OldLady
Diamond Member
- Nov 16, 2015
- 69,568
- 19,607
No. I'm sure of that.Psychosomatic maybe?They DID do studies of the drug as a preventive, your article said, and it proved uneffective. There is always an exception to the rule. When I was a kid, I was so allergic to poison ivy that I could be plastered in it just from someone burning their rake pile in the backyard. Not just rash, swelled up like a balloon. So the doctor gave me a series of shots--made my arm swell up like a balloon, too. But after that, I have never in 50+ years ever had another case of it. And once I realized too late I had squatted in it to pee in the woods. I used to be a hiker, always rousting about in field and fen. Never ever had a touch of it since.nope... i knnow mds who take it low dose who deal with very ill people and have not contracted it. its called verifiable factsOr the drug didn’t pan out like Trump wanted it to and so they’re doing exactly what they should be doing and revoking their emergency approval.Follow the money... this is totally politics driven
But that’s the simple solution and less fun than paranoid conspiracies.
This is the kicker: About ten years after my shots, the doctors came out with the pronouncement that the poison ivy injections didn't work.
LOL