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re: Monoclonal IV vs. shots?
Posted on 11/2/21 at 11:24 am to ESKFreedom
Posted on 11/2/21 at 11:24 am to ESKFreedom
I got the (4) shots in my torso at St Tammany Hospital, the whole process is over in about 10 minutes, then you have to sit for observation for about ~30 minutes. The hospital gives you the option of either getting them in the arms or torso. The nurses recommended torso, as each shot is ~30 mL so it's a lot of fluid and your body will absorb it much easier over the larger surface area.
My wife got the infusion via IV at Slidell Hospital, took about 2 hours, plus the observation time. Same medicine either way, different delivery system.
We both definitely felt better almost immediately and were back to 100% in about 8 hours.
Surprisingly, for both of us our doctor's treatment consisted of "go home, take Mucinex and Sudafed and hang out for 10 days." The antibody treatment is strictly optional, they said to call the 800 number to schedule local treatment. We figured the best defense is a good offense, it was effective we were back to normal life immediately. Very strange that doctors treat this virus with less attention or specific treatment than any other time we've had the flu or similar short-term respiratory illness (maybe 2-3 times over the last 15 years).
Also, we were unvaccinated and every other person receiving the IV treatments at the same time were all vaccinated, so efficacy of the vaccines is a joke.
My wife got the infusion via IV at Slidell Hospital, took about 2 hours, plus the observation time. Same medicine either way, different delivery system.
We both definitely felt better almost immediately and were back to 100% in about 8 hours.
Surprisingly, for both of us our doctor's treatment consisted of "go home, take Mucinex and Sudafed and hang out for 10 days." The antibody treatment is strictly optional, they said to call the 800 number to schedule local treatment. We figured the best defense is a good offense, it was effective we were back to normal life immediately. Very strange that doctors treat this virus with less attention or specific treatment than any other time we've had the flu or similar short-term respiratory illness (maybe 2-3 times over the last 15 years).
Also, we were unvaccinated and every other person receiving the IV treatments at the same time were all vaccinated, so efficacy of the vaccines is a joke.
Posted on 11/2/21 at 12:30 pm to GoIrish02
I got the infusion and it saved my arse. Wouldn't say I felt totally better, but it did make a big difference.
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