Drogues anesthésie
“Syringes for an induction” - via Wikimedia Commons (original description translated from French)

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Drogues anesthésie
“Syringes for an induction” - via Wikimedia Commons (original description translated from French)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Personally I’d like less chatter about what underling might or might not have the virus and someone to ask wtf is Trump doing with the nuclear football in his hospital room when the steroid they’re pumping him with has ‘common’ side effects like depression, euphoria, confusion, amnesia, irritability, mania and psychosis. Not like his decision making skills were great before, but - uh.
Two widely prescribed steroids - dexamethasone and methylprednisolone - are used for Covid patients in India to reduce the inflammation caused by the body's immune response. However, with hospitals and doctors overwhelmed by a growing numbers of cases, there's evidence that these steroids are being taken without medical supervision. The Indian authorities have recently warned against such self-medication, which can have seriously harmful consequences including, says Dr Denning, such as an increased the risk of developing mucormycosis. However, some states in India are reported to have distributed dexamethasone to the public along with home isolation kits.
Shruti Menon, ‘Black fungus: Is diabetes behind India's high number of cases?’, BBC
Trump getting ready to post another series of tweets talking about how good and healthy he feels
A drug used for decades to treat inflammation now appears useful in saving the lives of severely ill COVID-19 patients — ones who have trouble breathing.
A widely available and low-cost drug may save the lives of some patients hospitalized with COVID-19. The finding comes from preliminary data collected as part of a large clinical trial. The drug helped seriously ill patients who were on ventilators or getting extra oxygen.
Explainer: What is a clinical trial?
The drug is dexamethasone (Dex-uh-METH-ah-sown). It’s a type of synthetic steroid hormone. Doctors have prescribed it for decades to fight inflammation. Here, it was tested on COVID-19 patients at more than 175 hospitals in the United Kingdom.
Compared to standard care, use of this drug cut the death rate by about one-third in people on ventilators. (Those machines effectively breathe for the patients.) It cut death rates by one-fifth in patients who could breathe on their own but needed some supplemental oxygen. There appeared to be no benefit for coronavirus patients who didn’t need extra oxygen.
Explainer: What is a coronavirus?
Last month, scientists reported promising data on a different drug, which appears to shorten recovery time for seriously ill patients.
The findings for dexamethasone have not yet appeared in a scientific journal. They were instead issued in a June 16 news release. This means outside scientists have not yet had a chance to review all the data.
Once they do and the results still are able to hold up to scrutiny, this drug would be the first shown to cut the risk of death from COVID-19. When it comes to the coronavirus, says Martin Landray, “This is the first drug that says, yes, we can increase your chances of survival.” Landray is a heart specialist in England at the University of Oxford.

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Inexpensive steroid reduces death in severe coronavirus patients
Dexamethasone, an inexpensive steroid, reduced death by one-third in ventilated COVID-19 patients, and by one fifth in patients receiving oxygen for severe coronavirus symptoms. Preliminary findings suggest one death per eight patients ventilated could be prevented by administering dexamethasone.
Why are the doctors lying now too?
If they put him on Dexamethasone, he ain’t coming home soon.
My riding instructor, and good friend, has owned her horse Zephyr for twenty years. They've been throug… Erik Koper needs your support for Zephyr's Vet Bills
I want two things for Christmas: to own Jasper outright, and for Zephyr to live forever. If I can’t have Jasper, I’ll do whatever I can to give Becky a little bit longer with Z. If love alone could cure him, he *would* live forever. Please help.
He’s having a bad time. He’s had to go back up on his steroids, higher than he’s been before, and he’s still on the antibiotics. He’s a tough guy, but these are expensive meds. A course of antibiotics is $400, and the steroids are in short supply for non-human use due to COVID-19.
Will write fic for donations, too. Hell, donate enough and I’ll make a recording of myself singing the Firemen’s Song from the DecoFiremen. (I have a pretty ok voice I’m told).