Hi, 
Speaking purely hypothetically, of course, one might note that
a patient's breathing tube is connected to something, right? Often to
the wall, otherwise to some machine close to a patient's bed.  One might
Study the tube and it's connections, quickly unhook it where it makes
the most sense and Quickly insert a portable fogger of whatever sort one
chose BUT one which DID NOT make droplets which could cause coughing,
then also Quite Quickly re-attach the tubing and a patient will get the
contents out of the tube.  One might well Wait a few and do it again,
perhaps three or four times over 20-30 mins., then the next day, etc.
BTW, The fastest way into the bloodstream (other than I.V.) is through
the lungs.  

Consider one potential hypothetical problem with such a scenario; the
things often have an alarm, connected to the Nurses Station and a
patient's room, and equipped with a highly audible attention getting
racket.  one might find that maintaining some restrictions on a
machine's airflow for a couple of seconds while it's disconnected allows
the alarm to remain silent.  Often a friend who is into medical
technology or a nurse at another hospital can offer some similarly
hypothetical info.

They won't shoot, they'll just act authoritative, maybe call security.
BFD.  One might be saving a kid's life in a situation where they've
shown themselves unable, useless.  One could Bring a Friend to watch for
interference, one might get to know the nurses on the shifts, one would
do well to be sure the rest of her close family is on a patient's side
too. 

You, her parents, have the ultimate moral say on what goes down, but
often not the legal say.  Many MDs are sympathetic, but ALL are bound by
the FDA, Government Law and Hospital Rules and cannot condone any
therapy other than the accepted standard pharma or other "approved"
procedures.  Don't even bother asking!  Some, of course, have their own
agendas and the heroics of their last ditch saving of a life appeal to
them, but that's their prob. and should Not be anyone else's.

It may be difficult to recognize that a multi-million dollar institute,
filled with a cadre of highly trained professionals, successfully
dedicated to saving lives can be even the slightest bit wrong, and their
possibly insincere threats to abandon - whatever - abandon your kid's
care so heartless and hidebound - to be just a bluff; but even -
especially - the medical professions have not reached perfection; indeed
far from it.  I speak from fifty years of fairly close association with
them as an adult patient.  Statistics - however double-blinded and
cross-controlled they may be -  will never substitute for plain
humanity; i.e. "they" have no proof of efficacy or lack of harm?  How
could they, if they never tried it?  

I wish you and your child all the best in such difficult straits,
Malcolm

 

On Mon, 2014-12-29 at 16:18 -0500, Michael Mckenna wrote:
>  
>  
>  
> -----Original Message-----
> From: thomas mcmanus <[email protected]>
> To: Michael Mckenna <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sun, Dec 28, 2014 9:46 pm
> Subject: Re: Silver
> 
> Feeding tube works if she has one 
> On Dec 28, 2014 9:07 PM, "Michael Mckenna" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > thanks Thomas, the problem is I need to get it into her lungs and
> blood stream, by the time the hospital gives it to her it may be to
> late. she has a breathing tube in so I cant give it to her orally
> >  
> >  
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: thomas mcmanus <[email protected]>
> > To: piperbush <[email protected]>
> > Sent: Sun, Dec 28, 2014 3:40 pm
> > Subject: Silver
> >
> > I'm sending this outside silver list since none of my replies show
> up. I to had a loved one hospitalized for 6 months and developed a bed
> sore which would not heal using hospital approved methods
> > So I began administering EIS orally on the staff lull time. Also
> applied topically as I assisted in bath room. 2 weeks of hospital
> methods with no results then i took over and 100% healed in 7 days
> after I started. Got to take charge some times do what a best.



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