I've read the articles on the hemoglobin attack.
I still haven't seen anything that refutes that theory.
I will say, I've seen plenty of evidence that Covid 19 is a Blood disease and not a respiratory disease. (The bi-lateral "pneumonia" is a symptom of the problems absorbing oxygen) Once your cells are infected with CV-19, the underlying trajectory of bad symptoms is always the same, regardless of if you call it a respiratory disease or blood disease.
The main symptom that causes the downward spiral is the reduced O2Sat.
Once your O2Sat starts dropping, organs that need the oxygen start weakening which reduces the body's ability to fight the disease, which causes your O2Sat to drop even further.
If you have CV19, just monitor your own O2Sat with a simple, inexpensive, small, reusable, battery powered device called a Pulse Oximeter. If your O2Sat starts dropping below 95%, then you've got a slight problem. See a Doctor, get HCQS if you can.
If you wait until the O2Sat is in the 50's, you've got a serious problem and these are the folks they put on the ventilators which don't do anything except exacerbate lung issues.
This is different from the common cold and flu, but most of the time it's not serious at all.
I've read the articles on the hemoglobin attack. I still haven't seen anything that refutes that theory. I will say, I've seen plenty of evidence that Covid 19 is a Blood disease and not a respiratory disease. (The bi-lateral "pneumonia" is a symptom of the problems absorbing oxygen) Once your cells are infected with CV-19, the underlying trajectory of bad symptoms is always the same, regardless of if you call it a respiratory disease or blood disease.
The main symptom that causes the downward spiral is the reduced O2Sat. Once your O2Sat starts dropping, organs that need the oxygen start weakening which reduces the body's ability to fight the disease, which causes your O2Sat to drop even further.
If you have CV19, just monitor your own O2Sat with a simple, inexpensive, small, reusable, battery powered device called a Pulse Oximeter. If your O2Sat starts dropping below 95%, then you've got a slight problem. See a Doctor, get HCQS if you can.
If you wait until the O2Sat is in the 50's, you've got a serious problem and these are the folks they put on the ventilators which don't do anything except exacerbate lung issues.
This is different from the common cold and flu, but most of the time it's not serious at all.
Makes sense, as doctors are trained to fight symptoms and not the root cause.