
About these “therapists”: In 2003, it was claimed that Richard Bartlett gave five of his risky drugs, including strong intravenous antibiotics, without weighing the damage to treatment, according to complaint For the Texas Medical Studies Council, which was found that Bartlett “does not practice medicine in a way that is consistent with public health and luxury.” Bartlett has reached a settlement with the Board of Directors, without recognizing the error, by agreeing to submit to additional medical training and undergoing temporary supervision of his work.
As for the two remedies, Kennedy has highlighted: Aerobic biophyne is an asthma treatment. Although it may help measles patients who suffer from asthma as well, it is unlikely to help them and can harm patients without asthma, as doctors told me. Clarithromycin is usually antibiotics that are not used in children; Although it can treat secondary bacterial infections that arise after respiratory diseases, antibiotics will not help in a viral disease – and a deadly virus like measles is the primary concern, even when doctors treat secondary diseases as well.
“Sometimes we need to add other types of medications,” Elizabeth Murray, an emergency doctor at the University of Rochester. “However, saying that we can treat measles with antibiotics is a misleading approach” because it will not treat the “basic” measles. Doctors need great attention to matching bacterial infections with the most effective antibiotics. “We are trying to be very diligent and a alert about the use of antibiotics because of the resistance that can be built if we provide antibiotics for people a kind of Willie,” Murray said.