Check It Out: Are we able to hear positive news?
BY JOAN JANZEN
joanjanzen@yahoo.com
The doctor told his patient, “Good news! You passed your hearing test!” His patient responded, “Huh?”
We are receiving an onslaught of Covid-related information, most of which doesn’t cause the listener to break out in a happy dance. Recently I listened to a doctor relaying a positive message, and I wondered if people would be able to hear his words amidst the roar of the mainstream media. Nevertheless, I’ll share his words with you.
Dr. Richard Bartlett is a medical director, author, physician of 28 years living in Midland Texas, who also does a weekly update on Covid on Talk Radio in Texas. First of all he shared some stats: there’s 24 million people in Taiwan, no room for social distancing, and they’ve had seven deaths. Japan has 121 million people, and has less than 1000 deaths; 27 people died in Singapore, and ten people died in Iceland.
“In those countries, they’re doing what I’m doing,” Dr. Bartlett said, and continued to explain how he treats his patients. “I use inhaled steroid, Pulmicort. It’s about $200 for the entire treatment. I use a nubulizer machine. It’s an asthma medicine; it’s a respirator anti inflammatory for Covid, which is a respiratory inflammatory disease. It works; 100 percent of my patients are alive. I’ve been using it since March. Put the medicine into the reservoir of the machine and breath it through a mouth piece for five minutes.”
“When I started using it, patients said they felt better during the first treatment; their chest pains go away, shortness of breath goes away, their fever breaks.”
He told the story of a patient who couldn’t get out of bed, had fever for five days and all the symptoms of Covid. She also had two types of cancer, was on chemo therapy and had radiation a month earlier. “I gave her the treatment that night. In the morning her fever broke; she recovered over the weekend. On Monday she was working an 8 hour day.”
“Pulmicort (budesonide) has been used safely on premature babies; it’s totally safe. It’s used to prevent asthma attacks and has been out for over 20 years. Big pharmaceuticals won’t make money from it and there’s an abundance of it. It targets the inflammation at the source,” Dr. Bartlett said. When I shared this information with a nurse, she said she wouldn’t have any qualms about using it.
“Early testing and early treatment is the answer. We do early detection for cancer, stroke and every other disease, but we’re told by China to wait, don’t go to the hospital unless you’re really sick,” Dr. Bartlett explained.
Dr. Bartlett also gives an antibiotic called Clarithromycin, that will cover pneumonia.
“This is information people need to know: this is a rapidly mutating virus. In Iceland they broke down the DNA of the virus and found 243 mutations of the virus in April, 2020. A vaccine is not going to be the solution. Flu vaccines at best cover 40 percent and you have to get it every year. If they make this vaccine, it’s not going to be a one time shot. You’re not going to make a safe and effective vaccine because of those 243 mutations and it’s still changing. We don’t want to warp speed on a vaccine, force it on the people and miss the steps that prove that it’s safe,” he said.
“Why wait for a vaccine? We have working solutions already. The beauty of the treatment I’m using is no matter how much the virus mutates, the treatment still works.”
Dr. Bartlett said his treatment is being studied, but wondered “whether they would set this up for failure. Their criteria is the patient must have pneumonia, be on a ventilator and be in ICU before they’ll even give them the treatment.” How can the treatment be studied properly in this way?
“There’s a lot of misinformation, a lot of things are blown out of proportion. We should focus on science, instead of fear,” Dr. Bartlett concluded.
If you want Dr. Bartlett’s information you can email americacanwetalk@gmail.com and they will forward Dr. Bartlett’s paper to you.
You can contact me at joanjanzen@yahoo.com