Important considerations about Covid-19 from Miri Anne on FB
PLEASE ASK THESE QUESTIONS
They could save your life, and that of loved ones.
- What percentage of people with respiratory symptoms are being tested for coronavirus?
- What test is being used?
- How reliable is this test, and how likely is it to throw up false positives?
- If a positive result is returned, what evidence is there that coronavirus is responsible for the patient’s symptoms?
- If admitted to hospital with diagnosed coronavirus, what treatment protocols are being followed?
- What evidence is there these treatments optimise survival rates, over and above other treatments, such as IV vitamin C, and including giving no treatment?
- Are hospitals under pressures to prescribe specific drugs or treatments under threat of legal action, even if these treatments are not proven to optimise survival?
- Are people admitted to hospital with coronavirus aware the law on organ donation is about to change, and become opt-out rather than opt-in?
- Are patients and their families aware of the realities of organ donation, that donors are alive during the process, and that they often display clinical signs of pain when their organs are removed?
- Are patients and their families aware of the new Coronavirus Bill, which allows doctors to sign off death certificates without having seen the deceased, and that inquest by jury is no longer required?
I will summarise the answers, based on my own research, as follows; a very small percentage of patients with respiratory symptoms are being tested for coronavirus – only those who have severe enough symptoms to enter hospital, which means the death rate from the infection is being grossly skewed, which is causing people to think this infection is much more serious and fatal than it is.
It seems that a nasal swab is being used as a test, and that this test is extremely unreliable – that it returns false positives up to 80% of the time.
Once diagnosed with coronavirus, there is no evidence that coronavirus is responsible for serious medical symptoms. Chronically ill people at the end of their lives often test positive for many infections – it doesn’t mean these killed them.
The treatment protocols I have heard of include, putting someone under general anaesthetic (why on earth would you do that to someone struggling to breathe?), and administering antibiotics, immunosuppressants, and HIV drugs. I see no evidence this approach is more successful than others, in particular, IV vitamin C, which is an overwhelmingly successful, evidence-based, non-toxic treatment.
Hospitals are indeed under immense pressure to prescribe certain treatments – even if they’re not optimal – because if they don’t and the patient dies, they could get sued. Massive law suits are a
major concern to hospitals.
Most people are not aware of the change in law in organ donation, and that they will automatically be an organ donor unless they have opted out. Most people also believe organ donors are dead when their organs are taken.
Almost nobody knows about the new Coronavirus Bill, and the terrifying powers it gives governments and hospitals. Please look up this bill and familiarise yourself with it as soon as you possibly can.
Then consider writing to your MP about it as a matter of urgency, as I have done. PM me if you want a template.
Please research and find answers to the above ten questions to your own satisfaction, before you submit yourself or loved ones to any hospital tests or treatments.

