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The WHO maintained its stand against ivermectin, but most doctors in states like Uttar Pradesh couldn’t care less what the WHO was telling them. They believed it worked for COVID-19. The “ivermectin-has-insufficient-evidence” admonition by the WHO and WHO-obedient expert societies in India lost credence, as far as the ordinary Indian practitioner was concerned.
In two weeks’ time, the cases in the ivermectin-using states started to drop by half, and in six weeks, they achieved 85- to 90-percent reduction in cases. In three months, the cases further decreased by 95 percent to 99.9 percent compared to peak levels. For several months now, many states are enjoying near-normal, pre-COVID activities.
"I'm thankful for my medical squad, and I'm thankful for all the love and support I've been getting," said Rodgers. "I've been taking monoclonal antibodies, ivermectin, zinc, vitamin C and D and I feel pretty incredible."
He argued, "In Africa, if we compare countries distributing Ivermectin once a year with countries who do not give ivermectin...they don't give ivermectin to prevent COVID but to prevent parasitic disease... if we look at COVID numbers in countries that give Ivermectin, the number of cases is 134.4/100,000 and the number of deaths is 2.2/100,000."
The Japanese expert also compared statistics from African countries that did not use ivermectin yearly versus those that did not, revealing, "African countries which do not distribute ivermectin: 950.6 cases per 100,000 and 29.3 deaths per 100,000." Dr. Ozaki believes that this is evidence to show the difference between COVID rates and death rates among countries that use ivermectin and those that don't.
"I believe the difference is clear. Of course one cannot conclude that Ivermectin is effective only on the basis of these figures, but when we have all of these elements, we cannot say that Ivermectin is absolutely not effective, at least not me," Dr. Ozaki said.
He recommended that other studies be done to "confirm its efficacy" especially now that Japan is "in a crisis situation." The country is facing seeing one of its biggest surges of new COVID cases at about 23,000 new cases over the weekend. Dr. Ozaki concluded, "I think we are in a situation where we can afford to give [patients] this treatment."
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