Viktor
Diamond Member
Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
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the medication cocktail currently being given to President Donald Trump to treat coronavirus could have some serious side effects, including psychosis, mania and delirium.Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
Look, Biden my be a bit more intelligent than you, but that's a very low bar malaka.the medication cocktail currently being given to President Donald Trump to treat coronavirus could have some serious side effects, including psychosis, mania and delirium.Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
“Two of them, remdesivir and dexamethasone, are medications that we give in our hospital, even in our emergency department, with really sick patients with COVID-19,” she said, noting that those medications are usually only for “seriously ill patients.”
She went on to say that all of the medications Trump is taking can have side effects that could be damaging to the liver or heart, but warned that dexamethsaone “is known to have mental health side effects.”
“It can cause psychosis. It can cause delirium. It can cause mania,” Ranney said. “I would never want to say the president is experiencing steroid-induced psychosis, but it is certainly concerning to see some of his actions today in the wake of this potentially deadly diagnosis and infectious disease.”
Ranney was likely referencing Trump leaving the hospital so he could ride in a car to wave to his supporters gathered outside the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he’s been getting treated for COVID-19.
The president’s surprise visit to supporters was widely panned by critics, particularly by doctors. Dr. Leana Wen, a physician and CNN medical analyst, tweeted that she would “call security to restrain him then perform a psychiatric evaluation to examine his decision-making capacity” if Trump were her patient and left for a car ride. Another physician ― an attending at Walter Reed ― lambasted the move as “insanity.”
Stanford Professor Michele Dauber wrote a Twitter thread about her experience with the drug, claiming that it “seriously messes with your mind” and that she “could not wait to get off it.”
“In addition to warning of mood changes my surgeon told me it makes you feel like I could bike up Mt. Tam or run a marathon right after brain surgery when I still had staples in my head,” she wrote.
Dr. Paul Summergrad, the chair of psychiatry at Tufts University, tweeted that when “added to the risk of COVID related neuropsychiatric symptoms/severe delirium,” the drug’s ability to cause “frank mania, or more severe depressive states” should prompt the press “to be asking the medical team how they are formally monitoring his mental status.”
Trump did not help those already questioning his mental state when he sent a series of aggressive, all-caps tweets on Monday, beginning around 6 a.m.
Remember in the beginning when Trump fucked up at every turn guys like Paul Ryan said, "he's new to this". Then the pandemic hit 3 years later and again we see Trump has no leadership experience. Biden knows how to run a government. Trump doesn't. Trump could only do well when he was handed a great economy. Pass some tax breaks, deregulate, and watch the corporations love him for it. And you guys say Obama and Democrats are the corporate sellouts? Bullshit. That's why Biden is going to raise taxes on corporations. So he doesn't have to raise yours stupid.Look, Biden my be a bit more intelligent than you, but that's a very low bar malaka.the medication cocktail currently being given to President Donald Trump to treat coronavirus could have some serious side effects, including psychosis, mania and delirium.Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
“Two of them, remdesivir and dexamethasone, are medications that we give in our hospital, even in our emergency department, with really sick patients with COVID-19,” she said, noting that those medications are usually only for “seriously ill patients.”
She went on to say that all of the medications Trump is taking can have side effects that could be damaging to the liver or heart, but warned that dexamethsaone “is known to have mental health side effects.”
“It can cause psychosis. It can cause delirium. It can cause mania,” Ranney said. “I would never want to say the president is experiencing steroid-induced psychosis, but it is certainly concerning to see some of his actions today in the wake of this potentially deadly diagnosis and infectious disease.”
Ranney was likely referencing Trump leaving the hospital so he could ride in a car to wave to his supporters gathered outside the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he’s been getting treated for COVID-19.
The president’s surprise visit to supporters was widely panned by critics, particularly by doctors. Dr. Leana Wen, a physician and CNN medical analyst, tweeted that she would “call security to restrain him then perform a psychiatric evaluation to examine his decision-making capacity” if Trump were her patient and left for a car ride. Another physician ― an attending at Walter Reed ― lambasted the move as “insanity.”
Stanford Professor Michele Dauber wrote a Twitter thread about her experience with the drug, claiming that it “seriously messes with your mind” and that she “could not wait to get off it.”
“In addition to warning of mood changes my surgeon told me it makes you feel like I could bike up Mt. Tam or run a marathon right after brain surgery when I still had staples in my head,” she wrote.
Dr. Paul Summergrad, the chair of psychiatry at Tufts University, tweeted that when “added to the risk of COVID related neuropsychiatric symptoms/severe delirium,” the drug’s ability to cause “frank mania, or more severe depressive states” should prompt the press “to be asking the medical team how they are formally monitoring his mental status.”
Trump did not help those already questioning his mental state when he sent a series of aggressive, all-caps tweets on Monday, beginning around 6 a.m.
Look, Biden my be a bit more intelligent than you, but that's a very low bar malaka.the medication cocktail currently being given to President Donald Trump to treat coronavirus could have some serious side effects, including psychosis, mania and delirium.Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
“Two of them, remdesivir and dexamethasone, are medications that we give in our hospital, even in our emergency department, with really sick patients with COVID-19,” she said, noting that those medications are usually only for “seriously ill patients.”
She went on to say that all of the medications Trump is taking can have side effects that could be damaging to the liver or heart, but warned that dexamethsaone “is known to have mental health side effects.”
“It can cause psychosis. It can cause delirium. It can cause mania,” Ranney said. “I would never want to say the president is experiencing steroid-induced psychosis, but it is certainly concerning to see some of his actions today in the wake of this potentially deadly diagnosis and infectious disease.”
Ranney was likely referencing Trump leaving the hospital so he could ride in a car to wave to his supporters gathered outside the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he’s been getting treated for COVID-19.
The president’s surprise visit to supporters was widely panned by critics, particularly by doctors. Dr. Leana Wen, a physician and CNN medical analyst, tweeted that she would “call security to restrain him then perform a psychiatric evaluation to examine his decision-making capacity” if Trump were her patient and left for a car ride. Another physician ― an attending at Walter Reed ― lambasted the move as “insanity.”
Stanford Professor Michele Dauber wrote a Twitter thread about her experience with the drug, claiming that it “seriously messes with your mind” and that she “could not wait to get off it.”
“In addition to warning of mood changes my surgeon told me it makes you feel like I could bike up Mt. Tam or run a marathon right after brain surgery when I still had staples in my head,” she wrote.
Dr. Paul Summergrad, the chair of psychiatry at Tufts University, tweeted that when “added to the risk of COVID related neuropsychiatric symptoms/severe delirium,” the drug’s ability to cause “frank mania, or more severe depressive states” should prompt the press “to be asking the medical team how they are formally monitoring his mental status.”
Trump did not help those already questioning his mental state when he sent a series of aggressive, all-caps tweets on Monday, beginning around 6 a.m.
OK, you're much less intelligent than Biden even in his senility. Mind you, that is no compliment to either you or or him.Remember in the beginning when Trump fucked up at every turn guys like Paul Ryan said, "he's new to this". Then the pandemic hit 3 years later and again we see Trump has no leadership experience. Biden knows how to run a government. Trump doesn't. Trump could only do well when he was handed a great economy. Pass some tax breaks, deregulate, and watch the corporations love him for it. And you guys say Obama and Democrats are the corporate sellouts? Bullshit. That's why Biden is going to raise taxes on corporations. So he doesn't have to raise yours stupid.Look, Biden my be a bit more intelligent than you, but that's a very low bar malaka.the medication cocktail currently being given to President Donald Trump to treat coronavirus could have some serious side effects, including psychosis, mania and delirium.Back then, his IQ was the same as his age. Today, it equals his shoe size.
“Two of them, remdesivir and dexamethasone, are medications that we give in our hospital, even in our emergency department, with really sick patients with COVID-19,” she said, noting that those medications are usually only for “seriously ill patients.”
She went on to say that all of the medications Trump is taking can have side effects that could be damaging to the liver or heart, but warned that dexamethsaone “is known to have mental health side effects.”
“It can cause psychosis. It can cause delirium. It can cause mania,” Ranney said. “I would never want to say the president is experiencing steroid-induced psychosis, but it is certainly concerning to see some of his actions today in the wake of this potentially deadly diagnosis and infectious disease.”
Ranney was likely referencing Trump leaving the hospital so he could ride in a car to wave to his supporters gathered outside the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he’s been getting treated for COVID-19.
The president’s surprise visit to supporters was widely panned by critics, particularly by doctors. Dr. Leana Wen, a physician and CNN medical analyst, tweeted that she would “call security to restrain him then perform a psychiatric evaluation to examine his decision-making capacity” if Trump were her patient and left for a car ride. Another physician ― an attending at Walter Reed ― lambasted the move as “insanity.”
Stanford Professor Michele Dauber wrote a Twitter thread about her experience with the drug, claiming that it “seriously messes with your mind” and that she “could not wait to get off it.”
“In addition to warning of mood changes my surgeon told me it makes you feel like I could bike up Mt. Tam or run a marathon right after brain surgery when I still had staples in my head,” she wrote.
Dr. Paul Summergrad, the chair of psychiatry at Tufts University, tweeted that when “added to the risk of COVID related neuropsychiatric symptoms/severe delirium,” the drug’s ability to cause “frank mania, or more severe depressive states” should prompt the press “to be asking the medical team how they are formally monitoring his mental status.”
Trump did not help those already questioning his mental state when he sent a series of aggressive, all-caps tweets on Monday, beginning around 6 a.m.