Patentable Remdesivir is made by Gilead, and its "cure" costs nearly $1,000. 00 for one round of treatments to get to the result with about a 96% effectiveness rate - Non-patentable Hydroxychloroquine treatment regimens (been around since 1955) cost well under $20.00 (so, double it - $50.00) and have a 90% effectiveness rate.
Gilead filed for a patent three years ago. China filed a patent on the same drug January 2020. Gilead filed it under "coronaviruses" and China filed it under explicitly "covid19." No one knows who will be granted the patent.
These same people, like the NIH, developed Lyme disease in ticks to use them as a biological agent. Lyme didn't do enough damage so they collected the ticks and infected the ticks with co-infections. As someone who has had this Chronic disease for 13 years, I can easily believe this. Read the book, Bitten, where Bergdorfer the one who recognized the spiroketes, put them there when he was mixing up the various co-infections under the NIH. Now half of the CDC is waiting for patents and ways to make money off of it before they will even admit that the disease exists. Therefore insurance does not pay for treatment and many of us have bankrupted ourselves trying to fight it.
They started this out in Colorado, but they also worked at it on Plum Island and at Fort Deitrich in Maryland according to the book. I keep hoping that she will mention Lyme.
Patentable Remdesivir is made by Gilead, and its "cure" costs nearly $1,000. 00 for one round of treatments to get to the result with about a 96% effectiveness rate - Non-patentable Hydroxychloroquine treatment regimens (been around since 1955) cost well under $20.00 (so, double it - $50.00) and have a 90% effectiveness rate.
ReplyDeleteFOLLOW THE MONEY ... & 'nuff said.
Gilead filed for a patent three years ago. China filed a patent on the same drug January 2020. Gilead filed it under "coronaviruses" and China filed it under explicitly "covid19." No one knows who will be granted the patent.
ReplyDeleteThese same people, like the NIH, developed Lyme disease in ticks to use them as a biological agent. Lyme didn't do enough damage so they collected the ticks and infected the ticks with co-infections. As someone who has had this Chronic disease for 13 years, I can easily believe this. Read the book, Bitten, where Bergdorfer the one who recognized the spiroketes, put them there when he was mixing up the various co-infections under the NIH. Now half of the CDC is waiting for patents and ways to make money off of it before they will even admit that the disease exists. Therefore insurance does not pay for treatment and many of us have bankrupted ourselves trying to fight it.
They started this out in Colorado, but they also worked at it on Plum Island and at Fort Deitrich in Maryland according to the book. I keep hoping that she will mention Lyme.