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Re: go_wamu post# 44235

Thursday, 05/26/2022 7:57:14 AM

Thursday, May 26, 2022 7:57:14 AM

Post# of 44690
Although psychotic depression itself cannot evolve into schizophrenia, when severe depression is untreated or undertreated, it's possible for the resulting distress and side effects to trigger an underlying psychotic disorder, such as schizoaffective disorder.

https://www.brightquest.com/blog/can-psychotic-depression-lead-to-schizophrenia-what-can-you-do-about-it-now/

The prevalence of any anxiety disorder (at syndrome level) in schizophrenia is estimated to be up to 38 %, with social anxiety disorder (SAD) being the most prevalent. Severity of positive symptoms may correlate with severity of anxiety symptoms, but anxiety can occur independently of psychotic symptoms.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26482261/

Guns??? What do you propose, a government of caring angels???

China established gun control in 1935. From 1948 to 1952, 20 million political dissidents, unable to defend themselves, were rounded up and exterminated.

https://gatguns.com/gun-history/

The gunman who slaughtered 19 kids and two teachers at a Texas elementary school reportedly exhibited increasingly bizarre behavior leading up to the rampage – including cutting up his face with knives just “for fun,” friends said.

https://nypost.com/2022/05/25/details-emerge-on-texas-school-shooter-salvador-ramos-behavior/

A government-pushed vaccine???

https://rumble.com/v12gycf-ouch-excess-mortality-in-israel-plotted-against-vaxx-doses-.html

A government-pushed Remdesivir over a safe and effective Aviptadil???

https://rumble.com/v134ift-infants-to-be-guinea-pigs-as-remdesivir-dangerously-approved-by-fda-without.html

Unfortunately, the Food and Drug Administration will not give Emergency Use Authorization because the medicine showed only a 92 percent chance of being effective, rather than the “magic 95 percent” that is the traditional gold standard for approving drugs.

I was that patient. I contracted Covid while serving on the front lines of a hospital, caring for my own patients. My story has a happy ending only because my lifelong friend, an ICU doctor, moved heaven and earth to cut through the red tape and obtain the medicine for me with the FDA’s permission. I was especially lucky that the medicine was being tested at a nearby hospital and the pharmaceutical company immediately rushed an emergency dose to my bedside. I was as close to death as one can be, treated not only with a ventilator but also with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), which few survive. By the time I got the medicine and began to recover, the hospital was already preparing me for a lung transplant.

Unfortunately, most Americans are not as fortunate as I was. Each day another 1,400 people die anonymous, lonely deaths in the ICU, isolated from their loved ones when some number could be saved by emergency use medicines. The nation awaits confirmation of a new FDA Commissioner at a perilous time for public health as Covid continues to ravage the world.

Congress passed Emergency Use Authorization to empower the FDA to give doctors, patients, and families access to medicines that “may be effective” when all else has failed. For the first year of the pandemic, EUA decisions were overseen by the Commissioner’s office. Promising therapies were given a chance to show their effectiveness, or lack thereof, for the benefit of patients and families. Some early EUA medicines, such as remdesivir and tocilizumab, went on to prove their benefit in definitive trials and became approved drugs, while others failed and were withdrawn. That sort of trial is exactly what Congress and the American people intended in the face of an unrelenting enemy.

Unfortunately, in the absence of a confirmed FDA Commissioner, EUA decisions have been relegated to the traditional review groups that apply more rigorous measures of safety and effectiveness for permanent new drug approvals. FDA is listening to the voices of statisticians, not to the voices of doctors, patients, and families.

https://miamicourant.com/stories/617928153-op-ed-the-emergency-use-law-should-be-used-for-emergencies-like-now