Health & Wellness
Andrew Kemp, head of Scientific Advisory Board on the British Institute of Cleaning Science, said it has not yet been proven that alcohol-based hand sanitising gels could kill the virus that causes Covid-19 on skin.
But an over-reliance on the disinfecting product could mean certain bugs will learn how to survive them and instead thrive on residual sugars and proteins on a person's hands.
Instead, he said there should be more emphasis on washing hands with soap and water, which the World Health Organisation also recognises as the most effective way to protect oneself against infection.
In her presentation, she discusses how geopolitical power can be swayed in the absence of an identifiable army or declared war. She talks about the cognitive dissonance we're currently facing, when what we're told no longer corresponds with known facts or logical thinking.
And she reviews how medical technocrats — the so-called medical experts and political leaders who have turned the world upside-down in response to COVID-19 — have been 100% wrong about everything they've been telling us.
Secondary outcomes (planned outcome measures that are not as important as the primary outcome measure, but are still of interest in evaluating the effect of an intervention [1]) from the trial also suggest the vaccines also produce a T cell response within 28 days.
The new paper reports the findings from two small phase 1/2 trials lasting 42 days - one studying a frozen formulation of the vaccine, and another involving a lyophilised (freeze-dried) formulation of the vaccine. The frozen formulation is envisaged for large-scale use using existing global supply chains for vaccines, while the freeze-dried formulation was developed for hard-to-reach regions as it is more stable and can be stored at 2-8 degrees centigrade.
Comment: Considering this is more than likely a political move (to completely avoid the Gates-issued vaccine that will, no doubt, be pushed by the west, among other considerations), it's good to see Russia leading the way to vaccinating against a disease with a 99.97% survival rate.
See also:
- Mass mania: WHO confirms 172 countries agree to global Covid-19 vaccine program
- Half of Russians don't want to take world's first Covid-19 vaccine, only 42% willing to try 'Sputnik V'
- Mexico interested in getting Russian COVID-19 vaccine
- Russia produces first batch of COVID-19 vaccine, 500 million doses available by January
- Survey suggests half of Russian doctors will refuse to take rapidly created Covid-19 vaccine - developer says fears unfounded
- One in three Americans say they won't get coronavirus vaccine, and one in two Russian doctors won't take it either
- Russia offered Trump administration help with coronavirus vaccine, US declined
- Russia's approval of a COVID-19 vaccine is less than meets the press release
- Sputnik V, world's first Covid-19 vaccine, launched - Putin's daughter among first to take it - Vaccine will NOT be mandatory in Russia
Since 1900, the mortality rate in America and other first-world countries has declined by roughly 74%, creating a dramatic improvement in quality of life and life expectancy for Americans.
The simple question: "How did this happen?"
Why did the mortality rate decline so precipitously? If you listen to vaccine promoters, the answer is simple: vaccines saved us. What's crazy about this narrative is how easy it is to disprove, the data is hiding in plain sight. The fact that this easily-proven-false narrative persists, however, tells us a lot about the world we live in, and I hope will encourage parents to reconsider the veracity of many of the narratives they've been fed about vaccines, and do their own primary research.
1970, Dr. Edward H. Kass
Standing before his colleagues on October 19, 1970, Harvard's Dr. Edward H. Kass gave a speech to the annual meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America that would likely get him run out of this same profession today. At the time, Dr. Kass was actually the President of the organization, which made the things he had to say about vaccines and their impact on the reduction in American mortality rates even more shocking, at least by today's standards. Forty-eight years after Dr. Kass' speech, vaccines have taken on a mythological status in many corners of our world, hyped up by the people who benefit the most from their use. Of course vaccines saved the world. Of course every child should get every vaccine. If you don't vaccinate, you will enable the return of deadly childhood diseases. If you don't vaccinate, your child will die. If you question vaccines, even a little, you're an "anti-vaxxer" who should be shunned and dismissed!
But what if most of the history about the role vaccines played in declining mortality isn't even true?
As reported by business daily Kommersant, researchers at the private DNKOM laboratory examined 1,512 people from the Russian cities of Moscow, Ryazan, Kursk, and Nizhnevartovsk, and concluded that, after 74 days of observation, there is no chance of most people becoming sick again from Covid-19.
The study showed that a second infection could only affect patients with underlying issues, such as allergies, diabetes, autoimmune diseases, and obesity. In addition, people who take significant doses of anti-inflammatory drugs may also be re-infected by Covid-19, as the medicines suppress immunoresistance.
Comment: And if they do get reinfected, in countries not under tyranny, there's always the safe and effective option of using hydroxychloroquine.
Comment: All in all this is what many researchers have been stating for a while now that those at risk have multiple commodities and that herd immunity for the majority could safely be achieved without the need for a vaccine: No second-wave of coronavirus in Russia, head of Genomic Engineering Lab in Moscow explains why
The analysis, which is published in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, included 154 Cochrane systematic reviews published between 2015 and 2019. Only 15 (9.9%) had high-quality evidence according to the gold-standard method for determining whether they provide high or low-quality evidence, called GRADE (grading of recommendations, assessment, development and evaluation). Among these, only two had statistically significant results - meaning that the results were unlikely to have arisen due to random error - and were believed by the review authors to be useful in clinical practice. Using the same system, 37% had moderate, 31% had low, and 22% had very low-quality evidence.
The GRADE system looks at things like risk of bias. For example, studies that are "blinded" - in which patients don't know whether they are getting the actual treatment or a placebo - offer higher-quality evidence than "unblinded" studies. Blinding is important because people who know what treatment they are getting can experience greater placebo effects than those who do not know what treatment they are getting.
Comment: See also:
- Medical intervention may not be doing you any good
- Medical Interventions Are Overused Worldwide
- Facemasks, Lies, Damn Lies, And Public Health Officials: "A Growing Body of Evidence"
- Backlash over meat dietary recommendations raises questions about corporate ties to nutrition scientists
- New Cochrane Review: Flu vaccines fail 99%
- HPV 'safe & effective narrative' is destroyed by Nordic Cochrane Centre complaint
- Reviewed by the Cochrane Library: The ADHD drug Ritalin®
- No Value in Any Influenza Vaccine: Cochrane Collaboration Study

If you are taking multiple medications, it’s important to keep your doctors up to date. The more medicines you take, the greater the chance a negative drug interaction will cause an adverse effect.
At some point, you and your doctor may need to ask a fundamental question: Do you need all of these medications?
"It's always a little bit of detective work to figure out where the medications came from — who prescribed them and when," says Gregory Ouellet, MD, MHS, a geriatrician at Yale Medicine's Dorothy Adler Geriatric Assessment Center.
Adverse drug events, or unexpected medical problems that occur during treatment with a drug or other therapy, cause 1.3 million emergency department (ED) visits in the United States each year and about 350,000 hospitalizations, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
These medical events are most common among older people — those over 65 are nearly seven times more likely than younger people to be admitted to the hospital after an ED visit, and most of the time that visit is due to a negative drug interaction. "It only takes one unnecessary medication or a negative drug combination to cause a serious problem," says Karen Jubanyik, MD, an emergency medicine specialist.
In many cases, you may not need all the medications you're taking, says Marcia Mecca, MD, a Yale geriatrician who directs a "de-prescribing" program at the Veterans Affairs (VA) Connecticut Healthcare System in West Haven called IMPROVE (Initiative to Minimize Pharmaceutical Risk in Older Veterans Polypharmacy Clinic). The clinic's sole purpose is to eliminate unnecessary medications and help avoid emergency room visits for patients who are 65 or older, have multiple chronic conditions, and take 10 or more medicines a day.
"We look at people's medication lists carefully — especially if they have a new concern, are having trouble with their memory, or are at risk for falling," Dr. Mecca says. It's a process that involves listening to the patient and learning about what they want and expect from a given medication, she says.

A nurse administers oral polio vaccine to displaced children in South Darfur, Sudan.
A new polio outbreak in Sudan has been linked to the oral polio vaccine that uses a weakened form of the virus.
News of the outbreak comes a week after the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that wild polio had been eradicated in Africa.
The WHO linked the cases to a strain of the virus that had been noted circulating in Chad last year and warned that the risk of spread to other parts of the Horn of Africa was high.
Comment: The irony of this would be hilarious if it weren't so tragic. To essentially 'eradicate' a disease only to cause an outbreak of that very same disease with your 'cure'. It's safe to say that these 'authorities' have no idea what they're doing.
See also:
- New oral polio vaccine to BYPASS key clinical trials as vaccine caused outbreaks overtake wild polio
- More polio cases are now caused by vaccine than by wild virus
- CDC investigating burst of possible new cases of polio-like paralysis, as mystery persists
- CDC warns rare polio-like spinal disease spreading across 22 US states
- Six cases of rare polio-like neurologic condition 'with no cure' confirmed in Minnesota
- CDC admits it gave over 98M Americans polio shots containing cancer-causing Simian virus
- Polio wasn't vanquished, it was redefined
Whilst we are in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic, it seems that all other diseases have been relegated to a position of complete irrelevance. Should this be happening? According to the British Heart Foundation, cardiovascular disease kills four hundred and sixty people each and every day in the UK. That's just shy of 170,000 every year.
Since the start of 2020, Covid-19 has killed 40,000 in the UK, and now kills about ten a day. On the other hand, heart attacks and strokes have killed 115,000, and continue to kill 460 people a day. Which one should we be really concerned about? Have a wild guess on that one.
Comment: It's nice when mainstream science finally catches up to those in the know have been saying for decades. Too bad the doctors remain in the dark.
See also:
- People with familial hypercholesterolemia should eliminate carbs, not saturated fat, study suggests
- Leading scientists agree: Current limits on saturated fats no longer justified
- Government panel rules saturated fat is bad for you but angry experts slam the 'outdated and incompetent' advice
- An explanation of why saturated fat cannot raise cholesterol levels (LDL levels)
- Anti-fat hysteria! New study says saturated fats cause PTSD
- 'The Big Fat Surprise' - Saturated fat & cholesterol are important parts of a healthy diet
- 12 Reasons Saturated Fats Are Good For You
- Saturated Fats and CVD: AHA Convicts, We Say Acquit
- The real reason the AHA still fear saturated fat?
- Saturated Fat: Health Food or Health Hindrance?
Good news for kids over the last few months sees Oaxaca Mexico banning sales of junk food to minors, the Russian government recommending the ban of Wi-Fi and cell phones in primary schools, and a study finding that having pet dogs helps nurture kids emotional-social development.
In other news, New Zealand's largest child study has finally caught up with Weston A. Price from almost a century ago , revealing white flour products and rice rot teeth (duh), e-books as opposed to real books change how parents interact with their kids at story hour and the FDA approves the first prescription video game for kids with ADHD.
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Comment: See also: