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TheLastCaucasian's avatar

I'm not trying to be a contrarian here, but your theory runs counter to what I saw in patients, both pre and post Pneumonia development, that were given antibiotics for their positive SARs-CoV-2 test results and symptoms, versus what I saw in COVID patients who were not given antibiotics.

I saw a higher survival rate in patients given the antibiotics, both before & after pneumonia development. Now this is not a huge number I personally witnessed; but the outcomes were so strikingly disparate, that I find the secondary infection hypothesis quite plausible.

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Jaime Jessop's avatar

This is an active area of discussion and disagreement, but what I find most disconcerting is the lack of constructive engagement from the authors (Engler & Hockett) re. the evidence that Covid-19 ARDS is unique and distinct in several important ways from bacterial pneumonia ARDS. I pointed to this evidence on the unabridged substack version and that evidence was dismissed as having been 'debunked' - a comment liked by Neil and Hockett and approved of by Engler in a reply which didn't appear to make much sense to me. I asked for evidence of the 'debunking', pointing to McCullough supporting the unique clinical pathology of Covid-19 but the response from the commenter was that McCullough was wrong. That was it. No further constructive engagement either from the authors or that dismissive commenter. Not really helpful.

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