Saw a documentary about phage therapy some 30 years ago. At a party I told a pharmacist about it and he said it wouldn’t work. He hadn’t even looked into it. This is how science doesn’t progress: because of people’s inertia to embrace new paradigms.
@JoyPeace-ej2uv5 ай бұрын
He might have said that if a pharmaceutical company cannot make money off of it.
@i.ehrenfest3495 ай бұрын
@@JoyPeace-ej2uv I don’t even think it’s that - it’s just a knee jerk, non-thinking reaction. The idea that there could be something much better than antibiotics if only we’d think a little outside the box - that is too much for people. Similarly, countless people believe that no one has ever recovered from cancer through anything other than conventional methods.
@WishyWashyMaybe5 ай бұрын
Thank you !
@tjvirginia13195 ай бұрын
Maybe he didn't want to keep talking to you about it at a party for goodness sakes!
@dianemoril76125 ай бұрын
At least he said it wouldn’t work. When I talk about new therapies with doctors and pharmacists, they usually tell me that I’m delusional and that it doesn’t exist. They say IT DOESN'T EXIST. They treat me like a daydreaming child. at least this person has acknowledged the existence of this therapy... This is where we are with allopathic medicine: in the middle of Alice’s wonderland. where scary things are seen bigger than they are, and important things smaller than they are.
@tmilholin75525 ай бұрын
Bacterio Phage Institute in Tbilisi Georgia has the entire phage library already completed
@solutions4tenants1415 ай бұрын
Oh thank you for that update. If you have any phone numbers that would be helpful. Or even email address
@doroparker17025 ай бұрын
@@solutions4tenants141 Can't you even lift a finger? Why don't you figure out the telephone number and email yourself? You got all information you need to go from there.
@doroparker17025 ай бұрын
@@solutions4tenants141 Please figure this out yourself. It's like finding a store or restaurant on Google. You can do it.
@krysstefan25055 ай бұрын
Maybe 20 years ego wachted special documentary done by Americans with Bacterio Phage Tbilisi Georgia with specialists to cooperate and get financial support from American,they disclosed how is done celebrated….and got betrayed never continue the life saving program…..???!!!! Why?
@steve63755 ай бұрын
@@krysstefan2505 They could not patent phages. So drug companies could not make massive profits.
@brentwalker85962 ай бұрын
Why has phage therapy flourished in Eastern Europe and not in the West? Money is the simple answer. To quote from an exhaustive article on phage therapy history up to the present:"simple phage isolates, such as those available over the counter in Eastern Europe, are considered natural products that can't be patented. To profit from phage therapy, producers must genetically engineer them or patent the engineering process."
@b.j.3729Ай бұрын
@brentwalker8596 bottom line, big pharma can't make as much money on it as they can on drugs that don't really cure.🫤
@ighdesignsАй бұрын
Eastern Europe? Yeah, they are known for their medical advances.
@brentwalker8596Ай бұрын
@@ighdesigns Yeah, because the US has such a great infant mortality, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and other health problem rate. Starting a GoFundMe in order to pay for medical bills stemming from the inability to pay for treatments stemming from preventable disease isn't what I call "exceptionalism".
@PamelaArvishАй бұрын
Bingo! If there’s no financial gain the greedy aren’t interested. It was not God’s plan for people to be sick however He knew because of satan there would be illness so therefore He created things to help us. So, only God gets the glory from this one! As He should!!!
@limop20Ай бұрын
you're right. We live in a truly inhumane era
@ewinbarnett94115 ай бұрын
The real story is why the regulatory community was almost hostile to phage therapies for so many decades.
@gullybull-rx2ng5 ай бұрын
MONEY!
@warriormamma80985 ай бұрын
Ancient manuscripts talk of greed & love of money above all else in the latter days. We must keep trying to speak up.
@steve63755 ай бұрын
You cannot patent a phage! No company is going to invest millions of $ for no return when they can invent and sell man-made, patentable drugs and not only recoup their (very great) expenses but make billions more! Also, if the phage treatment works, the patient will be cured. If the phage does not work, then the patient dies. Either way, the drug company only sells one cycle of phage treatment. Compare this with being on a drug for the rest of your life and for a disease that affects many millions of people rather than just a few thousand people who have antibiotic-resistant infections. It is far more profitable to tell people to eat ultra-processed foods and take statins for the rest of their lifetime, than to simply tell them to stop eating ultra-processed foods!
@jpeterson14885 ай бұрын
Probably for the same reason they don't like alternative medicine. There's not enough $$$$ in it. There was no profit in ivermectin, so they called it horse dewormer and mocked people that used it. They (doctors/hospitals/politicians) would rather have people being given drugs costing $250,000 a series. Go figure.
@lukesmith32835 ай бұрын
They are influenced by elites and pharma. Cures are not profitable
@nursingu61643 ай бұрын
You mentioned that your husband going through this and you being an ID doc was 'God's cruel joke'. I actually think it was a blessing to your husband and so many others. As you pointed out, who else might have the passion, knowledge, and connections that you have? Who else could be emboldened and compassionate to others going through the same thing. Thank you for this story, it came/comes at an important time in history.
@donnaleveron57112 ай бұрын
GOD/YHWH/JEHOVAH, doesn't play cruel jokes, however, the god of this world does. See John 10:10 Agree, she was the person to do this.
@abl1699Ай бұрын
Well said
@idahardy4052Ай бұрын
It was not a blessing to her husband. Or to her. They took this terrible challenge and fought to overcome. And now they are blessing us.
@fireofhislove3395Ай бұрын
@@idahardy4052The NIH is now researching and using phages because of her husband. Life is a precious gift that can be taken in an instant. A blessing indeed.
@ethereal369Ай бұрын
@@idahardy4052 HE SURVIVED because of her knowledge, passion, and love for him. That's one hell of a blessing.
@winniecash16543 жыл бұрын
There's not a lot of people on this planet who could have pulled of what you have. Your husband getting ill is a blessing to the world.
@whiskeytangofoxtrot10069 ай бұрын
chances are he had to be over perscribed antibiodics for many yrs. who would do that?
@teresamoore41265 ай бұрын
@@whiskeytangofoxtrot1006no, it doesn't work like that, it's about what everyone is doing, if I've never had antibiotics in my life, a superbug could still get me and that's because of others popping antibiotics unnecessarily.
@sallyshipwreck43155 ай бұрын
@@whiskeytangofoxtrot1006 Not necessarily. *Antibiotic bacteria are everywhere. * edit (Antibiotic resistant)
@mercylong88555 ай бұрын
Does it help sepsis and ecoli?
@AnnikaAnnika-od3ub5 ай бұрын
@@mercylong8855 does it ?
@jimpoole60375 ай бұрын
As a 74 yo physician who first encountered super bug, this is awesome. My son was traveling in Thailand, bitten by mosquito, got MERSA, access. Had traveled to Uganda where British doctor took out the packing put in at hospital in Thailand, injected bee honey, and it cured him!
@dianemoril76125 ай бұрын
he injected honey through the veins? just like that?
@srbboo50145 ай бұрын
@@dianemoril7612 I think he meant MRSA abscess … so perhaps an open wound?
@dianemoril76125 ай бұрын
@@srbboo5014 if so I agree. there is some hospitals in France which already use thyme honey to heal surgery wounds that got infected and don't heal by themselves. it works better than any antibiotic. when I got surgery, I sprayed propolis dissolved in alcohol on my wound every day. it wasn't infected but just to be safe I use it all the time. I also use honey and propolis on my pets, so I don't have to worry about them licking it. honey and propolis are gold.
@ambermichellenope95495 ай бұрын
That would make sense. I had NO IDEA ABOUT HONEY until my dad was bed ridden and he was getting really bad breakage on his bottom. A random person told me to get matanusca honey from cvs. Worked int a day it was better three completely gone!
@warriormamma80985 ай бұрын
@@ambermichellenope9549manuka honey? My sister swears by it. Expensive for average people.
@jujutrini84125 ай бұрын
Phage therapy was not forgotten about for a hundred years in Russia or Eastern Europe.
@doroparker17025 ай бұрын
@@jujutrini8412 As soon as big Pharma finds out they will get a war to Georgia. They already tried several times to get a revolution in Georgia. Some big money guys want to destroy all knowledge which is easy access medecin for people.
@steve63755 ай бұрын
You can't patent a phage. I think a US company bought a Russian phage company with the idea of manufacturing phages but they could not protect it with a patent so if they did produce a phage it could be quickly copied. i.e. they couldn't make money out of it so they just let people die!
@chinwenduchinwe5865 ай бұрын
That's very good.
@i.ehrenfest3495 ай бұрын
@@chinwenduchinwe586 is it?
@MsBlondable5 ай бұрын
Phage therapy is inexpensive, that's why big pharma had no interest in the USA. We need health care for all. Other countries can do it and so can the US. We just have to take the monetizing and greed out of healthcare. I remember watching a documentary on phage therapy back in the 80s, and how successful it was.
@rogerdeacon58785 ай бұрын
Yes phage therapy has been largely ignored in the west...but not by Russia and some other eastern nations
@johnbell-yn5xe5 ай бұрын
Im sure I saw a documentary on this , decades ago , when a film crew went to Eastern Europe and saw them curing ill people for pennies The Western Companies wanted the info to patent it but they said no
@Plethorality4 ай бұрын
Ignored? Or stomped on, by corruption?
@Lovefromthedesert4 ай бұрын
4:26 th😅😅
@ryaniam224 ай бұрын
It probably works TOO good. Also it's kinda hard to make them specific to attack this rare superbug that you happen to have. You might die before you can manufacture a phage dose specific against your particular infection
@leasnow7094 ай бұрын
How can we ignore something we didn't know about
@PamelaHarding-l7f5 ай бұрын
🤯 Mind blown. Nursed for 40 years, this is news to me. God speed you and your research.
@Cindy-bee5 ай бұрын
Me also.
@marydd41474 ай бұрын
I was just going to write that! Retired RN with >38 yrs experience
@rebeccatexaschick76214 ай бұрын
Just think. Somebody over you/ older than you probably knew about this and was told not to use it and shut up about it.
@racerx41524 ай бұрын
what else have they not told us! makes me so angry.
@rebeccatexaschick76214 ай бұрын
@@racerx4152 you know why they were so anti ivermectin during the pandemic??? Because it works great on something else.... their big Cash Cow. Hint: the big C.
@carolynfealy74605 ай бұрын
This is what we should be funding. Not rma vaccines
@laulaja-71865 ай бұрын
I tend to agree, but what could go wrong... Are phages as likely as mRNA mechanisms to fly off the rails and trigger autoimmune instability? Or mutate and hit the wrong target?
@carolbaughan87685 ай бұрын
People were hornswoggled. rDNA is passed mother to daughter. Idiotic to use it for all.
@tmilholin75525 ай бұрын
No need to fund them order them from Tbilisi Georgia.. $6 to $10
@deedrole52965 ай бұрын
@@carolbaughan8768 explain.
@dan__________________5 ай бұрын
Ya, because viruses and bacteria are the same thing.....
@Curlyblonde5 ай бұрын
The problem continues with pharmaceutical-laced feed in our food supply.
@standingbear9985 ай бұрын
the fda allows it and farmers do it for more profit.
@terrifictomm5 ай бұрын
STOP EATING PLANTS! They already want you dead. The Big Farma and Big Pharma are simply helping them do it.
@bebeati5 ай бұрын
@@standingbear998not all farmers. The Amish farmers (Lancaster, PA) are being ransacked and destroyed, taken to court for not joining the anti- natural foods governamental programs. Look it up. Also, not just Amish.
@alvarocoronel675 ай бұрын
Indeed !! All those antibiotic-eating cattle... and they still point their fingers to the odd person who (wrongly) self-prescribes an antibiotic.
@Abby-ug4xc4 ай бұрын
One reason why moving towards a plant-based diet is better for humanity. Industrial livestock farming requires huge quantities of antibiotics to proactively treat the infections caused by the unsanitary, crowded conditions livestock are kept in. It's more profit-friendly for these companies to create superbugs than farm in a more humane way
@yolantadianow15845 ай бұрын
😂❤❤that method was never forgotten and still used in Poland 🇵🇱
@AGM-ts5bb5 ай бұрын
I suspect this treatment is not used in North America, and the UK because it challenges our conventions.
@xando815 ай бұрын
@@AGM-ts5bbLike paying or even taking loans out to buy medicine created in a lab to treat symptoms not cure disease
@xando815 ай бұрын
Poland is a beautiful country. Loved the Poznan region. Even went to see the large salt mine with a cathedral inside
@sabinesurhoff10645 ай бұрын
And Russia
@janina5900Ай бұрын
Because Polish people are very intelligent.
@sleepy5805 ай бұрын
I remember watching a 60 minutes ( I think) episode about phages. A Russian institute had huge assortments of phages to treat all kinds of bacterial infections. The episode aired maybe 25 or 30 years ago.
@kablammy74 ай бұрын
maybe that is the one that i saw several months ago on yewspewed ( youtube )
@joykelly5674 ай бұрын
I hope the Ruskies protect their library from this war. I suspect the proxy war has alot to do with bioweapon labs in the country next door to Russia, plus territory. Ain't saying there's a good guy in this one, but I'm also saying the US is one of the bad guys.
@peachBloom2 ай бұрын
Somebody said they saw it on a BBC episode 30 years ago.
@SuperDflower Жыл бұрын
This is freaking awesome! Not to mention the story of her husband. What an amazing woman
@geertruivanbroekhoven72095 ай бұрын
😮 Wow !!! I see this video is from 4 years ago. It should be world news ! I so hope your project is growing and helping people.
@yolantadianow15845 ай бұрын
😂😂😂Jesus in East Europe that is a basic in hospitals....also in Russia. God help Western society ❤
@Dandan-tg6tj5 ай бұрын
@@yolantadianow1584 I don't think so. Please explain.
@nichmon32214 ай бұрын
It isn't world news because BigPharma keeps it suppressed. They'd rather get rich from you spending tons of money on stuff that only works a little bit. If it only works a little bit, then they'll be ensured that you come back for more.
@singmysong11674 ай бұрын
@@yolantadianow1584...I agree. So glad this information is getting to the public!.
@carolcole5704 ай бұрын
SINCE this video is 4 years old and SINCE there have been no new updates, it leads ME to believe that she was NOT successful in her endeavor.
@cwavt88495 ай бұрын
40 years ago I read an article about phages and how they were in common use in USSR beacause they didn’t have the money for antibiotics. The article predicted the rise of superbugs in the wealthier countries and urged those countries to start back to using phages. The article also suggested that this wouldn’t happen because big pharma couldn't make the huge profit margins off of phages
@dah87895 ай бұрын
How is this video 4 years old and this is the first I hear about these treatments 😮!?!? Yes I understand about bacteriophages but not enough emphasis is placed on this idea. In school you learn so much about antibiotic resistance but not this part. Thank you for educating everyone about this. I hope this will be studied in healthcare courses everywhere.
@juditrotter51765 ай бұрын
We took one of those float down a river tours a few years ago. One place we went was to a German family farm. We baked a loaf of bread with the farmers wife, and drank some schnapps that they brewed on the property. Our guide talked out food protection rules in the EU. It is incredibly oriented toward healthy food for people not healthy bank accounts for the corporation.
@TheFirstManticore5 ай бұрын
Antibiotics are not the only treatment for infection.
@Matthew-wp5fp5 ай бұрын
What other treatments are there? Phages?
@countrysister7005 ай бұрын
In fact, the antibiotics are the problem. They bring relief today but resistance tomorrow.
@starman57544 ай бұрын
Well yeah, they kind of are for serious infections.
@RLocksley4 ай бұрын
@@starman5754 Like what? Which strain of "serious infection" can't be treated with phage?
@gayedawn14 ай бұрын
I am 76 and about 50 years ago loved reading historical novels. They used raw (organic )honey and natural remedies for injuries and other health issues in these books. Now it seems more people are interested in herbal and plant based medicines and treatments again, some having lost faith in the side effects created by big Pharma drugs.
@LoriShields-u5g2 ай бұрын
This video is amazing! In 12th grade, I did a microbiology project for NJSA at the local college campus. I used phage to destroy E-coli bacteria. I knew th results were important, but none of the science teachers seemed to understand how significant it could be. It is so amazing to see how phage have been able to save so many people.
@ellanlezcano69224 ай бұрын
Such research is to be applauded and funded👏
@teeniequeenie83695 ай бұрын
NATURE ALWAYS HAS THE ANSWER. OUR CREATOR IS AMAZING. GOD BLESS YOU❤
@happyface-vx7bqАй бұрын
Nature? Didn't she say it's from the sewer?
@michaelryan69474 ай бұрын
The Russians developed this decades ago. I was working overseas with a colleague from a former soviet Republic. Chest infections were rife at the work location. He told me to stop antibiotics and whe he returned from leave he would bring "medicine". When the BBC still made good quality programmes, a documentary called "QED" featured macrophages so I was aware of what he was referring to. Took the meds he provided. Chest infection gone in less than 3 days.
@lissyniña5 ай бұрын
Nurse here! This is fascinating stuff I have never heard of it before!
@doroparker17025 ай бұрын
It is time to get old books about medicine. They had lots of very good things for patients. Phages are older than antibiotics but they are created individually for every bacteria. Antibiotics came up and business was going up, so nobody bothered to work with Phages and petri dishes. Today's medicine is not about the patient it is all about money for the Pharma billionaires.
@kathygerulaitis5 ай бұрын
You're never gonna hear it from main stream medical practice....actually curing patients....'big pharma' wants to keep 'em sick and medicated....
@Jennifer-nz2ss5 ай бұрын
They are hiding all of these fantastic discovery from America in general. When someone does bring it medical profession itself talks it down and acts like it's ridiculous,too expensive and does nothing to keep the pill pushing going. We must put a stop to this now! If we don't we will put ourselves at a great disadvantage. Think about Covid and all of the variations it produced and is still mutating!!!! Even with other viruses now! Wake up, people! We are destroying our only hope here. 😢😮
@stronghold5004 ай бұрын
A patient cured is a patient lost. That's why 🤔
@martaaltheide51465 ай бұрын
Microbiology course taught me that what is needed to make anyone sick : Susceptible host, portal of entry ( any orifice, mucus membrane, cut wound, injury etc. ). and the bacteria, virus, fungi. Our defense against these is “ stay calm, restful sleep, moderation in all things, and live in gratitude. Fear, worry, anger, impatience are detrimental to your health. Be happy, and do all work as unto The Lord.
@HappyTexan525 ай бұрын
our government and the cdc is what makes sick too!
@hecate2355 ай бұрын
Sometimes you need a little more help than just clean living. So, in come the phages. It's insulting to tell a person's family that they didn't have enough faith for God to give them a miracle cure.
@jgage28405 ай бұрын
@@hecate235💯
@cathycoryell23515 ай бұрын
Action, take action is perfectly acceptable as well. Somehow, people confuse praying , with take no action. Pray, yes. Take action, yes. Pursue to solution, people who know the solution.
@countrysister7005 ай бұрын
@@hecate235 agreed. They need to know God created phages. We just have to be wise enough to find and use them.
@mjk-zw8bk3 жыл бұрын
I hope you are preparing your crew and bulking up on staff and resources as well as receiving funding because it seems like we will be needing it thank you for all your hard work
@ELOAAMinistries5 ай бұрын
Wow! I asked my Dad the same thing!!!! Leukemia, flu, pneumonia( all) at the same time! They put him in a coma and told us to call the " family" meeting! Well it twenty years later now! Thank you " Father in Heaven!"
@iknowheis5 ай бұрын
Praise the Lord!
@Merzui-kg8ds5 ай бұрын
How you get from the science of phages to "Father in Heaven" is curious.
@AngelAPAVLOVSCornDog5 ай бұрын
@@Merzui-kg8ds the entire comment is nonsensicle🤷♀️
@larryh48082 ай бұрын
so what was the treatment 20 years ago>
@barbarabyrne1886Ай бұрын
@@Merzui-kg8ds Scientists who recognize the power of God are the ones who succeed. Scientists with inflated egos who think they are in control are the failures!
@royalpitamamma4 ай бұрын
What a blessed man. When they told me my daughter had a bacteria resistant infection, they were just preparing us for her death even though she was alive, playing, singing, eating ice cream, and had zero symptoms. I would have loved to have had this option instead of "if this doesn't work we will provide palliative care."
@tw96644 ай бұрын
If she had no symptoms of sickness what prompted them to find out she had a superbug? I am sorry that this happened to your daughter and family. It breaks my heart!
@tw96644 ай бұрын
If you don’t mind my asking what kind of superbug did she have and how did she get it?
@royalpitamamma4 ай бұрын
@@tw9664 She went in for a tummy ache that went away. They did a urine on her and then cultured it. It came back with a very bad ecoli strain. She only had a tummy ache as a sign. She is a medically fragile child and has loss of feeling below the pelvis to a degree.
@davidcraig97793 жыл бұрын
This should be shown in classrooms worldwide. Thank you.
@nancybaumgartner67747 ай бұрын
Schools are too busy having drag shows to concern themselves with useful information.
@angelaj89586 ай бұрын
Med school classrooms
@mmmmlllljohn5 ай бұрын
Thank you for getting this important info out to the public. So happy your husband is enjoying the rest of his life! Kudos to you! ❤️🇨🇦
@Jenny-h8t5 ай бұрын
Oh wow let’s hope the medical field take this on board. I’m afraid if big pharmacy can’t make money out of a cure they are reluctant to allow its use.
@tmilholin75525 ай бұрын
Actually you are correct. The Rockefeller family Patented the enzyme they create that kills bacteria and shelved it.
@dwightsmith51745 ай бұрын
Big pharma is not just reluctant, they will pay mega bucks to politicians and governmental agencies to ban it.
@kathygerulaitis5 ай бұрын
You really think that 'big pharma' is gonna take on ANYTHING that will actually CURE or SAVE lives?
@jamesfritzinger1475 ай бұрын
You are correct, it is also politically motivated for population control
@guenadyguenady47735 ай бұрын
Like Chlorine Dioxide, which is also effective against MRSA ...
@clairrollings39885 ай бұрын
Wow fascinating! My Mother died from MRSA after a lump was removed from her breast. I hope you will change the world with your continuous good work.🙏
@jo-annahicks33244 ай бұрын
So very sorry for your loss. Wish you all had access to this information then.
@nowhere9824 ай бұрын
I watched a really good documentary in the early 90's about phage curing superbug infections but never heard another thing about it which was tragic as lots of kids here in uk were dying from things like meningitis. Doctors just kept on with their ineffective protocols. Sooooo happy to see this❤❤❤❤❤
@kathleenwoods96045 ай бұрын
I had antibiotic acquired cdiff. It would've been great to have had this as a treatment option instead of the cocktail of even worse antibiotics they gave me that eviscerated what little microbiome I had left. Between the infection and the antibiotic treatment, it's taken years for me to rebuild and repair.
@searchingfortruth47835 ай бұрын
Have you considered fecal matter transplant?
@Lastfirst3335 ай бұрын
Let me guess it was Cipro antibiotic?
@joyfulstand73985 ай бұрын
@searchingfortruth4783 YES! we used fecal matter transplant for the worse Clostridium Difficile infected patients in ICU. It was a cure! But only one infection doctor (he was the best) used it. It requires a stool specimen from a healthy family member without immune issues. Delivered to hospital lab. Stool checked for health issues, then blended into a cocktail liquid substance. The RN inserts the substance thru a nasogastric tube into the immunosuppressed CDiff client. The good bacteria in the healthy stool specimen multiplies into the gut of the affected client and gut health is restored faster than probiotics. Yes it worked! We need to think about using old therapies that work. (Retired RN)
@frankshala67285 ай бұрын
My wife went through consecutive cdiff infections before I intervened and had her take black seed (cumen) oil to successfully treat her and restore her gut.
@RRaucina5 ай бұрын
Same for me! But I immediately borrowed a stool from my 6 year old, made it into an enema and the very next day [Really] the most hideous shits a human could have were cured. Doctors would not provide me with the available fecal transplant, rather preferred I die in a pool of bloody shit.
@moiragoldsmith70525 ай бұрын
Crikey! I am teary at your brilliant success. I hope everyone recovers well in the long term too. ❤.
@58011600520865 ай бұрын
And her resilience and determination not to just give up when doctors were out of options.
@lisacraig18944 ай бұрын
Haven’t heard of phage treatment until your podcast. Thanks. Really wish it would have worked for my grandma, my favorite person who died of a superbug. After working as a groundskeeper for five years I realized there were lots of critters in the irrigation lines for the small college-Tarleton. I had seen and pulled out algae, bones from fish from the well, and sometimes slime. I think the graveyard she reburied grandpa Nygaard (1st husband) and last husband Burgess had a serious super bug problem. It was irrigated (1” water = 1x10^10 bacterial growth), was a cemetery with bodies not cremated ashes, and had a huge pond which was directly below what looked like a couple modern designed mosoleums. I think every step she took in that grass caused the bacteria to get on her clothes and eventually caused a huge infection and death. I really would like to get a doctorate in microbiology just to stop irrigation in cemeteries. Irrigation in cemeteries kills live people, increases crypto and super bugs in our water and waste systems, and does not honor family members but instead takes lives.
@Christine-j7b5 ай бұрын
Praise God! He has given everything in nature to aid in our well being. We are fearfully and wonderfully made!
@DawnAdams-d5i5 ай бұрын
And God created all the diseases, so your stupid point is
@BrightonJames-pz8kv4 ай бұрын
Praise the scientists and doctors who did the research and development work. Why do you religionists completely ignore the dedicated people who save millions of lives?
@happyface-vx7bqАй бұрын
Where did they get the material to make it from? And remember scientist end up dead if they discover too much good
@Christine-j7bАй бұрын
@@BrightonJames-pz8kv We don't ignore them but give thanks for their talents to the one who created them in the first place , we do not worship the Created but the Creator. Don't mix up cold institution religion with a living relationship .
@Dee-ty9ny5 ай бұрын
Using phage therapy to treat superbug infections sounds wonderful, thank you for making this therapy info more available to people via website and your book. God bless you, your husband, and your colleagues for pushing this forward, & sharing your wonderful stories of success.
@HeatherDrew25505 ай бұрын
This is excellent news! Worthy of funding! This research needs to be placed before the public and the powers that be in order to make some quantum leaps forward. Keep up the good work! Dr. LWM
@JoyPeace-ej2uv5 ай бұрын
The powers that be here get bribes from the existing pharmaceutical companies. They will say no.
@christinstorm25263 жыл бұрын
This should be studied, use the tax-payers money on that, instead of gain o function.
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
Right?! The Gain of function name should be illegal for false advertising.
@PiscesMoon2You4 ай бұрын
They don't want cures. If there are no longer diseases then Big Pharma and Medical Community lose billions of dollars.
@abbatrouble4 ай бұрын
Politicians think all taxpayers' money should go to them.
@lisabethdavis22802 ай бұрын
Or to donors. @@abbatrouble
@AJA-ie5uuАй бұрын
The profit margins are probably not as good 😒
@KM00Youtube4 ай бұрын
Congratulations on your husband's recovery! Thank you for your research! 🥰🥰😎😎
@samueljohnclark5 ай бұрын
Wow. What a great story. I’m in govt health and I’m going to chase up that our state has a phage therapy program either in existence or under development!
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
Nice! ❤
@freedom683 жыл бұрын
Heard about this many years ago and had completely forgotten, so good to hear its been activated again.
@philmathieu1017Ай бұрын
Well done you, my wife had phage treatment at the Eliava clinic, Tbilisi and saw marked improvements, we met people from all over the world many of whom felt abandoned by 'conventional' medicine. The Brussels Military hospital also deals with phage therapy.
@mvrickles15683 жыл бұрын
How lucky he has you!!
@kevindarroch73325 ай бұрын
Dear Stephanie Strathdee, congratulations, your actions will help help those others who have asked good questions and or did research for years for years who and were belittled, maligned, insulted and even threatened or attacked.. All the best to your and your family. During COVID I did useful research and learned a lot about alternative ways that were being suppressed.
@cbryanto5 ай бұрын
d'Herelle should get recognition like the Nobel prize.
@knottyinks15 ай бұрын
Incredible story of hope amongst a minefield of fear and catastrophe
@grannybee68053 жыл бұрын
What a great informative video and research program. Please take to heart this constructive criticism about the background music being so loud and annoying that it drowns out your valuable message. Some people who have hearing challenges must concentrate on the words to filter out any unnecessary noise. Please seriously consider editing out the music so your message comes through loud and clear.
@godbless92373 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/oZbZh3h7ap2qZpI
@jodyvaillant1182 жыл бұрын
I would suggest that you turn on closed captions. The words she is saying will be printed as a subtitle.
@Belle-yt5pe Жыл бұрын
I dont have hearing issues yet I am not able to watch it due to the noise sound used.
@roxyiconoclast Жыл бұрын
@@Belle-yt5pe have you tried turning the volume down to inaudible, and using the captions?
@booreed78135 ай бұрын
Ditto on the annoying music. ….(pingy -fast-repetitive) had to use CC to concentrate. Happy to hear your husband recovered. This is such an important topic. I will be sharing. Must keep this Superbug treatment at the forefront. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
@elissaaaaa5 ай бұрын
This is so amazing and heartwarming-I am stunned at not having heard about this before.
@yolantadianow15845 ай бұрын
❤maybe you should look more to East Europe or Russia. That method is in use all the time.
@no_country_for_real_men4 ай бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to make a video on this disturbing topic but I also want to thank you and tell you I admire your integrity to admit that most people don't have connections and THAT makes a difference. I respect you for that because the vast majority of people with connections don't admit it
@lisathiedeman44874 ай бұрын
Wow! Where there is a strong will, there is a way! Your husband is so lucky to have you, and you're helping so many others people! Amazing ❤
@mollymaccorkle70545 ай бұрын
As to antibiotic resistance, I tracked down c.diff, by somewhat of a novel means. I found a site that showed what medicine increased the odds of getting c.diff, and used another site to check what was used as a filler in those drugs.. to make a long story short the drugs that had titanium in the form of dioxide and trioxide were correlated with the cases of c-diff. The exceptions were drugs used for antirejection of joint transplants, (titanium).. The mechanism is that titanium abraids the outer shell, when it bursts it starts a reproductive cycle... Interestingly enough, certain antibiotics at times use, titanium in one dosage, say 500mg, and not in 250mg, (one such started with a C.). In otherwords, the "cut", was causing the "superbug".. They are putting that titanium in ALOT of stuff since it got approved (because it is inert), but they didn't take into account it's abrasive properties...
@WhytePip5 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Titanium dioxide is a food additive. Often found in candy items coated with a white shell, then a coloured shell. Could be in peppermints. Sometimes in toothpaste. Thank you for the clue to connect the dots. A health professional once told me to check for things that end in -ium as they are all radioactive. I stopped using toothpaste for sensitive teeth, replaced it with much safer product.
@mollymaccorkle70545 ай бұрын
@@WhytePip some aspirin uses it as a cut, other uses corn starch. Chronic use might be a factor. It is in some sun screens I read...
@amandacarter77405 ай бұрын
Thankyou for your comment it gave me some answers👍
@mollymaccorkle70545 ай бұрын
@@WhytePip as for having titanium in aspirin: when used as a clot preventative, the mechanism is tied to e-coli, some e-coli strains are needed to make vitamin k.. (People on aspirin become vitamin k deficient). Asprin makes a mineral kill many times more than either alone). With gut bacteria, a lack of some allows for an overgrowth of another, or an overgrowth can crowd out another.. Some involved in cancer, like h.pylori and stomach cancer, and others..
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
Yes. It was labeled GRAS (generally recognized as safe), so are allowed in food and medicine, but they didn’t consider particle size. The larger particles really are generally safe, but in the smaller micro sizes they start to do different things that cause problems.
@Mr60minor5 ай бұрын
Retired RN. Never ever heard of this treatment.
@dwightsmith51745 ай бұрын
For the most part, medical schools don't teach anything NOT pro big pharma, big tech and big corporations. Remember where the schools get the BIG funding.
@Freshie135 ай бұрын
Of course you haven’t. You’re Big Pharma trained.
@m.a.nugent82784 ай бұрын
It’s not the whole healthcare system that would lose too much money, it’s big pharma who would not receive the big payouts of drugs they would be receiving. They would not be receiving as much money as they would be if they could develop a new drug for it, but they would still have a very profitable business. But they are greedy, they want it ALL! That’s why they teach medical students and pharmacy students, who don’t know any better, that drugs are the only way to go!
@maggiegarber2464 ай бұрын
Part of the problem is when people started getting an antibiotic when they had a virus. Antibiotics are for bacteria, not viruses. I said something to a physician once about that, and he said patients didn’t think you are doing something for them if you don’t give them an antibiotic . We have made superbugs.
@nelsontoondrawer7618Ай бұрын
I heard that also...Doctors giving anti bionics for something it could not cure. 😮 Great job... lady. Hope RFK Jr hears about this. Pass it on everyone! Thanks. 😊❤🎉❤🎉😊
@dofu4youАй бұрын
Yes ~ And massive amounts of Anti-Biotics given to livestock every year. Insanity at work Profits over People again.
@TRINITY-ks6nw5 ай бұрын
A real WOMAN is a blessing to her man et family It's time to learn this in Western society RESPECT to you lady
@doirmad5 ай бұрын
Western society respects women more than any other society.
@Mr_Joshua734 ай бұрын
Found in sewage, garbage dumps, etc... amazing! Reminds me of a favorite song lyric- "Once in a while you get shown the light, in the strangest of places if you look at it right" ♥️
@schenelle792 ай бұрын
Oh, wow. What's the song?
@deannadeason18504 ай бұрын
Oh my you just guys this is Awesome please don't stop ,my mom was a student of homeopathy and she said that for every disease there was a cure ,I stopped believing because of whats going on but faith. Thank you all of you for working so hard.God Blesses those who bless others. Y'all are Beautiful❤
@kimchiman10004 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you for sharing this with us! So a Canadian doctor was using phages as far back as 1914 to kill bacterial infections; I cannot help but wonder what was involved technologically with that, and if what he did then was/is something that could be replicated today by 'regular folk' like me. I'm thinking in terms of small, local, neighborhood phage banks that coyld be readily accessed when the need arises. I mean, I sure would hate to cut into Big Pharma's profit margin, but perhaps it would be worth looking into.
@miriamlandau1207Ай бұрын
This information needs to be communicated to every hospital to whoever it is that would be responsible for educating staff. What an amazing discovery! I'm so glad it led to the idea of a phage bank! AMAZING idea🎉🎉🎉!!!
@kitsiewrАй бұрын
So they could start a PR campaign to discredit it? Big Pharma owns EVERY medical teaching hospital, plus all the politicians who make the drug rules. Anything they can't profit from is quickly silenced.
@johnnyc87755 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for a wonderful presentation Steffanie. That news was so encouraging and I am delighted your husband is well again. Thank you for providing a vital avenue for help to those who will need it. Keep up the good work. I wish you and your family peace, prosperity and enjoyment. I will be passing on this information.
@sloopy51915 ай бұрын
Bloody Brilliant!! Thanks for thinking outside the box!
@Aerospaceman5 ай бұрын
A deer jumped into the path of my vehicle causing an accident and the impact went into my legs. Several days later my legs began to hurt and since I didn't see anything I thought it was nothing. This was incubation period and a MRSA Superbug was about to put me into ICU Quarantine. The doctors started using cocktails at odd times and maybe phage? Your educational presentation was spot on and reminded me of my own fight for life.
@elizabethcote90705 ай бұрын
Glad you are still here 😊
@elnosworld98933 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this and for doing the work that you do I’m so glad that your husband is all right and wow you are making a huge impact on the world I’m so proud of you
@yall27435 ай бұрын
Actually, my mother told me that the antibiotics kills both good and bad bacteria so, she gave me Echinacea after an antibiotics. Echinacea strengthens the immune system while you are waiting for your good bacteria to come back. Always worked for me.
@elizabethcote90705 ай бұрын
Thank you for the info ☺️
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
It is true. There are studies done on how it boosts immune system.
@rosiesgrandmaАй бұрын
Thank you so very much. I've worked in the profession around superbugs and my mom was a natural physician and I was taught a whole different approach very similar to what you are using and applying to help others. No we need to make sure that people have the knowledge of this therapy we need to get the word out thank you.
@elsablue36463 жыл бұрын
God bless you for doing what you are doing!
@ellencooney55635 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. Welcome back hubby! I was recently bitten by a bug on a walk in the woods by a pond, resulting in a large blotchy red reaction on my chest. A recent bout of poison ivy maybe exacerbated.. 10 days later still cannot feel my left triceps tho the toxin/ rash was near my heart. No E.R this time just the grace of God. The more information available the better so we can make our best guesses on how to respond. Cannot stress enough how precaution matters. There are no full immunities.
@Lyn48175 ай бұрын
This is a life changing video, thank you. Every person needs to know this medical fact. More importantly we need to bring this awareness to all political people who have the ability to ensure Medical personnel are aware of Bacterial Phages. I am so happy for you and your husband. It is true love when we will do anything to ensure ourlovd one's wellbeing.
@CeruleanSky11115 ай бұрын
So glad your husband was able to recover. Thank you for the work you're doing!
@josephowens46544 ай бұрын
Just seeing this but totally amazed at the cleverness of working with nature rather than against it.
@dncprncss5 ай бұрын
The use of phages to kill bacteria was the subject of an episode of The Good Doctor.
@gruber16505 ай бұрын
Remember a BBC horizon episode from about 40 years ago and there was a guy from Russia who had a phage for most bad bacteria but no-one in the west bothered and stuck to anti biotics 😮
@deedrole52965 ай бұрын
there was a documentary decades ago that I watched. it was astonishing.
@woollyprimate5 ай бұрын
Probably due to big Pharma lobbyists.
@c.a.greene83953 жыл бұрын
At the first sign of illness gargle with listerine mouth wash 6 x a day, drink 1oz of 151 proof liquor of your choice, I choose vodka, 6 times a day, immediately after you rinse with the strongest mouthwash you can find....after only 1 day of doing this my early symptoms went away completely...I'm on day 5 and I'm feeling GREAT!!!!
@c.a.greene83953 жыл бұрын
Everyone else within the circle of friends that did this also didn't get sick, those that ignored our recommendation had a 16-20 day illness...I'm the last one to get sick...I wore gloves, mask, eye sheild and Tyvek painters suit complete with hood and booties and gloves taped to the suit, I was sprayed down with lysol before removing the suit each time, we burned the suits afterwards and I still caught the virus!!! The very second you feel that tingle in your throat remember to start gargling IMMEDIATELY before the virus reaches your lungs, then it's too late....good luck my friends...my prayers are with all of you
@mgreen52293 жыл бұрын
@@c.a.greene8395 I think there is something to what you're saying.
@c.a.greene83953 жыл бұрын
@@mgreen5229 I don't swallow the vodka that I gargle with but I do have at least one shot at noon of 151 proof vodka everyday of feeling that tingle at the back of my throat So far I haven't gotten sick, and I have been exposed 5 times. Gargling works
@monicali26086 ай бұрын
Same with CDL.
@ggrace11335 ай бұрын
Yeah, I would imagine so! 😂
@peterdowney14925 ай бұрын
Yes. Really, pleased for your husband and you and for the effort and thought you put into this. It's a coincidence that I came across this as I have only recently listened to a BBC programme 'In Our Time' where this issue was discussed. So, what I've learnt to add to this is that, apparently, phages are already in our guts and do a great job. And it is because they are so specific that they initially lost out to penicillin which covers a greater field. But one of the speakers is, indeed, optimistic for the future. And it appears that advances in technology are making this possible. I'm shocked that no one in the hospital seemed aware of this. I have a bacterial infection at the moment (not life threatening) and I do hope, that if the antibiotics don't work someone in The NHS will be aware. Because if they aren't aware, too often they don't take kindly to being made so. Once again, really pleased for you.
@steve63755 ай бұрын
Phages cannot be protected with a patent. So drug companies abandoned them years ago as they wont spend $millions on something that can be easily and cheaply copied.
@elizabethcote90705 ай бұрын
🙏🙏
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
Yep. Ego problems abound. Good doctors are worth their weight in gold and the search though!
@ethereal369Ай бұрын
An "Open Source Phage Library" sounds FANTASTIC!! What an incredibly story! I had a serious MRSA infection that spread in my bones & became sepsis. It happened during a surgery after I had a compound fracture from a fall down my stairs 20+ years ago. I was fortunate to survive but it took 3 years to get over that infection and it was so painful! I'm lucky to be alive though. I wish I'd known about this therapy then. I was a lab tech in a microbiology lab and still had never heard of it. I wish you the best in your professional journey. This treatment sounds revolutionary & will save countless lives.
@mandybell78844 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this info ! I had heard of this when I was younger - I am 64 yts old . The work you're doing & message you are conveying is and will be critical for healing people that otherwise may have no hope ! I believe this was a gift from God for the sake of many , that your dear husband got sick and you were forced to find the answer , I believe God was leading you to the right people and getting answers & results - very good life missions ! ❤ thank you both very much !
@Quantumtrancework4 ай бұрын
These people here do some good work! THANK YOU. I also see the value of people not over sanitizing everything in their life. We grew up in humble surroundings, and near the river where we always played in the dirt. Our immune systems were top notch from that, and still is as I continued to consume dirt throughout my life, not washing my veges from the garden totally clean etc. You can now even buy capsules with "soil based organisms" putting things right for your Micro Biome. Also make home made KEFIR with a lot of these bacterial strains that clean up beneficially. Thats how you keep your immune system alive, so any bugs coming your way, you are prepared.
@PennySixx-di7um4 ай бұрын
I let my son eat dirt and stick the dogs chew toy right in his mouth, I didn’t wash all the dirt off of potatoes and vegetables I grew in the garden, I didn’t wash and disinfect everything constantly, I let him get dirty and stay dirty for a cple days and then a bath. Not one every single day. I wanted him to get the germs into him young to build immunity. He’s never been sick, the odd sniffly cold yeah, but only once had a fever, had C19 run right through him in a weekend and it was gone and he was fine! He has no allergies or chronic anything! My friends who sterilized EVERYTHING and used shopping cart covers and over washed toys and hands and surfaces….. their kids are ALWAYS sick! Asthma, allergies to damn near everything! When they get a cold/flu bug it’s always high fevers, hospital visits, put for at least a week of suffering if not more! Dirt and some germs exist here too! We were supposed to coexist and build our own immunity not make artificial crap that living organisms can evolve to overcome 😉
@Quantumtrancework4 ай бұрын
@@PennySixx-di7um Good on You, great to hear that there are people who still connect to their inner wisdom and live it !
@LeloBoyle5 ай бұрын
Shows how many effective & safe treatments have been sidelined,because of big Pharma& money interests😢😮
@bruceallen64924 ай бұрын
I did not have a superbug infection. I had a regular bug infection. I was on Vancomycin, Cipro and Flagel . I was on IV Vancomycin for 30 days. I eventually had C-Diff and was on oral Vancomycin. I cried a lot reading your book. My doctors did not know about PTSD affecting patients like me. I wondered why I could not sit in the dentist's chair after I was released after the infection was cleared. I can't imagine what people go through with a super bug!!! THANK YOU for your book! I read it several times. MY infection happened in 1995 andI wish I had gotten PTSD treatment. I suggest reading Matt McCarthy's book Superbugs especially chapters 21 and 22. They cover The Rockfellers and Lysin. My research area is molecular dynamics , but I find Phages amazing. I think NanoEngineering has unbounded promise once humans understand phages and can manufacture them ! God Bless you and your Husband!
@idee78965 ай бұрын
One of the most important discovery for the mankind. Thank you!!!
@kenadair-c5i5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your story. Undoubtedly this will be seen by many people and hopefully it will reach those in need. I am a firm believer that natural cures at the end of the day are amazing... Thank you again, and God's Speed to you and your husband!
@lourdesm.velandia-calderon34865 ай бұрын
Wow. My mom contracted MRSA while traveling to S. America, she was treated and it went well. Thank you for this awesome video, and wish exponential success for the bank project. THE ALMIGHTY'S BLESSINGS!!
@LorraineCareyAuthor3 жыл бұрын
I've had MRSA and it's hung around for a year now. Got in from the hospital then contacted another bacterial infection in the sinuses. Bless you for all of your work.
@royblizzardIII3 жыл бұрын
Did any dr at any time ever tell you the MRSA lives in the nasal passages and you have to put a triple antibiotic ointment up in your nasal passage for 21 days to stop you from being a carrier.
@davidmangen19125 ай бұрын
Try organic cayenne pepper in water. Drink it before any meals and your sinuses will love you for it.
@sexywarriorwomen5 ай бұрын
You maybe can use a neti pot with salt/saline water to heal your sinuses. A guy I know did it when the docs gave up on him and the infection was about to break through into his brain. It saved his life and he’s perfectly well now.
@tw96644 ай бұрын
@@royblizzardIII I got MRSA and my Dr. had me put the antibiotic ointment in my nose as well as taking pills. From the stories i’ve read I dodge a bullet! Took (ALL) the meds for two months straight. I got it from cleaning an apartment for a lil extra money. Needless to say i came out of it in the negative! Ha! I wore latex gloves the entire time and even changed them out very carefully. I think the reason i got it and the two other people that worked in every room i did as well did not get it is because when i got home i instantly took a shower because i felt so gross and i shaved my legs. It was my leg that became infected in two places. I thought it was a boil the way it looked but it kept getting worse and my leg swelled up and i couldn’t stand up or put ANY pressure on it. I only got out of bed long enough to make it a few steps to the bathroom and back and i didn’t have crutches or a cane so i held on to the furniture leading to the bathroom and hobbled on one foot. It was very painful. The rest of the time i was in bed with my leg propped up on a stack of pillows for what seemed like forever.
@jeanbrown82955 ай бұрын
So pleased to hear that you managed to save him,god bless you both
@grumpystiltskin4 ай бұрын
"We can't afford it. It's Too Cheap!" : Industry A treatment for MRSA is really important. Skin surface MRSA can sometimes be treated with blue light therapy, along with other treatments. UV would work as well but blue light is safer-- no DNA damage, no sunburn.
@florforever15 ай бұрын
That's so awesome! I have a daughter who has Artillary Pulmonary Hypertension & we worry about her getting sick or having a super bug. Or even anyone else in my family! I am so glad you're giving this chance to people. God puts people in places to help those along the way till his day. ❤🎉 May Jehovah bless your efforts.😅😊❤❤🎉🎉😊
@marieslabbert6009Ай бұрын
This video is about one of the most consequential videos I have ever watched. It feels like I am watching history being made. This is going to play an enormous part of our health care in the not too distance future. Thank you!!
@Petunia-Greene5 ай бұрын
This is great information…good luck getting your insurance company to cover it. I’m recovering stage 4 cancer and I can’t get them to give me a CGM. There’s a thing called “standard of care” and outside that, they won’t talk to you.
@Agapy88885 ай бұрын
That’s evil. Check out dr Ken Berry.
@Agapy88885 ай бұрын
Eat meat
@issamelissaaa5 ай бұрын
Fenbendazole
@carolcole5705 ай бұрын
YES……MEAT. ONLY MEAT. Carnivore.
@tjsurname1195 ай бұрын
Dear Petunia-Greene, My Dear Friend had what they called advanced 'Stage 4 Stomach Cancer'. They gave her zero prospects, but ensured they put her on chemo anyway and made her very sick. Petunia, my Dear Friend who got that diagnosis is a medically trained senior lecturer in the medical field and practitioner. She followed the advice of a Dear Dr. JB who spoke to her on a video conference from the USA. and over 10 years later she is healthier than she has ever been in her life. The cancer "disappeared" in a 3 month period between x-rays (?) and they tried to tell her that they must have made a mistake with the original diagnosis and got the x-ray(?) mixed up with another patient or some such nonsense. GOD Bless you Dear Petunia-Greene, prayers for you to be guided to your best health ever - like so many others have been in my own personal direct experience. kzbin.info/www/bejne/nYbMd3iegJh1b8U 💗
@pluto4D5 ай бұрын
Michael Mosley on a BBC documentary had a well researched program on the topic of phages
@connieroberts51525 ай бұрын
Fantastic news and I’m so glad your husband has recovered!Please keep up the good work your doing!👏🏻
@JefferyHagen5 ай бұрын
I worked in a dairy and we got a phage in one of our holding tanks that was made of stainless steel. One of the people in management who had a doctorate in food science said we had to wait until it went away. Even with all of our sanitation capabilities that’s all we could do. The issue it was causing was we made yogurt and after the yogurt was pasteurized we would introduce a yogurt culture post pasteurization so it could legally be called yogurt. The phage was attacking the yogurt culture.
@davidfleming4052Ай бұрын
So glad you spoke to Vandy students last fall. A profound impact on them.
@Heaven333gemini5 ай бұрын
Wow never heard of this we need to put this a priority Please share this forward
@mylilpc4 ай бұрын
Ugghhh I discovered phage therapy years ago when I was searching for alternatives to antibiotics because of how sensitive I am to them. I feel like they’re gonna kill me along with the bacteria being treating whenever I’m on them. I really wish big pharma wasn’t so busy peddling antibiotics. I would prefer this treatment over wiping out both the good and bad bacteria any day. I currently use a phage serum as an acne treatment but wish there was more available for other types of bacteria and infections.
@Roylamx5 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing this and sharing your story with all of us! Thank you for being AMAZING!!!
@CBJAMPA4 ай бұрын
What a blessed lady! Thanks to her efforts, millions of lives may start to be saved from now on. Gratitude! ❤
@onecompass72904 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. I want to see this for cancer treatment. Antibiotics have taken us as far as they could. It IS time to move beyond them with these types of therapies. I have had great success with homeopathy as well.
@cindyhollings20795 ай бұрын
Excellent science, fingers crossed for multi governmental support as well.