Robert F Kennedy Jr continued his participation in the funeral of Texas of a deceased child of measles by praising two unconventional “healers”, one of which was previously disciplined by the State Medical Council for “an unusual use of drugs filled with risks”.
The Secretary in the United States of Health continued to send mixed messages during the weekend on the measles epidemic which has now made at least three lives, including that of two children-first praising the measles vaccine, mumps and rubella (MMR) as effective, then praising the practitioners who avoided vitamins and cod liver oil.
For years, Kennedy has himself baselessly sowed doubt about the safety and efficiency of vaccines, and triggered an alarm last month when he supported vitamins to treat the disease. At the time, he had stopped in short to supply by the ROR vaccine, which he minimized as a “personal choice” rather than a measure of health and public security which turned out to be effective.
In a tweet Sunday after his presence in Seminole during the Daisy Hildebrand funeral, an eight vaccinated child who died on April 3, Kennedy said that he had visited Richard Bartlett and Ben Edwards – and said without proof that anti -Vax physicists had treated and healing “some 300 children in grade in grade”.
Texas Medical Board disciplined Bartlett in 2003 for its “inappropriate treatment of patients with intravenous antibiotics and other drugs”.
Kennedy’s tweet said Bartlett used “Budesonide and Clarithromycin aerosolized” to treat children with measles, two drugs that Bartlett would have previously affirmed were also ingredients in his treatment as a “magic solution” for COVID-19.
Bartlett, who carried out a short -term campaign of the congress in 2019, has something of a checkered past. During a long medical career which, according to him, was “an appeal from God”, patients complained to receive “unnecessary diagnostic tests, drugs or treatments”. And in 2021, he received a criminal intrusion warning after being caught which allegedly crossed trash bags in a hospital in the county of Ector where he did not work.
Edwards, meanwhile, has a “well-being practice” without vaccine in a converted gran building in Seminole where it promotes better nutrition and treats patients with cod liver oil and vitamins to control the measles epidemic, according to NBC News.
Like Bartlett, Edwards is a budget defender, a corticosteroid more commonly used in the treatment of the inflammatory intestine disease – and inhaled to open the respiratory tract in patients with asthma.
Kennedy previously expressed his admiration for the pair, telling Fox News last month that Budesonide produced “very, very good results” and that patients had experienced “almost miraculous and instant” recovery.
Conversely, Kennedy spoke the ROR vaccine during his visit to Texas. He said the goal of the trip was to comfort the families of Hildebrand and Kayley Fehr, a six-year-old child whose death was the first in measles in the United States in a decade.
“My intention was to descend here quietly to console families and be with the community in their sorrowful moment,” he said in a previous article on Sunday to X.
“At the beginning of March, I deployed a CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) team to strengthen local and state -of -response capacity in several Texas regions, supply pharmacies and Texas clinics with required MMR vaccines and other medications and medical supplies.
“Since that time, the growth rates of new cases and hospitalizations have flattened. The most effective way to prevent the propagation of measles is the ROR vaccine. ”
Kennedy said that on Sunday, there were “642 confirmed cases of measles in 22 states, 499 of those in Texas”.
The United States and Social Services Department confirmed Hildebrand’s death in NBC late Saturday, declaring that the cause of the child’s death remained under investigation.
A spokesman for the UMC health system in Lubbock, Texas, said on Sunday, said the child had been hospitalized before dying and “received treatment for measles complications”, which is easily preventable by vaccination.
According to the authorities, Fehr has not been vaccinated. NBC said that the County of Gaines, which integrates Seminole, has one of the highest vaccine exemption rates in Texas, almost 18% against 3% nationally.
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