Author Topic: Malaria makes Africa poor: Not colonialism, wars etc  (Read 3325 times)

Offline veritas

  • Enigma
  • *
  • Posts: 3353
  • Reputation: 4790
Re: Malaria makes Africa poor: Not colonialism, wars etc
« Reply #20 on: August 26, 2018, 01:19:29 AM »
I heard about folks developing immunity but immunity is just a matter of health condition. Those who eat and sleep well have better immunity and faster recovery rate in general.

Malaria can be cured with malaria tabs if displaying flu symptoms or quinine if later stages - displays hallucinations and other mental disorders.

We had one case of a young teen who kept sitting on an ant hill, uttering jibberish and injuring himself. His family were concerned and brought him to the village daktari whom I was assisting at the time. They had taken the boy to see a witch doctor but the rituals hadn't worked. Daktari suspected malaria and ordered some routine tests. The boy indeed had late stage malaria... cerebral kind. He was with us 6 days quinine IV & round the clock massages. Apparently massage helps distribute drugs around the body. During the first 2 days, he had psychotic breakdowns but by day 3 he was calm and by day 6 he was normal. Blood tests indicated no more parasites. He came back 3 months later and thanked us for saving his life.

Offline veritas

  • Enigma
  • *
  • Posts: 3353
  • Reputation: 4790
Re: Malaria makes Africa poor: Not colonialism, wars etc
« Reply #21 on: August 26, 2018, 01:55:41 AM »
I do wonder if mental disorders have an underlying medical cause. Imbalance of something much in the way of dopamine and serotonin but much more comprehensive. Bacterial, parasitic, viral infections that remain unchecked. My concern is with the new designer vaccines. They've engineered it in a way so one doesn't experience flu symptoms. That should be a good thing but the virus is still in your body and it goes straight to damaging your heart (like in my case) and possibly one's mind.

A few months back, 3 of my colleagues had free flu injections but I didn't. I noticed after about a month, they were sort of anti-social like and withdrawn right before they took sick leave even though they hadn't appeared sick. Prior to this flu shot, they were lovely. After this flu shot, they were irratic. I kid you not one snarled at me then suddenly caught herself and ran off sulking out the door. Similar crazed look like the malaria teen. One suddenly kept apologising to everyone for days before dashing out the door and went missing for 1 week. One became non-respondent and kept swelling. All three had taken extended leave or sick leave in the span of 2 months after the flu shot.

There's something in those flu shots that's suppressing the body's ability to dispel infections, and as a consequence it may be manifesting in cerebral regions.