Catherine:

Of course I understand!  I've been "working on" several very qualified
infectious disease specialists now for quite some time.

I had erronously assumed that the MD's were experienced in using colloidal
silver.

I also didn't want those "on the street" to be afraid of nebulizing.

On more than one occasion I have been approached by those I know who work in
hospital settings, who almost cannot bear NOT to take a few select
substances into their hospital.  I myself almost cannot bear to not walk in
myself and lend assistance to ease needless suffering and failing treatment
modalities.

The conversation always goes like this:  "Would X work on this case of
gangrene ( as an example )?  We're going to have to take the leg!"

My response goes something like this:  "Yes it would.  But you can't risk
losing your license to practice.  Get them out of the hospital, and it would
be different."

Not be to overly harsh on the medical establishment, I had the opportunity
to follow a precident setting case of a failed surgical procedure where the
bowels were nicked.  The individual was sewn up, and within 24 hours
displayed signs of SEVERE bloating.  The surgeons went in and determined
that the bowels were nicked and leaking, and they could not perform a
surgical repair.

This individual was going to die.

They brought in a VAC wound care system.  The dressing changes would take
from 2 to 4 hours... Sometimes longer if they could not get a vaccum seal on
the irregular wound.  Every pad, seal, and dressing would have to be cut to
dimensions.  Once the vaccum seal had been successfully established, it
could be left on for extended periods of time.  If for whatever reason the
seal was broken, the whole dressing would have to be redone.

In such situations, antibiotics are useless.  When fecal matter is leaking
into the body, you cannot stop an infection.  The VAC system successfully
kept the wound isolated and sealed.  The infection was eliminated.  The
abdominal area was kept free of fecal matter, and the nicks in the
intestines healed.  The individual walked out of that hospital.

Best Regards,

Jason

----- Original Message -----
From: "C Creel" <ccr...@adelphia.net>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Friday, April 25, 2003 11:25 PM
Subject: Re: CS>A question for the scientifically inclined


> Dear Jason,
>
>   You said:
>
> <<I'm not certain I accept the reasoning that one should not nebulize for
> fear
> of spreading the infection.  In a hospital setting, you don't "not use
> silver via a nebulizer" because you don't know if it works or not ( and
> simply stick to oral colloidal silver use ), you isolate the individual
and
> take necessary precautions.  >>
>
>
>   The point is if they think nebulizing is dangerous under these
conditions
> (and they do) then recommending nebulizing CS is going to be entirely
> rejected.  I have one shot at this.  I want to take my best shot.  Trying
to
> talk an entire profession out of what they consider to be safety
precautions
> at a time when the majotiy of people with SARS in many hospitals are
> hospital workers would not be productive.
>
> Regards,
> Catherine
>
>
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