Sovereignty
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2020
- Messages
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- SL Rez
- 2007
Dr. Roger Seuhult of MedCram fame (but is a practicing ICU, pulmonology MD in California) hits hard on using some form of thermal hydrotherapy to reduce Covid19 hospital admissions today's video. He's not talking only about saunas.
Searching for Immunity Boosters & Possible Lessons From Spanish Flu
Turns out, variants of this idea were used to treat syphilis into the 1950's. Interesting stuff. For instance, give people malaria to cause a fever which cured the syphilis (neurosyphilis) and then cure the malaria. This approach originated before we had penicillin, [k]new about viral replication, etc., but it is no more primitive than locking people in their houses aka social distancing.
Seuhult goes into a lot of medical history. Have to wade through that. Worth it. In short, reduce the incidence of pneumonia and you have fewer pneumonia patients. Talks about how that was a better way to go with the 1918 flu.
However, he does not go into details of how it might be implemented other than to mention "contrast showers, etc." in some text splashed on the screen early on.
I'd really like to see younger people using some approach like this, probably the best benefit there. I'd expect diminishing returns as immune systems degrade. 40% of admissions are under age 60 IIRC. There is an opportunity here.
Searching for Immunity Boosters & Possible Lessons From Spanish Flu
Turns out, variants of this idea were used to treat syphilis into the 1950's. Interesting stuff. For instance, give people malaria to cause a fever which cured the syphilis (neurosyphilis) and then cure the malaria. This approach originated before we had penicillin, [k]new about viral replication, etc., but it is no more primitive than locking people in their houses aka social distancing.
Seuhult goes into a lot of medical history. Have to wade through that. Worth it. In short, reduce the incidence of pneumonia and you have fewer pneumonia patients. Talks about how that was a better way to go with the 1918 flu.
However, he does not go into details of how it might be implemented other than to mention "contrast showers, etc." in some text splashed on the screen early on.
I'd really like to see younger people using some approach like this, probably the best benefit there. I'd expect diminishing returns as immune systems degrade. 40% of admissions are under age 60 IIRC. There is an opportunity here.
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