"The high prevalence of neurological diseases is having a devastating impact on local communities in Africa." Hindustan Times, March, 2023
Mockingbird Article found the culprit: Poverty and Drinking and stuff and Africa just needs more public health and COMMUNITY SUPPORT NETWORKS
While the WHO and the “West” focus on saving Africa from purported novel Dangerous Germs Pandemics spreading the world like CRAZED SUPERANTIGEN WILDKORYFIRES by upping Africa’s Covid Vaccine uptake rates, (while the WEST gets clobbered with cancer) the Benevolent Bill Gates (“I fund population control.”) and the Herd Culling Scorpions did manage to get busy saving Africa…from Dangerous River Blindness flies with Mectizan, aka IVERMECTIN.
Unpack that sentence!
Let’s do this.
Now let’s get to the spin from the World Population Review Minders about why cancer explodes in the West:
Cancer tends to be more prevalent in high-income countries due to lifestyle factors such as smoking, obesity, and alcohol intake. Fortunately, these also tend to be countries with sound health care systems, which can better detect and treat cancer than the health-care systems in low-income countries. Moreover, advancements in medical knowledge and technology continue to improve each country's cancer survival rate. Although a decreasing percentage of cancer patients succumb to the disease, the total number of deaths from cancer continues to rise. This is often attributed to the fact that the world's ever-growing population includes more senior citizens, whose cancer risk is highest, than ever before. Cancer rates are typically expressed as a crude rate or as an age-standardized rate, which adjusts for the fact that some countries' populations are younger overall than others.
Counterpoint: Meeebbeeee jabs?
::raises hand slowly::
I THINK I LOCATED THE PROBLEM.
Hello your “sound health care systems which can better detect and treat cancer” are the ones exploding with cancer!
The “sound health care systems” nations can better detect and treat the cancer…which (LOW NO OCTANE SPECULATION) they are causing.
IT’S THE SOUND HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS WITH INCENTIVE STRUCTURES TO CAUSE AND THEN *TREAT (::wink-wink::) CANCER.
But still the WHO wishes to save the poors with more jabs…you know…for the Covid which Pierre Kory and Jay Bhattacharya warned was a very deadly disease!
From the WHO regarding Sierra Leone, promo code Conspiracy Sarah:
15 February 2023
Sierra Leone, a smallish coastal nation of 7 million in the West African tropics interlaced by savannah and forest and grassland, was well on its recovery path from a hard bout with *Ebola from 2014-2016 when the Covid-19 pandemic arrived.
Medical care in the country is still hard to access in large parts of the country. While Sierra Leone was one of the first western African nations to receive COVID-19 vaccines—beginning its vaccine rollout in March 2021—by March 2022, Sierra Leone had only 14 percent of its population vaccinated. That was up from five percent two months previous.
On the strength (12 mass vaccination campaigns in 2022 and three in 2021) and strenuous efforts to reach remote parts and populations of the country, a year on—as of March 2023—Sierra Leone had administered 7.8 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines.
37.9% of Sierra Leone’s total population has now been vaccinated against COVID-19 and in December 2022 Sierra Leone reached the target of vaccinating 70% of their adult population.
Africa: STOP HELPING US, WESTERN NATIONS!
*RE Ebola: Merck (also responsible for Mectizan, Ivermectin) made some bank on Ebola with their vaccines, courtesy some brokering by one Bob Malone:
Alright, let’s move on to more Western benevolence.
Ivermectin Donation Program Covered here:
We interrupt this post about Africa to discuss Ivermectin dosing in dogs.
(Just roll with it.)
Ivermectin is an anti-parasitic medication used in human and veterinary medicine. It is most commonly used to prevent heartworm disease in dogs and cats, but it can be used to treat other intestinal and external parasites seen in pets as well.
Is Ivermectin Safe For Dogs?
Ivermectin is safe for use in dogs when following your veterinarian’s dosing instructions. It’s important to keep in mind that while ivermectin is generally safe when following skilled dosing guidance, ivermectin use can lead to serious health complications if your dog receives an inadequate dose for their condition.
For example, overdose of ivermectin in dogs can lead to severe neurological symptoms like muscle tremors and seizures. Ivermectin can also be dangerous to use without guidance if your dog has heartworm disease. If a large amount of microfilariae (baby heartworms) are in the dog’s bloodstream when the ivermectin is given, the ivermectin may cause the microfilariae to die suddenly, triggering a shock-like reaction that can be fatal.
The dose is the poison. Makes sense.
Safety of Ivermectin in Dogs
In many cases, the safety of ivermectin is directly related to the dosage administered.2 As with many drugs, higher dosages tend to have higher risks of complications and potential side effects associated. Ivermectin is used in many dosage ranges, depending on the purpose of its usage. Dosages used for preventing heartworm infections are generally relatively low, with little risk of side effects.
Higher dosages, such as those used to treat demodectic mange, sarcoptic mange, ear mites, and other parasitic infections, are more likely to be associated with adverse reactions. However, for most dogs, ivermectin is considered to be a relatively safe medication when used appropriately.
Sounds good. Just dose appropriately.
One other thing about Ivermectin.
From this Rabbit IVM fertility study, I learned a fun fact about the Mectin.
Its well-known that ivermectin is lipophilic compound, for that reason it prefers to accumulate in fatty tissue which is an important reservoir of the drug and this can influence persistent in the body and its pharmacokinetics behaviour. The lipophilic character of ivermectin also accelerate the distribution extensively from blood stream to different tissues (8,9). The endocrine disruptor resulted in this study due to excess production of free radicals which form by repeat administration of ivermectin and it is very clear that ivermectin attend to accumulate in fatty tissues particularly ovaries.
Ivermectin hangs around in fat cells.
Like luggage.
and this can influence persistent in the body and its pharmacokinetics behaviour.
Hmmm…sounds like regular dosing may add up and accumulate in the body.
Stored in the fat cells.
Okay, let’s move on.
Here is a current article from Hindustan Times.
The article does not mention a certain widespread donation program at all of a certain drug with neurotoxic effects when dosed too high or that “lipophilic” trait whereby the dose lingers in the fat cells of the body.
Rather it specifically addresses a health problem in which Africa does lead the world, per the article.
😮
Around 43% of the population, or 3.4 billion people, live with a neurological disease worldwide. Why are rates highest in Africa, and how are nations tackling the issue? The high prevalence of neurological diseases is having a devastating impact on local communities in Africa. "Mental health and neurological diseases are often misunderstood in Kenya," said Penny Wangari-Jones, founding member of Hidden Voices, a Kenya-based mental health charity. "People are often taken to churches and prayed for or told they are possessed. Patients are often neglected, locked in houses or left to die in institutes. It's harrowing."
Neurological conditions are now the leading cause of ill-health worldwide, with around 3.4 billion people living with neurological conditions. However, neurological diseases disproportionately affect sub-Saharan Africa compared to other parts of the world. Around 50% of people who go to the emergency room in Africa have some sort of neurological complication, and neurological disease rates are often double those in higher-income regions. The prevalence of epilepsy, for example, is two to three times higher in sub-Saharan Africa than in Europe.
Counterpoint: mmeeebbbeeeee mectin?
Okay.
Who the heck knows?
Remember that Vaccine Spin on Cancer above? That we probably are just diagnosing more cancer in the Vaccine Utopias of the West?
Welp, this article takes a similar turn.
No matter what the cause of the problem, it will require more public health and probably United States Military running some programs along with their Fifth Generation Warfare pals UN and the WHO.
Here is the rest of it.
"Because there are often no health services or sources of help for people, local communities have no way to deal with caring for people with neurological or mental health conditions," Wangari-Jones told DW. Why does Africa have such a high prevalence of neurological diseases? The biggest factors contributing to neurological health conditions are stroke, neonatal encephalopathy (brain injury), neuropathic (or nerve) pain, Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
One reason for the higher prevalence in Africa is infectious diseases like HIV, meningitis and malaria, which can cause neurological complications like encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain. But the issues also stem from multiple socioeconomic and public health factors, according to Jo Wilmshurst, head of paediatric neurology at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa.
"You might have a child [with neurological conditions] who is more likely to be born in socioeconomically deprived settings where the mother might be HIV exposed. They might also have tuberculosis. And then you have all the access-to-care barriers," said Wilmshurst. Neurological issues often start before birth, she added, where complications or infections during birth can cause permanent neurological damage. The lack of neonatologists means the damage often isn't diagnosed or treated in time to prevent permanent neurological damage.
"Then there's maternal health. In Western Cape, we have pandemic-level proportions of toxin exposure from fetal alcohol syndrome, which causes neurological conditions in children," Wilmshurst told DW. Fixing Africa's medical 'brain drain'
Currently, there aren't enough specialist doctors and other medical staff in Africa to deal with the scale of the burden of neurological disease. "The main problem is that specialist medical training hasn't caught a firm foothold in Africa. You can actually map the highest prevalence of neurological conditions in regions that lack neurologists," said Wilmshurst. There is a striking disparity in the number of neurologists between African nations and European ones — there are 0.03 neurologists per 100,000 people in Africa, compared to Europe's 8.45 neurologists per 100,000.
Wilmshurst said things are improving. She's been working to build neurological medical services around Africa from the ground up, and part of that is training specialist doctors. "We take a clinician [from around Africa] for two years and do intensive training [in South Africa]. The first trainee to go back to Tanzania was the first child neurologist in the whole country," she said.
While the program has trained only around 200 specialist doctors in the last 16 years, their impact is huge. "We had one trainee who went back to Kenya, where they advocated and lobbied to get a vaccine rollout of rotavirus. We know that [after] implementing rotavirus vaccination ... mortality rates from rotavirus complications plummeted. He saved a couple of million lives there," Wilmshurst said.
Community support for neurological conditions
Wangari-Jones said that to tackle the burden of neurological diseases, it's important that support programs integrate into local people's communities. "There's a lot of fear and anxiety around medication or modern medicine, often due to past trauma from colonial times. One of the challenges is not over-medicalizing neurological conditions so they alienate how local communities have traditionally approached care," she said.
Wangari-Jones works with Hidden Voices to reduce stigma and fear around neurological and mental health conditions, often by talking in local church groups and schools in Kenya. "People often come forward in these talks with their issues and incidents with family members. It's a way of reaching people in the local community and helping them access sources of health and social care," she said.
Community health is also a key target for Wilmshurst, who organizes "critical mass" training programs. Community health and care workers are trained to recognize and manage neurological diseases. Often this training is piggybacked onto existing programs to treat diseases like HIV or tuberculosis.
"People are busy in Africa. The workload is huge, and people have a lot of commitments. The only way to change the situation is to have solutions that are viable and adaptable in the setting they're working in," said Wilmshurst. The hope is to alleviate Africa's burden with neurological diseases by working both top-down with public health programs and bottom-up with local communities.
That Community Support part sounds familiar.
Public health programs (which are busy saving Australia from Cancer ☝️) and Community Support programs.
May as well go back to the WHO post about getting zeeeee Covid shots in zeeeee arms.
37.9% of Sierra Leone’s total population has now been vaccinated against COVID-19 and in December 2022 Sierra Leone reached the target of vaccinating 70% of their adult population.
These photos, shot near the end of 2022 among isolated villages and dense forest in the northern district of the country, illustrate essential scenes in what is an extraordinary collective effort.
The community nurses and mobilizers in the Northern Province district of Bombali, as in other parts of the country, strive hard to reach what are very remote communities and villages. Nurses Kai and Koroma from the Masselleh Community Health Post, some 20 kilometers by rugged dirt road from the regional city of Makeni.
Photo credit: WHO / UNICEF / Michael Duff
Nurse Kai (right) and Nurse Koroma (left) are heading out from Masselleh Community Health Post to conduct mobile vaccination clinics on 8 December 2022. Nurse Koroma is Nurse In-Charge; she has been a nurse for 28 years, with the last six years being posted at this facility.
“The biggest challenge that we have is accessing the patients in the remote villages. Many of the communities can only be reached by bike or on foot, which becomes very difficult in the rainy season,” she says.
Or…the Mectizan post from Merck:
https://www.merck.com/stories/mectizan/
😅 “stories”
Yes!
Now you just need new community stuff to deal with the rise of the neurological disorders.
Gosh I wonder if community stuff can turn the tide against cancer in Australia, which again, the cancer happens because they are detecting it better.
Africa? Neurological disease? Several years ago the WHO gave Africa permission to use as much DDT as they wanted to .... no restriction. This toxic forever chemical is not a sustainable way to treat malaria and has certainly been shown not to be the most efficacious. Bed netting is the most efficacious and most economical. We seem to be addicted to pesticides. India, where 40% of the population does not have toilets, makes the most DDT and uses the most DDT. Cases of Acute Flacid Paralysis rates are thru the roof despite the eradication of the "polio" virus. So, what is causing the neurological disease then? I will wait for you to provide the obvious answer.
Is autism considered a neurological disease? Cause if so we have the highest rate in the world...and I dint believe it comes from drinking alchohol......