Florida Becomes First State to Allow Early Treatment in Their COVID Protocols, Safe Guards Doctors Who Prescribe Them

Since the beginning of the covid, early treatments have been denied to patients who have covid. As a result, those who have had the virus end up in hospitals on respirators, and the data suggests this is a death sentence.

Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis, has been pragmatic from the very beginning about his State’s covid response. Besides the few counties and cities who implemented their own mandates and restrictions, DeSantis has kept the Sunshine State open.

Now the Republican Governor has given instruction to the Florida Department of Health to allow doctors to prescribe off-label medications to use in the early treatment of covid.

The guidance was published in February and explains that doctors in Florida are encouraged to provide treatments with generic, federally approved pharmaceuticals to patients.

“When recommending COVID-19 treatment options for patients’ individualized health care needs, physicians should exercise their individual clinical judgment and expertise based on their patient’s needs and preferences,” the guidance states. 

“These options may include emerging treatments backed by quality evidence, with appropriate patient informed consent, including off-label use or as part of a clinical trial.”

The initiative, led by Gov. DeSantis was in order to give some protection to practitioners against lawsuits for providing early treatment to their patients. DeSantis stressed the importance of the use of these other drugs and monoclonal antibodies which have emergency use authorization (EUA).

“We want people to be able to have a right to access these medications, especially if they’re in a situation where nothing else has worked,” DeSantis announced in a statement.

Included in the guidance are provisions for doctors to report hospitals that refuse to treat patients with these early treatments, allowing them to file a report to the Agency for Health Care Administration.

“So now doctors who practice medicine in the way that they think is most appropriate for their patients, when they receive pushback from hospitals, we have an avenue for them to file a complaint with our Agency for Health Care Administration,” added Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo.

The Florida government states that only those who are “high risk” should be admitted to hospital and they may be eligible for antiviral meds and monoclonal antibodies.

Florida is the first state to go against the recommendations of the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which states patients should stay home until they absolutely have to go to the emergency room. No early treatments.

Dr. Pierre Kory, president and co-chief medical officer at the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care (FLCCC) Alliance, says that many people have needlessly died throughout the plandemic because they were denied access to the types of early treatments that are now allowed in Florida.

Dr. Pierre Kory, president and co-chief medical officer at the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care (FLCCC) Alliance, at a recent panel said, “We know there have been hundreds of thousands of deaths in the U.S. and all for a treatable disease,”

“We have identified effective treatments, for now two years, and those effective treatments that are widely available generic repurposed [drugs], they continue to increase. And yet, we are still trying to vaccinate people with a 2-year-old vaccine against an Omicron variant, which is absolutely absurd.”

The FLCCC has been working on covid treatment protocol for hospitalized patients since March 2020 and in October 2020, ivermectin was added to the protocol as the main drug to be used for early treatment.

“We’re still perpetuating these toxic novel pharmaceutical company concoctions like Paxlovid and molnupiravir,” Kory added. “Molnupiravir does not work and Paxlovid is poisonous.”


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