), RSV, common cold, etc. Those are just a few off the top of my head.
Sure I get that. But we're talking about symptoms right? Much like the current vaccine, if you could find a drug that would treat the symptoms of Covid and get you to wellness, that would be great news right? Currently the vaccine is not treating the virus. It is treating the symptoms by making them less severe. Tell me where I'm wrong?Gordo14 said:aggierogue said:Huh?Zobel said:
Most viruses have no treatment.
Prescribing medications that don't work is at best the same as doing nothing, at worst carries additional hazard.
For most people, there is no medication that's going to help. But that's ok, because for most people a full recovery is certain.
Something as simple as aspirin could be considered treatment.
There are treatments for the flu (Tamiflu), HIV, Cold sores (Valtrex), RSV, common cold, etc. Those are just a few off the top of my head.
Most of those treat the symptoms more than they treat the virus itself. Antibiotics are very effective for bacteria, but viruses in general are substantially harder to treat without your immune systems help.
aggierogue said:Sure I get that. But we're talking about symptoms right? Much like the current vaccine, if you could find a drug that would treat the symptoms of Covid and get you to wellness, that would be great news right? Currently the vaccine is not treating the virus. It is treating the symptoms by making them less severe. Tell me where I'm wrong?Gordo14 said:aggierogue said:Huh?Zobel said:
Most viruses have no treatment.
Prescribing medications that don't work is at best the same as doing nothing, at worst carries additional hazard.
For most people, there is no medication that's going to help. But that's ok, because for most people a full recovery is certain.
Something as simple as aspirin could be considered treatment.
There are treatments for the flu (Tamiflu), HIV, Cold sores (Valtrex), RSV, common cold, etc. Those are just a few off the top of my head.
Most of those treat the symptoms more than they treat the virus itself. Antibiotics are very effective for bacteria, but viruses in general are substantially harder to treat without your immune systems help.
Half of the hospitalizations in the most vaccinated country in the world are now fully vaccinated. 1 in 150 now have Covid in Israel. 7,500 new cases daily. And they are near 80 percent vaccinated for 12 and up.Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:Sure I get that. But we're talking about symptoms right? Much like the current vaccine, if you could find a drug that would treat the symptoms of Covid and get you to wellness, that would be great news right? Currently the vaccine is not treating the virus. It is treating the symptoms by making them less severe. Tell me where I'm wrong?Gordo14 said:aggierogue said:Huh?Zobel said:
Most viruses have no treatment.
Prescribing medications that don't work is at best the same as doing nothing, at worst carries additional hazard.
For most people, there is no medication that's going to help. But that's ok, because for most people a full recovery is certain.
Something as simple as aspirin could be considered treatment.
There are treatments for the flu (Tamiflu), HIV, Cold sores (Valtrex), RSV, common cold, etc. Those are just a few off the top of my head.
Most of those treat the symptoms more than they treat the virus itself. Antibiotics are very effective for bacteria, but viruses in general are substantially harder to treat without your immune systems help.
The point of a perfect vaccine is to keep you from getting the virus in the first place. For example:
Polio vaccine? Yep. Down to pockets in about 4 countries. They get oral immunizations yearly. It's close to being eradicated.
Smallpox? Yep. The vaccine eradicated the disease.
Or kill the virus once you have been exposed. For example: Rabies.
Not every vaccine is perfect. The yearly flu vaccine being a good example.
I would say that the current vaccine is doing a pretty decent job based on the numbers hospitals are reporting. Yes there are breakthroughs but the overwhelming majority of cases are in the unvaccinated class. And those that are breaking through seem less severe.
Not BS at all. But I think when you read that, you see different things than I do.Quote:
All of the above is BS? You don't sound very impartial when you don't seem to be willing to listen to anything that doesn't fit your narrative.
The vaccines aren't treatment. They do absolutely nothing for you if you take them after you've been infected. What it they all do is prime your immune system by showing it the same spike proteins the virus has on it (pre-delta, womp womp) so that when the immune system encounters the virus it can rapidly make antibodies and mount a cellular response (T cells etc) to clear it. It also does some stuff to your innate immune system which isn't really clear, that may help reduce severe cases by preventing infection.Quote:
Currently the vaccine is not treating the virus. It is treating the symptoms by making them less severe. Tell me where I'm wrong?
The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
aggierogue said:
You continue to be one of the board's largest critics of Ivermectin.
What do you think of Oxford adding it as a researched drug? What do you say about these quotes:
Ivermectin to be investigated as a possible treatment for COVID-19 in Oxford's PRINCIPLE trialQuote:
Ivermectin is a safe, broad spectrum antiparasitic drug which is in wide use globally to treat parasitic infections.Quote:
With known antiviral properties, ivermectin has been shown to reduce SARS-CoV-2 replication in laboratory studies.Quote:
Small pilot studies show that early administration with ivermectin can reduce viral load and the duration of symptoms in some patients with mild COVID-19.Quote:
Professor Chris Butler, from the University Oxford's Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, Joint Chief Investigator of the PRINCIPLE trial, said, 'Ivermectin is readily available globally, has been in wide use for many other infectious conditions so it's a well-known medicine with a good safety profile, and because of the early promising results in some studies it is already being widely used to treat COVID-19 in several countries.
All of the above is BS? You don't sound very impartial when you don't seem to be willing to listen to anything that doesn't fit your narrative.
aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
It appears that anecdotal evidence is only relevant if if fits the narrative.SoupNazi2001 said:CondensedFoggyAggie said:Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
We all knew debating here wouldn't change anyone's mind. Only thread that ever changed maybe anyones mind was the one where 4 good folks not vaccinated ended up in the hospital but thankfully recovered, all saying they will get vaccinated asap.
You are picking 4 people. Do you really think 4 random stories out of a country of 330 million people changes minds. People know their own health and can evaluate the risks. Stories aren't told of ones that have mild Covid recover and are fine but that is the vast majority of people. Those stories aren't interesting or frightening though.
SoupNazi2001 said:CondensedFoggyAggie said:Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
We all knew debating here wouldn't change anyone's mind. Only thread that ever changed maybe anyones mind was the one where 4 good folks not vaccinated ended up in the hospital but thankfully recovered, all saying they will get vaccinated asap.
You are picking 4 people. Do you really think 4 random stories out of a country of 330 million people changes minds. People know their own health and can evaluate the risks. Stories aren't told of ones that have mild Covid recover and are fine but that is the vast majority of people. Those stories aren't interesting or frightening though.
aggierogue said:It appears that anecdotal evidence is only relevant if if fits the narrative.SoupNazi2001 said:CondensedFoggyAggie said:Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
We all knew debating here wouldn't change anyone's mind. Only thread that ever changed maybe anyones mind was the one where 4 good folks not vaccinated ended up in the hospital but thankfully recovered, all saying they will get vaccinated asap.
You are picking 4 people. Do you really think 4 random stories out of a country of 330 million people changes minds. People know their own health and can evaluate the risks. Stories aren't told of ones that have mild Covid recover and are fine but that is the vast majority of people. Those stories aren't interesting or frightening though.
At least 3 of them were in B/CSSoupNazi2001 said:CondensedFoggyAggie said:Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
We all knew debating here wouldn't change anyone's mind. Only thread that ever changed maybe anyones mind was the one where 4 good folks not vaccinated ended up in the hospital but thankfully recovered, all saying they will get vaccinated asap.
You are picking 4 people. Do you really think 4 random stories out of a country of 330 million people changes minds. People know their own health and can evaluate the risks. Stories aren't told of ones that have mild Covid recover and are fine but that is the vast majority of people. Those stories aren't interesting or frightening though.
I'm not sure why my stance is so upsetting to some of you. I'm in my forties, not overweight, and eat healthier than 99 percent of people I know. So I think my chances are greater than 99 percent. But the fact that I've also seen very healthy people get very sick is not lost on me. I'm also perfectly aware that I could be in that group that ends up regretting my decision. I certainly don't think I'm bulletproof.CondensedFoggyAggie said:aggierogue said:It appears that anecdotal evidence is only relevant if if fits the narrative.SoupNazi2001 said:CondensedFoggyAggie said:Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:That's your argument for a vaccine that has about 60 percent protection after 3 months?Mathguy64 said:aggierogue said:The fact that you know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs should be evidence that the vaccine is not stopping the spread. Curbing? Sure. Better than being unvaccinated? Sure. I never argued otherwise. I'm simply saying that there are too many people getting breakthrough cases to pretend that you're going to be protected by being vaccinated.Mathguy64 said:
I know 3 vaccinated breakthroughs in my circle. All three had multiple kids at home (unvaccinated) that tested positive first. I know of more than a dozen unvaccinated that have gotten it in the last two months. I know two hundred (friends, family, my large rotary club, coworkers) that are vaccinated and all have stayed clear since their vaccine.
Aren't anecdotal numbers fun?
People use condoms and take oral birth control medication and still have babies. That doesn't make them bad or ineffective. But if you don't want children would you rather use them or go commando and take your chances?
I give up. If you honestly believe that the safest thing you can do is to choose to not get vaccinated you go for it. Roll those dice. Or maybe spend some time reading the thread on this board telling the stories of the three people who rolled the dice and spent weeks in the hospital.
And depending on your age thank your parents or grandparents for being brave enough to take that experimental polio and new and improved smallpox vaccine in the 50's.
We all knew debating here wouldn't change anyone's mind. Only thread that ever changed maybe anyones mind was the one where 4 good folks not vaccinated ended up in the hospital but thankfully recovered, all saying they will get vaccinated asap.
You are picking 4 people. Do you really think 4 random stories out of a country of 330 million people changes minds. People know their own health and can evaluate the risks. Stories aren't told of ones that have mild Covid recover and are fine but that is the vast majority of people. Those stories aren't interesting or frightening though.
Have nothing to say so falling back on 'narrative' eh? Also 99% recovery rate means nothing if you're the 1%. Do a seach on facebook for 'covid vent' and you'll see thousands of posts in the last 24 hours of desperate family.