Denmark ends pandemic

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  • čas přidán 2. 02. 2022
  • A tale of two countries New Zealand and Denmark
    www.ft.com/content/83084cfd-6...
    Gradually reopen borders to citizens, workers and international travellers
    Thousands of New Zealanders remain stranded abroad
    Full reopening to non-citizens in October.
    Denmark
    www.telegraph.co.uk/global-he...
    Put an end to all coronavirus-related laws.
    Danish government
    Virus, no longer deemed a critical threat to society
    No longer a legal obligation to self-isolate if positive
    BA.2 omicron now dominates infections in Denmark
    Tyra Grove Krause, director of infection preparedness, (infectious diseases agency SSI)
    There was nothing for it but to let omicron run through the population
    With omicron, it is impossible to stop the spread of infection, even with severe restrictions
    Natural immunity and vaccinations,
    send cases down by middle of February
    As far as community health is concerned,
    Covid is now on a par with the common cold.
    Michael Bang Petersen, professor political science and government advisor
    Throughout the pandemic, our data shows that the key worry of Danes is not their own health, but overwhelmed hospitals
    Epidemiology in Denmark has not been politicised.
    Social consensus and trust in government have been Denmark’s hallmarks.
    If you have a strategy based on trust and solidarity, then you can actually open up with a relatively broad agreement,
    where the vulnerable and the elderly are accepting of the risks
    taking on a personal responsibility,
    allow younger groups to live life as normal again.
    a trade-off based on data
    You could say that a lot of young people have been showing solidarity with the elderly throughout the pandemic,
    and now the elderly are showing some solidarity with the younger generations
    Søren Brostrøm, Danish Health Authority
    I’m keeping my sights on the seriously ill,
    and looking at figures for inpatients in intensive care units
    which, by the way, have just kept falling and falling and are now incredibly low
    We have sky-high immunity in the population,
    partly due to our large vaccine acceptance, but also from the wide spread of omicron
    This also means that we will start to see the back end of this
    Prof Lone Simonsen, epidemiologist, Roskilde University
    I think that this is the last sort of lockdown-crazy pandemic wave
    Having gone through two, three, four pandemic waves,
    which is normal for recent historical pandemics,
    I imagine Covid control will soon be similar to that of seasonal flu
    Dear John,
    One of the factors you might not fully appreciate from outside the states is how really poor our “health care system” (or lack thereof) in United States is.
    We are well known for some fantastic institutions, but only the very well off and very well insured are sure of good care.
    Many people have insufficient or no health insurance. Many of our hospitals are run like businesses, by cutting staff and costs with no consideration for quality of patient care.
    Many people with comorbidities don’t get them controlled because they can’t afford the doctor visit, or the tests, or the time off work, or the actual medications.
    I’m sure you’ll agree that a covid patient with controlled hypertension or diabetes will have better chances of a good outcome than a patient with uncontrolled comorbidities.
    Our unfortunate political priorities, I believe, created many bad outcomes.
    RN, MA
    DMN
    My family knows a lot of people who've died from Covid. A lot.
    At least 12 people. Varying ages from 30-70's and the one thing they all had in common was either/and obesity and high blood pressure.
    The US is incredibly unhealthy, particularly in the South and in poorer areas.
    It seems almost no one is mentioning this as not only a pandemic but an epidemic of very, very bad health. You can go into a Walmart or Target in east texas and I am not exaggerating as much as 75% of the people you see are obese.
    Not thin. Not normal.
    Not overweight.
    Obese.
    www.medrxiv.org/content/10.11...
    A LITERATURE REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECTS OF LOCKDOWNS ON COVID-19 MORTALITY

Komentáře • 9K

  • @michaelnancyamsden7410
    @michaelnancyamsden7410 Před 2 lety +394

    As a physician in the USA, I can attest to the problems in our health system. Greed. Power. Lack of education. Lack of hope.
    Politicization.Power trips. Twisting of opinion. Brain washing. Bullying. Lack of compassion, humility, self responsibility. Genetics plays a huge roll in health and disease. We are just beginning to understand this. We need classical debate. Facts. Honor. Less power trippers. More caution. Money and power and lack of personal respect. All these things have lead to our mess. How to solve?

    • @AFuller2020
      @AFuller2020 Před 2 lety +8

      Put all of the honor in the world and pour it into a coffee cup, let me know when it fills up.

    • @iggle6448
      @iggle6448 Před 2 lety +17

      You could be describing the NHS precisely.

    • @JAMESWUERTELE
      @JAMESWUERTELE Před 2 lety +37

      You sound like a great physician! A simple anti viral could have saved many, however that wasn’t the plan. If you look a little deeper you’ll understand why all this happened. It was all planned.

    • @veggiewrangler4674
      @veggiewrangler4674 Před 2 lety +7

      @@JAMESWUERTELE Yes, by watching the Plandemic series.

    • @Closertotruth2
      @Closertotruth2 Před 2 lety +28

      Maybe an emphasis on better research like randomized controlled trials instead of the crap “science” the CDC produces would be a start. Of course to do that you would need better critical thinkers in positions of power.

  • @sarahwarnock716
    @sarahwarnock716 Před 2 lety +889

    Loved this post. After hiding for 2 years, my whole family got covid 2 weeks ago. My daughter who is 18 months old is a recent cancer survivor and we were terrified that she would have a serious case of covid. She had a fever for 1 day and was achey and grumpy for about 10 days, but never had any serious complications. My husband, myself and my son all had mild cold-like symptoms. Glad we have gotten it out of the way and have some immunity. We have for the first time in 2 years gone to some indoor playground without masks, and because of all the data I see on your channel, I can allow my children to have some normalcy for the first time in their entire lives. I am teary eyed writing this. These kids deserve to live normal lives. Thank you for all that you do!

    • @essanjay8604
      @essanjay8604 Před 2 lety +34

      Must have been a very worrying time for you. Onwards and upwards!

    • @claudiaw.6266
      @claudiaw.6266 Před 2 lety +13

      Well said!

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW Před 2 lety +46

      I think it's getting ridiculous, especially since Omicron is literally everywhere. Here in California, we've been wearing masks for going on 2 years. I think it's definitely time to learn to live w/this virus.

    • @kevin6588
      @kevin6588 Před 2 lety +13

      True enough, but what about potential long haul symptoms?

    • @lavendersky4324
      @lavendersky4324 Před 2 lety +13

      @@kevin6588 It’s terrifying to consider what long haul could do to an 18 month old with a compromised immune system. ☹️

  • @duskodozet4573
    @duskodozet4573 Před 2 lety +14

    Absolutely honest from beginning of pandemic times. Hard job done the best way possible. Thank you Sir from bottom of my Croatian heart.

  • @cheriesnakedancer3293
    @cheriesnakedancer3293 Před 2 lety +20

    This is one of your best ever. Succinct, illustrative, clear. It is always a relief to listen to your clarity, honesty & intelligence. You've helped take me and mine thru this enormous experience. Thank you and bless you and see you tomorrow.

  • @Noclaf555
    @Noclaf555 Před 2 lety +304

    The nurse is 1000% right. The health system in the USA is broken

    • @jashannon
      @jashannon Před 2 lety +25

      you can't medicate gluttony

    • @airybrook
      @airybrook Před 2 lety +17

      @Terre Schill If you believe this, there is no hope for you.

    • @martinmartins7703
      @martinmartins7703 Před 2 lety +16

      @Terre Schill that is very rare. Even cee Dee cee says 95 percent died *with* and not *from* the meme virus with an average of 4 other health conditions.

    • @joanneehrmantraut3249
      @joanneehrmantraut3249 Před 2 lety +5

      @@alexanders5364 why depend on a pill if you can do it just by changing the way you get your nutrition? Metabolic issues CAN be improved with food. I have done it. I don’t want more pills!

    • @dr.emilschaffhausen4683
      @dr.emilschaffhausen4683 Před 2 lety +4

      Terre, you can't compare a country with 350 million people to one with 5.

  • @IC1B4U
    @IC1B4U Před 2 lety +107

    Dr. John Campbell, you sir are a total legend. Thank you for everything you do.

  • @beckynelson6786
    @beckynelson6786 Před 2 lety +13

    Denmark has ,for the most part,a sensible,well educated population.

    • @kongmik
      @kongmik Před 2 lety

      Education in Denmark is brainwashing and indoctrination

    • @raimundematiusaityte9929
      @raimundematiusaityte9929 Před 2 lety +3

      Social responsibility and critical thinking is very big value in Denmark.

    • @frantstorpmadsen3279
      @frantstorpmadsen3279 Před 2 lety +1

      And the social democratic government has actually had an opposition on covid restrictions, pulling the government away from the power grab you see in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Austra etc.

    • @Zlervo
      @Zlervo Před 2 lety

      All the Scandinavian countries are very sensible. More so than the UK.

  • @ML-uk6lu
    @ML-uk6lu Před 2 lety +4

    Denmark is example for the world for using science and dialoge with real Drs and Scientists. The rest of the western world was malevolent political agendas, at a cost we will never be able to calculate. Thank you for your knowledge and integrity. Canada

    • @Mike-ox8sq
      @Mike-ox8sq Před 2 lety +1

      Very kind of you. Just remember in Canada that it is important to be sure Delta are eradicated/overtaken by b.a.1 and b.a.2 before you open up, Furthermore I will draw your attention to this story I posted here yesterday, many seemed to have overlooked. Maybe lessons for the world and Canada in this to consider.
      Maybe the audience here are more informed, partly because of Dr. John, but the global population generally are unaware of the story of the Danish mink culling, what caused it and the lessons from it we still have to weight in, in relation to any predictions related to Covid.
      To avoid anyone drawing wrong conclusions, make misinterpretations etc. I will try to tell the "longer story" because I find it vital that people know this.
      In the early stages of the time when Covid spread, Denmark had a scientific project ending, why we could use the genom sequencing capacities used in that project instantly, instead of using it for the next planned project, why Denmark from the very beginning have had genom sequencing of all positive Covid tests. The combination of our governments decision to grab this opportunity and also make testing free of charge and accessible, provided Denmark with excellent real time monitoring of what was going on, long before the first vaccines arrived. The global science community, that still not had the insight they wanted, to know how to respond in the best way, created an international genom based "variant database" where the global science community/nations could upload any local detected variants, not already there, thus enhancing monitoring and knowledge broadly, but also functioned as an early warning tool, to be able to call alert, if a variant suddenly showed to be more aggressive etc. Dont hang me on the date but maybe around 15/4 2020 around 200 to 250 different variants had globally been uploaded. Suddenly here in Denmark we got an extreme explosion of variant detections in some geographic clusters. In a matter of 4-6 weeks Denmark discovered over 5000 (!) variants and subvariants of the variants. These around 250 global variants thus became 5250 in a months time. Because of our test and trace program, it soon became clear that these originated from persons working with mink farming. Investigations soon proved that minks were very prone to get infected with Covid. BUT the scary lesson were that it turned out, that the minks also could pass the virus on, BUT THEN ALLWAYS in an altered form!!! It turned out conclusively that minks COULD NOT pass on Covid unaltered, thus they acted as Covid mutation variant "machines". We saw many milder pretty harmless variants but also 1 that looked pretty ugly and a rigours test and trace and very hard local isolation efforts were immediately applied and it turned out to be effective. I believe 7 persons in total ended up as being final tally for that variant. While this happened Denmark wanted to protect its citizens and not least the world and took the drastic, but ever so responsible decision to cull our entire farmed mink population! Some other countries in Europe that had substantial mink farming, like fx Belgium looked at Denmark and did the same thing, others, like Sweden, UK or USA did not. Denmark had, measured per Capita, the worlds largest concentration of farmed mink and represented a substantial value for Denmark, employing many thousands. What is the key, epidemiological seen, here are that the knowledge that these animals cannot pass the virus on, without creating a new variant, are to be seen, as a picture, as lottery tickets. The more tickets you have in the lottery the larger chance you have for a hit (a dangerous deadly variant).
      Around the same time, or a little before, as Denmark culled their minks I saw a story from USA where a very large mink farm suddenly lost half their minks to sudden disease. I tried to follow the story but not more were reported.
      Truth are:
      Had the severe variant found and stopped in Denmark in 2020 happened basically anywhere on planet earth but Denmark, it probably would have ended up sweeping the globe because no one would have been able to identify it before it already were to late. And that could have had ended up with a completely different global Covid related death count than the current.
      The case with the physiology of minks, that they cant pass on the virus in an un-altered state, should be part of the global knowledge regarding this virus. IF we globally dont make sure that these farmed animals are culled or as a bare minimum are isolated and its staff rigorously tested/monitored the risk of a variant with potential fatal characteristic's are high. Right now we, globally seen, are buying an frightening lot of "lottery tickets".
      The recent pet hamster culling in, was it Hong kong?, indicates to me that these animals MIGHT have same physiological characteristic's and MIGHT pose same danger as minks.
      Hope this was useful information to you.

  • @northernillinoissasquatchr6260

    I am a retired RN. Over the last several weeks I have had many friends and family come down with Covid, including myself. We all weathered it fine except for one, 61 y/o female relative. She developed pneumonia and ended up in hospital for 3 days. Thankfully, she is home now with oxygen PRN. But....she is the only one who is morbidly obese, type 2 diabetic with poorly controlled blood sugar. To me, that says a lot about risk.

    • @lisasrnka8060
      @lisasrnka8060 Před 2 lety +58

      Exactly as a HCP US citizens are incredibly inflamed and have high risk factors. I am glad your relative is doing well.

    • @gigstrail7180
      @gigstrail7180 Před 2 lety +3

      👍

    • @mediaaccount8390
      @mediaaccount8390 Před 2 lety +37

      This is true with omicron. Omicron changed the risk/effectiveness considerations. If that many of your close contacts had gotten Delta, it would have been a different story

    • @cinnamon-spice
      @cinnamon-spice Před 2 lety +38

      It's odd how it affects some more than others, even those with comorbidities. A family member with type 2 diabetes that isn't particularly well controlled, who is morbidly obese and has additional health problems, caught the original Covid and had it very mild. Other household members were much more poorly. However, he doesn't have high blood pressure, so perhaps that made a difference? Omicron also recently hit the household and he didn't catch it. Go figure.

    • @emmettturner9452
      @emmettturner9452 Před 2 lety +33

      As someone who works alone and was home-schooled, I don’t know a ton of people in my area and yet I personally know two people who died. My friend’s elderly stepdad and a police officer who routinely worked with me off-duty (look up Frankie Gutierrez). Frankie was fit, middle-age, and active though he was a darker-skinned racial minority who might’ve had a vitamin D deficiency. The fact that I lost two people in the last several months tells me just how serious the India variant was. That said, I agree that it’s time to end this. We can’t equate the South Africa Mk II variant to what we had before… case numbers be damned.

  • @cubablue602
    @cubablue602 Před 2 lety +732

    Maintaining overwhelming trust in Government, scientific advisers/institutions and media outlets. The loss of these factors is far more damaging than any pandemic. Well done Denmark.

    • @michaelcollins966
      @michaelcollins966 Před 2 lety +58

      trust is earned, not given

    • @TheKimNeeper
      @TheKimNeeper Před 2 lety +25

      We still have a strong 10% anti-vaxxers who take up 95% of the comments on articles mentioning COVID, it’s a global thing we can thank Google and Facebook for🤮

    • @TheKimNeeper
      @TheKimNeeper Před 2 lety +7

      At least now they are all getting “vaccinated”, hopefully they will be okay with omicron 😀

    • @cm401
      @cm401 Před 2 lety +29

      something that Patron Saint Fauci failed to see is playing the Boy Calling Wolves, when there's another far worse virus coming, people will not be as cooperative. Their so called "facts" have undermined their own credibility

    • @jonathanhadley2555
      @jonathanhadley2555 Před 2 lety +32

      @@TheKimNeeper And yet according to the msm all those countries that have high "vax" uptake have all got high cases....!

  • @DougieL
    @DougieL Před 2 lety +10

    I can understand the reasoning from the NZ government and I do not believe that it is political. They are protecting the vulnerable and keeping things like elective surgeries open. Less haste, more speed, some might say?

  • @PrimroseViews
    @PrimroseViews Před 2 lety +97

    I live in Denmark, we still take precautions, wear our masks in hospitals and care homes etc and take quick tests before we meet with family and friends, results are give by text message within 20mins if negative. There is still hand sanitizer in shop entrances etc and we try to social distance where we can, ie, check out etc. there is much more respect for personal space now.

    • @peetabrown5813
      @peetabrown5813 Před 2 lety +3

      Hi Emma ASMR, from the bits and pieces I have heard about Denmark it sounds like that has been a feature of true community response to COVID; that an individual person takes some collective responsibility to help the others, like by wearing masks when possible.
      Sadly in my country (Australia) when not mandated many people seem to regard you are a coward frightened of the virus if wearing a mask and they frown upon you, they simply do not seem to understand that wearing a mask can help reduce community transmission generally, and it probably most helpful (IMO) when worn by the person with COVID.
      I wanted to ask about your quick tests, I am curious how it works in Denmark? We have only had rapid antigen tests (lateral flow tests) available to the general public for a short time. For screening testing (like prior to visiting an elderly relative) they are purchased ourselves and then self administered - since you receive result by text, yours should like they are centrally administered somehow? I was hoping you could elaborate further, I am just curious to hear how it is done in other countries?

    • @ProfSimonHolland
      @ProfSimonHolland Před 2 lety +4

      excellent..did john mention that? no...

    • @hannass4797
      @hannass4797 Před 2 lety +10

      @@ProfSimonHolland When she mentions "taking quick tests before meeting with family and friends", she mentions things that SHE does, and what she and her family does. Not the whole population of Denmark. So why would John mention how this particular individual behave, and what she experiences locally or among her friends and family? That doesn't apply to the rest of the population.

    • @Carroty_Peg
      @Carroty_Peg Před 2 lety +4

      why? its a nothingburger, babe

    • @Carroty_Peg
      @Carroty_Peg Před 2 lety +5

      @@peetabrown5813 yawn, 2 years out of date with your studies. masked loon

  • @Simonpt2000
    @Simonpt2000 Před 2 lety +146

    Well done Denmark for putting science before politics

    • @MIOLAZARUS
      @MIOLAZARUS Před 2 lety +1

      You'd wish.

    • @lilimarleen4952
      @lilimarleen4952 Před 2 lety +4

      Still had lockdowns, despite no evidence of efficacy. Government tyranny as always.
      Glad they've finally seen sense

    • @MIOLAZARUS
      @MIOLAZARUS Před 2 lety +1

      @@lilimarleen4952 hørt hørt

    • @collybeans586
      @collybeans586 Před 2 lety +1

      Not exactly. In the midst of our locksdowns there was a big party thrown in an aprtment in Copenhagen owned by a certain political party with many members of Cristiansborg attending not unlike whats going on with Boris Johnson in the UK ast the moment. Denmark also proclaimed(with no evidence what so ever) that crorona was a pandemic of the unvaccinated(which was a bad faith lie) preassuring people to get vaxxed on non scientific grounds. I have no idea why Denmark is presented at an example to follow when there's many examples of why this isnt exactly the case. This high case count we see now and the other things I mentioned has forced the government to declare the pandemic is over in the hope that those things will be forgotten. This is nothing to do with trust quite the opposite.

    • @terjeoseberg990
      @terjeoseberg990 Před 2 lety +1

      Denmark did this before almost a year ago. It didn’t end that time. Maybe it will this time. Or, maybe it won’t. We’ll see.

  • @milingimbi1438
    @milingimbi1438 Před 2 lety +339

    Go Denmark! The Nordic countries have always been World Leaders for Common Sense!

    • @The_Reality_Filter
      @The_Reality_Filter Před 2 lety +28

      Sweden has the 6th highest number of rape cases, out of all 195 countries, in the world. You really call that a world leader in common sense?

    • @MichaelGGarry
      @MichaelGGarry Před 2 lety +28

      @@The_Reality_Filter Sweden classes its cases very differently to other countries. In fact, its very hard to compare country to country because of the different ways they are classed. But you know, just chase and promote the headline and not the actual story behind it.....

    • @rollingacresfarmstead206
      @rollingacresfarmstead206 Před 2 lety

      @@stephen3654 🤣

    • @naphatsiri8
      @naphatsiri8 Před 2 lety +5

      Yep exactly, my old country rocks 🥰😉😊

    • @elizabethfox7677
      @elizabethfox7677 Před 2 lety +28

      @@The_Reality_Filter you should research into that and find out why, Germany has the same problem its not rocket science by the way.

  • @jetterasmussen6577
    @jetterasmussen6577 Před 2 lety +3

    Hi 👋🏻. Danish citizen here.
    I have to correct you: we DO have to isolate for 96 hours after a positive test.

  • @footprints2gigi
    @footprints2gigi Před 2 lety +9

    ❤️Thank you for all of your videos! You have been a grounding source to get a look into this all. Also,you have kept many of us sane in this crazy time! Much respect & appreciation of your overview throughout this pandemic. 👍

  • @kevindecot186
    @kevindecot186 Před 2 lety +92

    As an American, I am embarrassed and outraged how our government managed Covid. They put politics above science and common sense. Kudos to Denmark.

    • @AFuller2020
      @AFuller2020 Před 2 lety +8

      The government manages everything like the Post Office, can't expect much more.

    • @narcissismnow4338
      @narcissismnow4338 Před 2 lety +1

      So did the UK x

    • @iggle6448
      @iggle6448 Před 2 lety +4

      @@narcissismnow4338 Yes, they did. And the results are clear - US and UK at the top of the % fatality chart.

    • @echofoxtrot2.051
      @echofoxtrot2.051 Před 2 lety +4

      @@iggle6448 Because COVID-19 primarily affects people with chronic conditions and both countries are chock full of those people....also, they're not medically coding accurately

    • @bidnow2946
      @bidnow2946 Před 2 lety +10

      As an American, I am outraged, but not embarrassed by the Government's poor performance. "We" get what "we" vote for.

  • @stinkybritches9104
    @stinkybritches9104 Před 2 lety +48

    One of the main problems with public health in the U.S. is that too many people rely on medication rather than living a healthy lifestyle.

    • @pamelag5945
      @pamelag5945 Před 2 lety +3

      And that’s supported by the ‘medical model’ that there is a medicine to fix everything.

    • @murielodette2995
      @murielodette2995 Před 2 lety +1

      this is very true......maybe there will be lifestyle professionals which will spring from all this.

    • @Broomtwo
      @Broomtwo Před 2 lety +5

      Very, very true. Everyone thinks they can just get antibiotics if they have an infection and they will be fine, they can take medicine every single day instead of eating healthy, they can take a vaccine instead of losing weight and being healthy. Americans have totally outsourced their own health from their responsibility to the responsibility of their doctors and their medication.

    • @thatguybill34
      @thatguybill34 Před 2 lety +4

      *That is called SICK CARE. Eating healthy and working out is HEALTH CARE.*

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 Před 2 lety +1

      Very true.

  • @dreamcatcher3861
    @dreamcatcher3861 Před 2 lety +5

    You really are, the David Attenborough of Covid information . Thank you for you Dr John. 🙏🏻

  • @audreymott5879
    @audreymott5879 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this informative video Dr John. Greatly appreciate all your work.

  • @ThorRavnsborg
    @ThorRavnsborg Před 2 lety +368

    As a Dane just let me say that even though my country has fared better than most other places and most information here has been science based your work throughout this pandemic has been invaluable to me. I have been a follower of your channel for more than two years now and I am much more enlightened and have been much better prepared because of it. One direct consequence has been the vitamin supplements D and K2 which my family and I have been taking and which I have been promoting to anyone who wanted to listen. I'm sure that has had a positive impact on our health and the mild symptoms we experienced when we caught the virus. So please accept my gratitude. By the way that recommendation never made it to the authorities here which goes to show that even some of the best governments could have done better if they had followed in your footsteps.

    • @sen7706
      @sen7706 Před 2 lety +10

      Very important yes, we also use those. Also zink & selenium, high dose vitamin C, quercetine, resveratrol and NAC supplements and lots of healthy herbal tea's (pine, curcuma and ginger, hawthorn many all with positive impact on the body and immune system).

    • @Ottee2
      @Ottee2 Před 2 lety +9

      Nice report, Thor, thanks.

    • @sharongross8579
      @sharongross8579 Před 2 lety +5

      Thor, with case numbers so high, are there still laws to protect nursing home residents ?( vulnerable elderly who may not be able to wear an N95 or effective mask). Here in US, that is the population who I am most concerned about ( their caregivers shoud be wearing N95 to prevent them from being exposed )???

    • @kickasyberg7344
      @kickasyberg7344 Před 2 lety +13

      @@sharongross8579 noone is wearing N95 masks here, except from the people working directly with people who are very sick from the virus. The reason being that working with a N95 mask is restricted to 3 hours a day. We simply do not have enough staff to take care of the residents in care facilities if they all only are allowed to work 3 hours a day.
      There are no laws mandating any tests or wearing of masks before entering a hospital or care facility, but it is strongly advised, and you can get a self-test at the reception if you wish. I visited a hospital yesterday and everybody I saw was wearing masks.
      Staff in hospital and care facilities should use facemasks when they are within one meter from the patient and are strongly incouraged to be tested 1-2 times a week.
      In short: no laws, only recomendations

    • @jean405
      @jean405 Před 2 lety +19

      @@sharongross8579 I live in Denmark, I believe hospital staff and elder home staff are advised to wear masks, and if visiting, is deemed polite to use a mask. Lots of us still wear masks, I travel the rush hour train, so I still wear a mask. I’ve had 3 vaccines, having the vaccine instead of getting sick or dying was a no brainier! We were kept well informed by the politicians and the epidemiology staff, communication was vital, and we responded well, the trust was there between the government and the people. I still watched Dr John for better understanding and knowledge seemed to bring peace of mind.

  • @georgen9306
    @georgen9306 Před 2 lety +331

    I’m in New York, and know personally several people who died from COVID and the common thread was the treatment protocol. Upon entry into the hospital they are given the standard Remdesivir and then end up on a ventilator and slowly die without any other proven and cheaper protocols provided. Yes, obesity is an issue in the US, but our inability to use other successful protocols has resulted in so many unnecessary deaths. It is a travesty to see the US leading the world in this category. I would be curious to see what countries are using Remdesivir and ventilators as their primary protocol upon hospitalization and then compare the number of deaths to those in the US. If anyone has that information that would be of great interest to report out on. My understanding is that the US is only one of a few countries that continues to use this death protocol. It is baffling as to why we continue on this path, it’s not science based and unfortunately leads one to a conclusion that there is widespread corruption to blame.

    • @conniepitts8392
      @conniepitts8392 Před 2 lety +26

      Investigate that medication..you will be Horrified at what you will find..

    • @colupy
      @colupy Před 2 lety +7

      I would be interested to see this as well.

    • @ffssheeple
      @ffssheeple Před 2 lety +20

      In Australia that is the same protocol. Its how patients are treated in NSW, Remdesivir (especially if you are unjabbed) and in Victoria in 2020 the same rule that Cuomo used against the elderly by putting them back into the nursing home whilst infectious caused 800 deaths.

    • @tigerwoods232000
      @tigerwoods232000 Před 2 lety +8

      Or maybe… the remdesivir has nothing to do with why they got sicker

    • @MR..181
      @MR..181 Před 2 lety +4

      100s of billions of $..government sponsored...ccp..biden..$ ala ccp killing 100s of millions of c..????????

  • @jrwaters31
    @jrwaters31 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you yet again Guru Campbell - cheers John stay well😁

  • @prinsazz8683
    @prinsazz8683 Před 2 lety +8

    Gotta say as someone who lives in NZ I like and respect what you are saying here.

  • @chinookvalley
    @chinookvalley Před 2 lety +87

    The nurse's story 13:30, so sad, so true. I don't know how many times I have been at the pharmacy, and seen people stand there and cry, because their insurance won't cover their Rx, or they can't afford to pay out of pocket. The greatest country on the planet? Our poor, elderly, and disabled are ignored and forgotten. Money talks.

    • @sandyj3231
      @sandyj3231 Před 2 lety +6

      So sad! My elderly parents got a boost in their monthly Social Security payments only to have it taken away by INCREASED costs for Medicare. Unbelievable!

    • @arbiterodie7685
      @arbiterodie7685 Před 2 lety +3

      Breed at all costs, despite obesity and diabetes troubles in the family. Or maybe we should rethink that philosophy...

    • @CharitysClarity
      @CharitysClarity Před 2 lety +6

      Only country who advertises our medicines an funds fda who can back a medicine that earns giant profits an is completely exempt how can people trust the science when these organizations just in the 70s did horrific experiments they have had corruption to the core an people wonder why?! Money 💰 we need to stop fighting an be United jabbed or not we know it doesn’t stop transmission so why aren’t we respecting everyone an coming together to find truth an healing 😢💔

    • @tinathene
      @tinathene Před 2 lety

      Keyword: costs. Choice. Multi Culture. Basic Applied Math Education. Corporate Food. Comfort Food? What is freedom in this American experiment? We have to perceive the possibilities, see the beauty in restoration, not simply paying people to tear things down to build shiny new stuff that doesn’t last. Seeing the same “dirty” building get restored with creative uses gives a priceless feeling of hope and empowerment. Keep it simple , practical, not just a quick profit for unscrupulous contractors and greedy politicians.

  • @thailanddiscovery6832
    @thailanddiscovery6832 Před 2 lety +32

    3:55 to 4:25 brought tears to my eyes. To hear those words sounds as good as "the war is over".
    So happy for Denmark. Love from Australia.

    • @wendyg8536
      @wendyg8536 Před 2 lety

      I would have thought that Monash in Aus that is a patron of Mary off Denamrk that discovered Ivermectin being useful would have promoted ivermectin more than removing it from treatment instead of promoting vaccine investment with the WHO.

    • @Top-NotchRentals
      @Top-NotchRentals Před 2 lety +1

      @FuskerFisker really needed to hear this. Id lost hope our protests in Canada were achieving anything besides more division. Thank you for the kind words John.

  • @lyra2112
    @lyra2112 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Dr John! I love your videos and how they stick to the science. ✨🙏✨💖✨

  • @Googleuser-hy3so
    @Googleuser-hy3so Před 2 lety

    Your information is excellent John !! Your the only person who actually makes any sense ! Keep up your good work , you are amazing

  • @robert4you
    @robert4you Před 2 lety +189

    This was a very, very interesting presentation. You don't find information like this on the mainstream media outlets. Thanks, John, great work!

    • @humblewoodcutter2754
      @humblewoodcutter2754 Před 2 lety +10

      I think it's an excellent move on dr J's part to do away with that horrible mask/ distancing advisory sign in the background.

    • @robert4you
      @robert4you Před 2 lety +2

      @@humblewoodcutter2754 👍

    • @tessalynne6778
      @tessalynne6778 Před 2 lety

      @@humblewoodcutter2754 I think the UK removed mask mandates so he would be following the recommendations where he is at

    • @janecooke9151
      @janecooke9151 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, you do find this information on other news outlets and long before John does, just not the media outlets on our TV.

    • @lyndaf.6329
      @lyndaf.6329 Před 2 lety

      @@humblewoodcutter2754 He's in a hotel room, the sign will be back.

  • @bronw8657
    @bronw8657 Před 2 lety +277

    I am an Indigenous Australian with a public health background, and I can tell you now - the way the Australian authorities have responded to this pandemic has utterly destroyed the trust the Indigenous people had in our medical system. I fear for the future as I don't think we will trust our government again. The lockdowns here have had an awful impact on society, and we are still experiencing draconian measures - especially Western Australia.

    • @tilapiadave3234
      @tilapiadave3234 Před 2 lety +18

      What a load of bull-twang ,,, I have utterly lost ALL respect for your pathetic comment

    • @twitchbiddy6880
      @twitchbiddy6880 Před 2 lety +34

      Indigenous Australians have been treated so badly in this and in so many ways for ever. I’m sorry this is happening. Let’s hope the truth will come out and good things will emerge from the ashes. Sending love from NZ xo

    • @mfg1035
      @mfg1035 Před 2 lety +28

      Agree, trust can only exist when you are allowed to make informed medical decisions for yourself.

    • @Strictlybizznesss
      @Strictlybizznesss Před 2 lety +15

      WA is not a part of Australia anymore obviously

    • @theflaca
      @theflaca Před 2 lety +11

      @@Strictlybizznesss It's Xanadu, with chairman MaoGowan.

  • @JUN-hx4yd
    @JUN-hx4yd Před 2 lety +31

    Denmark sounds like a country I would love to visit in the future.

    • @PixieHouseInc
      @PixieHouseInc Před 2 lety +2

      I'm Danish, and most of this video is pure fantasy!!!

    • @LexLExistor
      @LexLExistor Před 2 lety +1

      idk, it's getting too leftist like many other Western countries

    • @blazoraptor3392
      @blazoraptor3392 Před 2 lety +2

      @@LexLExistor And it ranks as one of the happiest countries in the world 🤔

    • @youtroop
      @youtroop Před 2 lety +3

      @@PixieHouseInc really, which part ?

    • @PixieHouseInc
      @PixieHouseInc Před 2 lety

      @@youtroopIt's actually more easy to tell which is not: All restrictions are now past tense - to be replaced with a mandatory digital EU Vaccine Passport needed if you want to travel within EU.
      And that's actually about it. All the remaining is pure misinformation or wishful thinking.

  • @joannaspivey566
    @joannaspivey566 Před 2 lety +1

    ❤️ thank you for your reporting. So grounding, like an anchor in storms.

  • @AlteoTNT
    @AlteoTNT Před 2 lety +50

    What an amazing man you are, God bless you. I'm saying that because the honesty and the kindness reflects on every video and every video you post it's clear and straight forward and hits all the points. Thanks Doctor.

  • @feedingit
    @feedingit Před 2 lety +185

    This is my most favorite report since December 2019. I agree it is time to lift restrictions, allow doctors to appropriately treat their patients (see the Sen. Johnson hearings.) and give compassionate, affordable care to those who cannot afford it. Let the pharmaceutical companies pay for it.
    Thank you, Dr. John, for your daily updates. You have been my single source of sane specifics!
    (Also, holy cow, 2+ million subscribers!! Well deserved!)

    • @parrotletsrunearth1173
      @parrotletsrunearth1173 Před 2 lety +4

      Johnson is firmly against M4A and is a lap dog of the pharmaceutical industry. Once he pushes for M4A I'll believe what he says

    • @sue7794
      @sue7794 Před 2 lety +6

      What a great idea! Big Pharma can pay for it. Won't happen sadly, because their hands are in their own pockets.

    • @prestige8161
      @prestige8161 Před 2 lety +4

      The science, I mean proper science that follows the scientific method is non-existent in virology. So no one can say that there is or ever was a "virus". Unfortunately, most people don't understand the methods used in virology. These fictional "virus" objects have never been seen or found in a person's clinical specimen. They're the modern equivalent of "evil spirits" for today's society. Beliefs. Really.

    • @dancohen8476
      @dancohen8476 Před 2 lety +4

      @@prestige8161 what an odd opinion, have have even been DNA sequenced, how do you think they came up with vaccines and know about the difference variants?

    • @donnagpalk912
      @donnagpalk912 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. I watched that.🙏

  • @27boof
    @27boof Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much Dr. Campbell !!

  • @GeologyNick
    @GeologyNick Před 2 lety +2

    One of your best sessions, John. Thank you!

  • @northernfool7453
    @northernfool7453 Před 2 lety +28

    Our medical system In the US is awful, I lost faith in it long before Covid. Now they are refusing early treatment with extraordinarily safe meds. How many could have been saved? Thanks for all that you fo doc.

    • @pamelaneibuhr6959
      @pamelaneibuhr6959 Před 2 lety +1

      Same here, wealth before health. Having a disabled (deceased) I have battled the medical providers for 21 years. And……her death was caused by medical providers. Now I am battling my own. I’m even in the medical realm with my job. So I know enough to be dangerous. Never trust them. Especially if you are old or disabled.

  • @Dobbin1010
    @Dobbin1010 Před 2 lety +16

    As a 44 year US practitioner (physician Assistant) I can verify the US nurse’s letter. This is a rationing system based on private insurance/cash and those without. Bankruptcy from illness is common.

  • @Zlervo
    @Zlervo Před 2 lety

    Hello Dr John it's great to see you again.

  • @isadorabordini9528
    @isadorabordini9528 Před 2 lety

    Great reflection as always. Thanks, Dr. Campbell.

  • @oldponytail
    @oldponytail Před 2 lety +6

    I am English, but live in New Zealand. I think our Govt has done a supper job in protecting it's population. Two days ago there was a report that if we had the same death 'rate' as the UK, we would have 10,000 deaths. In fact, we have had sixty! I know Omicron is more infectious, but less devastating. By reducing the numbers arriving from overseas, our Govt is trying to reduce the load upon Hospitals. Also, if you think about it, the longer we leave the 'import' of cases, those that do arrive may well be naturally immunized and less of a threat to those in the Country, and the Health resources.

  • @gregpennefather3495
    @gregpennefather3495 Před 2 lety +148

    I’m in Western Australia John, I asked the vaccine giver to aspirate when I got my booster. She refused saying they don’t do it, it’s not necessary and takes too much time. She spent more time explaining why not than it would have taken to just do it.

    • @grainofsand4176
      @grainofsand4176 Před 2 lety +13

      Bet she didn't even know how to aspirate.. In states the pharmacy giving shots didn't even know how to aspirate

    • @herbetrono4373
      @herbetrono4373 Před 2 lety +28

      Hi Greg , got my booster yesterday ! Asked if she would aspirate ( already knowing she would not ) and got all the usual bullshit in reply ! so I just said that in denmark It was against the law NOT to aspirate and to please not hit a vain. I am very sad that the medical industry in Australia Is so fucked up ! So full of arrogance and bias !!

    • @stanaradovic875
      @stanaradovic875 Před 2 lety

      It would be the same here in Belgrade.

    • @markbr5898
      @markbr5898 Před 2 lety +1

      @Rob That's a misnomer if ever there was one!

    • @herbetrono4373
      @herbetrono4373 Před 2 lety +15

      @Rob Wow Rob thats bloody awesome mate ! When I got my first shot and asked the nurse If she would aspirate ( she was about my age - late 50 tees ) and I could see the hatred in her eyes , that I had even dared to ask, so I politely said I would wait for the next nurse. The next nurse would not aspirate either so I just walked out . rang three different doctors and got the same answer, so I gave up and SENT a message to the poker gods to flop me a flush , ha ha

  • @kathleenloverso5654
    @kathleenloverso5654 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, Dr. Campbell ✌🏼🤓♥️

  • @andy_goslow1451
    @andy_goslow1451 Před 2 lety

    I wanted to tell you, that during the last two months, when I discovered your channel, you gave me so much hope and clarity as I didn't know who to believe, on the one side main stream media, lot of fear based wrong information, on the other side all kind of conspiracy theorie, where we also found a lot of fear based and wrong information, and then there is YOU, just awesome how you balanced that out, thank you🙏❤

  • @linda487nc
    @linda487nc Před 2 lety +73

    Another problem in the U.S. is that the doctors are not allowed to use any of the early treatments that other countries use routinely. They tell patients to go home, self-treat with OTC, isolate and come to the hospital if they get very sick, e.g. can't breathe. They still can't get effective treatment and many times end up on remdesivir (which can damage the kidneys and liver) and put on a ventilator. I believe that contributes to a lot of deaths that could have been prevented.

    • @murielodette2995
      @murielodette2995 Před 2 lety +8

      i can just imagine all the SS income saved by the government from the death of all those seniors....it just makes you wonder...?

    • @linda487nc
      @linda487nc Před 2 lety

      @@murielodette2995 Oh yeah...

    • @kornelia6741
      @kornelia6741 Před 2 lety +4

      It is unfortunately the same in France too- no allowed early treatments, you are told to isolate and self treat with paracetamol, adviced not even to gargle your throat, and told to go to a hospital in the case of breathing difficulty. .

    • @stevekelly4020
      @stevekelly4020 Před 2 lety +4

      Nuremberg trials 2.0 for politicians who have murdered their own citizens. Psychopaths, all of them.

    • @MrClobbertime
      @MrClobbertime Před 2 lety +2

      @@murielodette2995 Don't forget that older people also tend to vote more along conservative lines.

  • @KGB1965722
    @KGB1965722 Před 2 lety +52

    Thanks again for the updates you provide. You've been a solid and calm voice of information during a time where so many voices bordered on hysteria. Much appreciation from Canada.

  • @user5760
    @user5760 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for everything you are doing.

  • @penelopemason3786
    @penelopemason3786 Před 2 lety +1

    THANK YOU Dr. Campbell for all your hard work
    I think i speak for MANY who are grateful for the information you provide
    Have a great weekend everyone
    💕

  • @rimfrozt
    @rimfrozt Před 2 lety +446

    Hello John. And update from a danish citizen
    I can tell you that the Danish approach to covid-19 has in many ways proved to work excellently. As you yourself mention in your video, there are only a few dead, but our government's assistance programs for companies and individuals have at the same time resulted in the sale of houses and holiday homes, as well as trade in general during the epidemic has grown enormously. Therefore, Denmark has actually come out on another side with very few bankruptcies and with an economy that is stronger than before the pandemic. Our unemployment rate is only 2.5% and it has not risen much during the pandemic.
    I am always on guard against any government. They have a great power, you have to remember. But I have to say that I am very happy with the way they have handled this.

    • @Evilslayer73
      @Evilslayer73 Před 2 lety +24

      Here in Québec we are under a lot of pressure because of our dysfunctional healthcare system , it cost 1 billions per weeks ,2 beds for 1000 patients ! we are in hell here !! we are the hostage of this shitty system!

    • @wefsux
      @wefsux Před 2 lety +20

      Looks like a move to Denmark might be quite refreshing, over the dictatorship here

    • @marmotsongs
      @marmotsongs Před 2 lety +26

      I live in Denmark and agree. Denmark has not taken an ideological approach. We have had high vaccination rates, covid pass requirements, shutdowns, masking requirements at some times, and relaxed all of those measure at other times. It has been according to the best data and interpretation available at the time. Reactive when necessary, and proactive when possible (like last winter when cases were low and going down, but we still increased restrictions to head off the Beta wave that was forecast.)

    • @lizclarke4684
      @lizclarke4684 Před 2 lety +7

      @@wefsux Happiest place to live, even before the pandemic!

    • @markwalmsley9868
      @markwalmsley9868 Před 2 lety +38

      I’ve lived in Denmark for 28 years and although I agree with most it what’s said I have to reply
      There has been a lot of small shops closed because of the bull💩
      I’ve been absolutely slated here for my opinions and told to shut up because I don’t have a Danish passport
      What’s happening now should have happened last year so please don’t give them too much credit
      People still walk/ drive with the useless masks on ie they believe the msm bull💩
      Denmark has the second lowest number of hospital beds in Europe
      The killing of the mink was illegal and nothing has happened to the people who enforced the illegal ruling
      It’s a great place but far from perfect !
      💪✊🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇩🇰
      Ps
      My son just had Nr3 shot and they did NOT aspirate he even complained as was told that is not the Danish policy !
      Don’t believe everything you hear about Denmark
      Professor Henning Bundgaad conducted a survey of 6024 adults half using masks the other not
      His findings were published 18th November 2020
      1.8 percent with masks got infected
      2.1 percent without got infected and it was ignored. We were forced to wear masks anyway
      Denmark is good at looking good but is as full of corruption as any other country !

  • @watchmewatch9
    @watchmewatch9 Před 2 lety +39

    Doctor, you are a World Treasure. Thank you for being a source for so many, to receive proper unbiased, nonpoliticized info and data.

  • @ninaspalace
    @ninaspalace Před 2 lety +1

    You are a very interesting person to listen to. Thank you.

  • @ExaZettaYotta
    @ExaZettaYotta Před 2 lety +8

    Thank you Dr John Campbell I discovered your channel early on in the pandemic and I cannot thank you enough! I have found your programs so helpful and informative as well as being up to date with the latest scientific thinking in the COVID era. I live in NZ and 100% agree with you I do not understand our Governments approach. I just wish they would listen to your channel! Instead of using the time NZ Government gained from the initial lockdown in March 2020 to improve ICU bed numbers and staff numbers they did nothing and with every wave of the pandemic have not adapted their approach to the changing circumstances of the virus . In fact certain treatments have been banned from being prescribed here. Yes we may not have had the COVID deaths, but we do not know the real costs of our approach - we only know our suicide rate has increased but we do not know how many have died from medical procedures deferred and the long term health effects on individual health caused by the thousands of broken businesses, material hardship and the induced fear anxiety.

    • @VauxhallViva1975
      @VauxhallViva1975 Před 2 lety +1

      Agreed. I felt their response to Alpha/Beta and even Delta was good, but Omicron is a totally different beast in terms of transmissibility. They CANNOT stop the spread of it, once it gets moving here. Any attempt to do so via strategic opening of this and that, is a waste of time and effort. If they had not sacked about 2,000 medical staff via the mandate, perhaps the hospitals etc would be able to cope better when the Omicron wave peaks here, but there you go. IMHO, they are mishandling the Omicron variant at this point in time.

    • @Mike-ox8sq
      @Mike-ox8sq Před 2 lety

      @@VauxhallViva1975 Just make sure you dont have Delta around and it really have been replaced/overtaken by b.a.1 and b.a.2 before you open up. Best regards a Dane.

    • @maguires
      @maguires Před 2 lety

      They took a more moderate approach than Oz where the Fed govt essentially let it rip. The timelines are not cast in stone so will be moved as the impact is clearer.

  • @simonjlkoreshoff3426
    @simonjlkoreshoff3426 Před 2 lety +77

    My congratulations to you Dr John. You have called this pandemic right from the very beginning. Not only that but you have done so in a polite and informed way that has guided, reassured and taught your listeners.

    • @angelablacksmith9653
      @angelablacksmith9653 Před 2 lety +1

      Stress relief czcams.com/video/1COZFpEK7JU/video.html

    • @Shelmerdine745
      @Shelmerdine745 Před 2 lety

      People have died because he has spread disinformation for almost two years…

  • @jfarlandutube
    @jfarlandutube Před 2 lety +31

    Three cheers for Denmark. Sanity rules the day. Thank you for reporting on it.

  • @alisonruby1
    @alisonruby1 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for your diligence and informing videos. Very clear and no scaremongering.

  • @kymjohnthorburn6044
    @kymjohnthorburn6044 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for all your coverage during the "pandemic", most appreciated and mind settling. Yours is a secure , steady and reasoned scientific approach. Much appreciated.

  • @olgasawyer9017
    @olgasawyer9017 Před 2 lety +41

    Dear John thank you, thank you, thank you for keeping me sane during the past 2 and a bit years. I don't think I could of got through it without nightly review of your videos. We are out there and support your good work. Be sure of it.

    • @berniekitts1786
      @berniekitts1786 Před 2 lety +1

      It is very reassuring to hear John's no nonsense vlog. In an age where information is broadly available the quality varies greatly. I rely on his early alert system. He checks the data and makes predictive analysis. Those that have contracted Covid have proven to have the highest immunity. They are treated as lepers!

    • @carolechapman7857
      @carolechapman7857 Před 2 lety

      From NZ … have relied on your stats and information … you are a great teacher !

  • @lisamareepritchard6375
    @lisamareepritchard6375 Před 2 lety +134

    Thank you Dr John & well done to Denmark ! I live in Australia & our approach has been very strict & continues to be. I believe people need to move on now, considering our high levels of vaccination

    • @miheadhurts
      @miheadhurts Před 2 lety +48

      I live in Brisbane and we just need to scrap all restrictions and open up. Give the vaccines to those who want them and let everyone live their lives. You can't mandate risk out of living. If the government wants to save lives then why don't they ban smoking and alcohol?

    • @amaroogroup4599
      @amaroogroup4599 Před 2 lety +7

      Literally no restrictions in Australia whatsoever now. Hospitals full though 70-100 dead a day which you're probably fine with and even happy about I guess... Businesses destroyed, livelihoods lost.

    • @MEOxley23
      @MEOxley23 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed. To date, we've dealt with it better than any other country. And in NSW I think they realise that and are doing the right thing so far.

    • @Neil-Aspinall
      @Neil-Aspinall Před 2 lety +24

      Why do people with 3 boosters get Covid when people who've had no Covid vaccines don't?

    • @dronepilot1333
      @dronepilot1333 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Neil-Aspinall vaccine is the Covid or varse versa

  • @annestovgaard681
    @annestovgaard681 Před 2 lety +4

    Im so proud of my country and all its citizens. We worked together, caring for each other, and trusted the science :-) Thank you, to all the doctors and nurses working hard, to keep us alive, thank you government, for thinking of the people and not just politics, thank you scientist for explaining it and finding a vaccine, thank you to the danish media, for not spreading nonsens and scaring people, but taking your job seriously. I love that the danish peoples biggest worrie, was filling up hospitalbeds, so we did our best to protect everyone, so it didnt happen. I hope the virus will stay weak, and not change, so it will finally be the end of it :-) I wish good health to everyone, blessings from Denmark

  • @wboyle9721
    @wboyle9721 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Dr John the best that teaching about health and how the human body works your doing great informing people who are not in the know best wishes from Glasgow Scotland

  • @chrisbeck7266
    @chrisbeck7266 Před 2 lety +29

    As a person who lives in the US, I agree with what the unidentified nurse said about the quality of heath care in the US.

    • @beverleyventura3725
      @beverleyventura3725 Před 2 lety

      Controlled by government entities who are not held accountable and that includes congress

  • @ricks.1318
    @ricks.1318 Před 2 lety +53

    Like so MANY others, I find myself "addicted" to your channel .... You have a fantastic way of communicating to information that is so helpful, and at the same time educating us all !!!! I sincerely "thank you" sir ....
    Rick from Massachusetts, USA

    • @murielodette2995
      @murielodette2995 Před 2 lety +2

      we have his counterpart here in the u.s. Dr.Chris Martensen of Peak Prosperity,,Medcram with Dr,Schults,and Dr.Michael Hansen....they were the absolute best for Covid, info,,,Dr.Campbell has an interview with Medcram's Dr.Schults some time ago..

    • @Tygo423
      @Tygo423 Před 2 lety

      Another addict here in MA!

  • @HolzHammerSagas
    @HolzHammerSagas Před 2 lety

    brilliant as always dr.J

  • @miketalon2197
    @miketalon2197 Před 2 lety

    THE most HONEST and transparent doctor on ANY public platform! I'm surprised that YT even lets his channel exist!
    Imagine that, YT allowing someone to speak who is FOR the welfare of the public.

  • @uiuiuiuiuo
    @uiuiuiuiuo Před 2 lety +10

    I am from New Zealand, and with much respect John, our staggered approach to reopening is because we don't want our health systems to become overwhelmed with an influx of returnees all at once. I live in the far north region of NZ and my local hospital has only 27 beds... in total, and they are planning 6 new beds specifically for covid patients. So we are doing it to slow the spread and lessen the load and save more lives by doing so. We have and always will be about trying to save as many lives as possible. Kind regards John. 🇳🇿

    • @Eohippus100
      @Eohippus100 Před 2 lety

      They may get the extra beds but they have't got the staff

    • @uiuiuiuiuo
      @uiuiuiuiuo Před 2 lety +1

      @@Eohippus100 yikes!. Thats all the more reason to stagger our border reopening. Xoxo

    • @redbeard3946
      @redbeard3946 Před 2 lety +1

      You seem to have missed what John said, you can't 'stagger' omicron. It's fast spreading and easy to catch. This tiered system is simple another attempt to appease both sides in light of the trucker protests. It will be another flop. Denmark is doing better, it's okay to admit when your country isn't doing well. Jacinda isn't perfect (point in hand when she opened the border up to Australia two years ago for who knows what reason).

    • @uiuiuiuiuo
      @uiuiuiuiuo Před 2 lety +1

      @@redbeard3946 If i thought we were doing poorly I would be the first to admit it. You missed my point, which is, by staggering the number of returnees entering our borders at any one time, that will lessen the number of cases that we have at any one time, Which will lessen the number of hospitalizations, which is the CRUCIAL point here, as our poorly equipped health systems will not cope with masses of returnees entering all at the same time. We are doing it to lessen the burden on our health care systems so they don't collapse under the pressure of too many cases at once. So in fact we actually are staggering Omicron. By STAGGERING THE NUMBER OF CASES ENTERING our country. Not sure how I can explain it any clearer.
      Kind regards.

  • @ammar12459
    @ammar12459 Před 2 lety +86

    really appreciate the hard work you put in to come up with such analysis - I am getting really good vibes about this pandemic since I have started watching your videos.

    • @laineedenise7662
      @laineedenise7662 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree. Thank you DR John. A very effective talk to include notes we can read.

    • @phanders6236
      @phanders6236 Před 2 lety

      ???????good vibes about people dying and ending up in hospital beds because of some dumb truckers who think they represent the opinion of "all regular people"??????

    • @laineedenise7662
      @laineedenise7662 Před 2 lety

      @@phanders6236 victim mentality will get you no where.

  • @annettejacobsen6035
    @annettejacobsen6035 Před 2 lety

    Thank you Dr Campbell 🙂

  • @eholloweh
    @eholloweh Před 2 lety +25

    Thanks for all your work over this pandemic! As I am a health care worker in NZ, I'd like to mention that the decision to stagger arrivals back into NZ is less based on the biology of this virus, but the ability of our healthcare and supply systems to cope with the expected omicron surge....with tens of thousands of kiwis wanting to come home, this will put added pressure on our systems. We just want to get through the next few months of the omicron surge before opening the borders fully. I'm sure, having experienced previous surges and their impact on services and supply pathways in the UK, you will understand this. 👍🏻

    • @laurenmoses3373
      @laurenmoses3373 Před 2 lety +10

      Good friend of mine was a nurse here in NZ for 30 years and fired with the mandate. That's the healthcare crisis!

    • @louisejoel
      @louisejoel Před 2 lety +3

      @@laurenmoses3373 The mandate decision is not even a true science based one given the lack of transmission studies. I think it's more of a commercial, control based decision to have everyone prey to a digital ID and digital pass on a permanent basis along with mandated medical treatments for whatever the people in power see fit. Given that the euthanasia bill has just passed I personally would not willingly go into a hospital if I got very sick again.

    • @VauxhallViva1975
      @VauxhallViva1975 Před 2 lety +2

      @@laurenmoses3373 Tend to agree with that. When mandates put critical health-care workers out of work, and then the government claim that the healthcare system is under pressure.....well, gee! Ya think so?! I seem to recall we lost around 2,000 nurses and other medical professionals cos of that decision. 2,000 medial workers could certainly ease the pressure on the healthcare system if they were still working during the impending Omicron wave we are about to have....

    • @Emma310
      @Emma310 Před 2 lety +4

      Nothing on vitamin D in NZ in the news. According to statistics around 30% of NZ ers does not have enough vit. D. Also I think the 8th day protocol of Dr Shankara Chetty is worth looking into to keep people out of hospital. Antihistamines in research has shown preventing severe disease. Pulmonary Pharmacology and Therapeutics has an article about that "on primary health care" in elderly patients.

  • @pitchforkparty
    @pitchforkparty Před 2 lety +213

    As a kid in grade school in Boston during the 1970s and 1980s, I remember that there were always about 3 or 4 kids who had weight problems in my class. When I was a substitute teacher from about 2000-2008, more than half of the students in any given class had weight problems. This problem has been trending in the wrong direction for decades in the US. Exacerbated by cheap, unhealthy fast food, and sedentary lifestyles.

    • @carrie893
      @carrie893 Před 2 lety +14

      Same for me in the 80s and early 90s I remember one obese kid in high school and maybe 2-3 chubby kids out of over 100 students. Started going to college last year and half the students there are obese, and they're so young, most just graduated high school.

    • @CQuinnLady
      @CQuinnLady Před 2 lety +26

      What u have is called "Big Pharma's dream". The fatter, the unhealthier the better big pharma make money.

    • @S.M.E.A.C
      @S.M.E.A.C Před 2 lety +8

      And massive portion sizes.

    • @bluecoffee8414
      @bluecoffee8414 Před 2 lety +20

      @@carrie893 This pandemic was the perfect opportunity to convince Americans to lose weight (since it's the top comorbidity). Yet it's the one think no one emphasized for fear of 'fat shaming.'

    • @trafferz
      @trafferz Před 2 lety +23

      I was one of those fat kids. And had stayed that way until I stopped listening to government nutrition 'science', reduced carbs and ate real foods, not that processed crap. Dropping down carbs, replacing them with fat, was almost an instant energy boost coming after two weeks and all the incentive I needed to change my eating habits completely. No more blood glucose roller coaster and no constant appetite certainly helped.

  • @christineince5841
    @christineince5841 Před 2 lety +55

    Thank you for your sane, level headed, fair minded, reports that don't seem available anywhere else. Beginning to wish I lived in Denmark rather than Britain but grateful am not in Canada, Austria or the US.

    • @keyworth8936
      @keyworth8936 Před 2 lety +6

      Add Australia, New Zealand and China to your list!

    • @aal2206
      @aal2206 Před 2 lety +9

      US has lots of free states with no restrictions .

    • @tmcche7881
      @tmcche7881 Před 2 lety +7

      @@aal2206 ... absolutely right. The only lockdowns are in those states that have single party rule, California, NewYork, Illinois,.... That party is the Democrat Party, made-up solely of tyrannical socialists.

    • @lindsaywilliams9505
      @lindsaywilliams9505 Před 2 lety +1

      Italy is prob worst

    • @keithljs
      @keithljs Před 2 lety +1

      @@tmcche7881, very true indeed!!

  • @louisenurse1234
    @louisenurse1234 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for truth in reporting! I love hearing you explain in a rational tone facts!

  • @Charlayo
    @Charlayo Před 2 lety +7

    Coming from New Zealand, we are opening up, we already have omicorn, yes we still have restrictions like physical distancing and masks.
    Except we're taking the approach of boosting as much of the population as possible to prevent hospitalization, which is why it's a phased approach instead

    • @Ronny.81
      @Ronny.81 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you heard how bad omnicron is?not very bad ,stop living in fear .the sooner NZ get herd immunity the better

    • @Charlayo
      @Charlayo Před 2 lety +2

      @@Ronny.81 yeah but our hospitals can’t handle it we’re not very big compared to other counties healthcare. We will when the modeling shows that our hospitals can handle omicron when our booster rates are higher

    • @Ronny.81
      @Ronny.81 Před 2 lety

      @@Charlayo NZ government has had 2 years since this pandemic started to sort out more ICU spaces and they haven't as I believe. Still only 200 spaces in ICU for the whole country.

    • @Charlayo
      @Charlayo Před 2 lety

      @@Ronny.81 yeah I don’t really understand that.. ?

  • @timdrums1
    @timdrums1 Před 2 lety +300

    Hi John, as a Brit living in Denmark I echo everything you say in this video. Since the start of the pandemic - which to all but epidemiologists was unpredictable (and I guess to many of those too!) - there has been great faith in how the Danish government has handled things. There are some here that will disagree as regards such things as financial support for those in business (very good if you tick certain boxes) but that’s an entirely different subject. We have had clear information, guidance and laws from the outset, which, although coming as a shock initially, were largely accepted over the past two years for the reasons made in your video: consensus between scientists, government, press and the population.
    There has been well-thought out dynamic shifts in policy as we’ve seen new variants arrive along with the incredible vaccine rollout/acceptance, and the reasoning is always carefully explained.
    It’s probably worth adding that in the past our infection numbers have appeared extremely high, which may be true, but are also very impacted by the fact that Denmark has the best free testing, tracing and reporting of any EU country - so naturally the results hit hard and fast in international news.
    Unlike the UK - things have remained calm here despite natural concern; DK is a cautious country but a very well-educated one. And I think important to add that the government here never grandstands or announces policy based on the need for political gains or popularity. Consistency has been the key. Also huge capacity in the healthcare system - although as you note - hospitalisations and deaths here in DK are mercifully very low. It is possible that as most Danes lead a healthy lifestyle, that’s had an effect on response to covid.
    I regularly return to the UK, and despite the fantastic efforts of the NHS, it seems to me that the UK government’s politicised, inconsistent, de-humanising, ill-timed, fractured and quite often corrupt response to the pandemic has been appalling by comparison. And that the poor folks of the UK are forced to take their own common sense measures.
    Here in DK, the government will not take credit for ‘beating covid’ as Johnson’s government seem so keen to do - instead the focus is on something achieved together, as a society co-operating to deal with something horrific, compassionately and successfully.

    • @iggle6448
      @iggle6448 Před 2 lety +8

      Oh, how well said! Denmark's a great exemplar and, anyway, a wonderful country.

    • @helenporter7584
      @helenporter7584 Před 2 lety +8

      Hi Denmark. Were you recommended to take Vitamin D at any stage and were early treatment protocols suggested? Thanks

    • @scottmacmillan3042
      @scottmacmillan3042 Před 2 lety +1

      Excellent post. Cheers

    • @westjes639
      @westjes639 Před 2 lety +3

      @@helenporter7584 Good question. I wonder if they fortify some staple foods with Vit.D - I know some countries do (or did).

    • @jamesnoahandersonjr76
      @jamesnoahandersonjr76 Před 2 lety +18

      The key points that you made that made the difference, a well-educated public, a non-politicized scientific approach, and the overwhelming support of the public trust, made the difference here. and like you said in UK and the United States missing all three of those factors are there downfall.

  • @pallemedel
    @pallemedel Před 2 lety +6

    👏🏻🇩🇰👏🏻Congratulations to our brothers and sisters i Denmark for being sharp, smart and effective during the Pandemic.
    Cheers from Sweden 🇸🇪👋🏻❤️

    • @pallemedel
      @pallemedel Před 2 lety

      @FuskerFisker Thanks! Yes, Tegnell was pretty solid too 👍🏻

  • @katerinabolijn7009
    @katerinabolijn7009 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for your words, I live in New Zealand and cant believe how ridiculous is this border closure...so many people are being sad about it and this is ruining their lives

  • @terrybreiland4230
    @terrybreiland4230 Před 2 lety

    You are my go to channel for covid and health news . You make a lot of sense to a common sense guy like me .THANKS .

  • @Xoyi.__.Sakumi
    @Xoyi.__.Sakumi Před 2 lety +161

    I live in Denmark, the whole family had Covid 2 weeks ago. tested on a Wednesday, got positive result Thursday. Had a headache Thursday, hangover-like symptoms Friday, bit of a snotty nose Saturday and that's it. Now its feels liberating to know we can go about with very little to fear. - For a while.....

    • @Yubnub_dunduY
      @Yubnub_dunduY Před 2 lety +11

      4 a while?
      For 2 years I've been telling people the facts and have realised most people are docile like cows.

    • @julieleduc631
      @julieleduc631 Před 2 lety +11

      Sounds like you're still living in fear. Instead enjoy and stand behind other country's citizens trying to and mandates and restrictions

    • @RM-iii
      @RM-iii Před 2 lety

      Sounds like the flu I had a few years ago

    • @darylfoster7944
      @darylfoster7944 Před 2 lety +5

      You could have previously gone about with little to fear, if you hadn't been willfully ignorant of the facts. It's been two years. No more excuses for being uneducated.

    • @SarahGK333
      @SarahGK333 Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you for sharing your symptoms. My symptoms a week ago were identical but a lot of our rapid tests in Canada don’t seem to register omicron. Our household had negative results on our tests so I’ve been hesitant to assume it was omicron.... but... :.: it probably was.

  • @danielmoreno2969
    @danielmoreno2969 Před 2 lety +6

    Almost cried when he said, younger people lower risk of this virus paid the higher price. It has been a rough a 2 years.

  • @lisastephenson1000
    @lisastephenson1000 Před 2 lety +5

    NZ Government is extremely worried about our hospitals being overwhelmed. Our hospital system has been broken for years and this is highlighting that.

    • @mosb007
      @mosb007 Před 2 lety

      Have they not invested in the hospital capacity? We're a few years into this now. They seem to have had closed borders for a very long time.

    • @richetal
      @richetal Před 2 lety

      @@mosb007 primary care will be overwhelmed now! No mention of that by govt!

    • @andynewzealand
      @andynewzealand Před 2 lety +1

      Lisa - Certainly our hospitals and health system are far from perfect, and I personally would like to see many improvements made, but let's resist using emotional words like "broken". We all can cite cases or know someone who knows someone else who has been waiting 1-2 years for a hip replacement or similar, but our primary care services for immediate and necessary medical intervention ( e.g. heart attacks, strokes, broken bones, and yes Covid-19 etc) is still on a par or in many instances much better that that which exists in other wealthy first world countries. Feel free to research this. The government's measures and those responsible behaviours we have taken as citizens during this crisis (i.e. masking, social distancing and perhaps most importantly - getting fully vaccinatedx3) so far have been to mitigate and prevent our hospitals being, as you say, overwhelmed. I do not think overly emotional finger pointing does much in the way of helping the problem other than giving a sense of credence to others with less responsible agendas to push fear-mongering misinformation and lies. Cheers, Andy.

  • @homestead44
    @homestead44 Před 2 lety

    Great information, great to see a sensible approach at last.

  • @AndreaJosefineYoga
    @AndreaJosefineYoga Před 2 lety +19

    The end is near 🙏🏼🥰

  • @Morfmemes
    @Morfmemes Před 2 lety +166

    The bad health has been the main pandemic here and it has annoyed me from the start. Growing up in sweden and then moved to UK I was shocked over the amounts of obese kids and people in this country. Been to US aswell so seen it there too obviously. I even know a few people who never drink a glass of water.. rather sugary drinks and sodas. I have had so many people tell me vegetables and fruit is "for girls" or its disgusting. I wasnt allowed to leave the table if I hadnt finished my greens as a kid. Personal responsibility for your own health is what we need to bring back

    • @heatherlavender8236
      @heatherlavender8236 Před 2 lety +6

      I totally agree!

    • @teaves8251
      @teaves8251 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed!

    • @kimesadiku6152
      @kimesadiku6152 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed!

    • @1984IsHere
      @1984IsHere Před 2 lety +4

      Banning early treatment is the biggest problem by far .

    • @mickthefisherman1562
      @mickthefisherman1562 Před 2 lety +4

      I was made to eat my vegetables first as a kid and then I was allowed to eat my meat, and I was not allowed to leave anything on my plate. I am sixty years old now and still do this, if any of my family complain about having to eat cooked vegetables or fresh salads all the time I tell the that sometimes you need to eat these foods because of their benefits to your health. We do not by MacDonald's.

  • @pinkasarp2250
    @pinkasarp2250 Před 2 lety +1

    100% in agreement with everything you say - this post is the clearest and most emphatic. Thank-you so much for posting - Every aspect of the structure of the pandemic has been entirely predictable and unsurprising. Panic and culture of fear has caused immeasurable damage that will last for years.

  • @MC-yp2tn
    @MC-yp2tn Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for taking your time to provide balanced feedback on data & studies as they emerge from around the world. I can't tell you how much my spirits have lifted after finding your channel. Your refusal to allow politics or financial gain to taint your findings makes you one of the few sources I feel I can trust.

  • @frankbruno7122
    @frankbruno7122 Před 2 lety +18

    Thank you Dr. John! Great work throughout the pandemic. You've made a difference.
    Frank in Colorado, USA

  • @skylarc8859
    @skylarc8859 Před 2 lety +42

    Greetings from Denmark :D i do feel lucky that our government dealt ok with the pandemic and didnt completely trample peoples rights.
    But i have to say the most important factor is the 2 disciplines working together science and politics. they were balanced well AND the people held the governments feet to the fire through it all,not being scared to question authority but demanding real answers and holding them responsible when they messed up.
    thank the gods for Denmarks still relatively free media
    also most politicians in Denmark is very ordinary and live just like the rest of us, they shop in the same stores etc. there is a relatively low amount of greed and selfishness compared to some other Scandinavian country, and they have to live with and among us.
    Also Denmark seems to have decided to get in on the data collection game and testing, so they were able to draw conclusions of there own and not just trust / wait for WHO or CDC data

    • @metallicaner
      @metallicaner Před 2 lety +1

      Lucky you, my government calls me a nazi lunatic for demanding scientific evidence for their draconic measures

    • @beatrizangeles-lopez5121
      @beatrizangeles-lopez5121 Před 2 lety

      Hopefully the next virus that poses a threat to humanity doesn't come from Denmark's inhumane and cruel treatment of mink population just for their frivolous use of animal pelts!!!!
      Wake up and stop your cruelty!!!!

    • @frederik7338
      @frederik7338 Před 2 lety

      @@beatrizangeles-lopez5121 You don't need to worry about danish mink production for quite a while. The culling as a pandemic measure has pretty much destroyed that industry within our country. While it's still legal to raise mink for their fur, it remains to be seen if any investors will foot the costs of purchasing the mink needed to resume production.

    • @nielspeterborgennielsen1386
      @nielspeterborgennielsen1386 Před 2 lety

      @@beatrizangeles-lopez5121 All minks were killed in an unlawful demand.
      The next threat will likely be from the pig industry with its 30 mio. pigs pr year.

    • @nielspeterborgennielsen1386
      @nielspeterborgennielsen1386 Před 2 lety +1

      I do not agree about the danish media. They have been censoring every critical voice and scientific arguments questioning the onesided vaccination demand all the time like in most other countries. At pressmeeting mostly questions suggesting even more extreme restrictions was heard, like it would put the authorities and the government in a more moderate perspective.

  • @rachelforrester2333
    @rachelforrester2333 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant as always John xx

  • @robertoguerra5375
    @robertoguerra5375 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your video as always Dr Campbell… but you should also mention how many hospital beds there are in Denmark and other countries, per capita.

  • @greatpianomusic9457
    @greatpianomusic9457 Před 2 lety +18

    Many thanks to you for helping us through the last two years. Much appreciated 🇨🇦

  • @helenstewart2085
    @helenstewart2085 Před 2 lety +25

    As a New Zealander we are all shaking our heads at our government.
    All our lock downs or special opening conditions over the past 4 months has done is destroy all restuarants. In the South Island until omicron arrived we had no Covid for over 12 months, but we were still told not to have any inside large gatherings e.g funerals or weddings, except some English DJ's came in 3 times, but family couldn't get home to visit dieing family.
    Life continues but NZ's Government believes they can control everything.

    • @buzzlite3
      @buzzlite3 Před 2 lety

      We can't even watch our kids play cricket!

  • @spelunkernz6390
    @spelunkernz6390 Před 2 lety

    I'm in New Zealand & I hear you mate, thankyou.

  • @randomtask9029
    @randomtask9029 Před 2 lety +2

    Bravo Denmark. You give us hope for sanity.

    • @michaelyakson9953
      @michaelyakson9953 Před 2 lety

      Hope everyone soon will get to their normal life again -it,s have been a hard one for everyone to "deal" with .

  • @cathysiso6147
    @cathysiso6147 Před 2 lety +74

    I live in the Southeastern part of the U.S, in my 60's, and had the Delta virus back in August of 2021. My son, in his 30s has Crohns Disease and we were all very worried that if he caught Covid of any type, it could be very hard on him. However, he is currently in isolation at home and has Omicron along with his wife. Both have mild symptoms and we are so grateful it wasn't worse. He lost his father in law in January of 2020 to one of the first strands of Covid. So glad to see an end to this in our near future. And thank you John for keeping us all informed with your daily updates, it is greatly appreciated.

    • @JennySimon206
      @JennySimon206 Před 2 lety +2

      I have heard countless stories of people who think they got a mild disease, thought they came out the other side and wham! They get hit again. It wasn't over. I wouldn't count my chips until a few weeks after recovery. Also, people are getting reinfected over and over just weeks apart. Vaccinated much more than unvaxxed. The deleterious effect on one's immune system of constant reinfections is scary asf. This virus causes neurological damage. I fear dementia patients are going to rise rapidly. Avoid getting the virus if you can. I am wearing goggles again in addition to double masking. Don't give 2 shits what ppl think. Cave men were the smart ones. The caves are climate controlled and protected from the solar plasma storms our ancients drew pictures of.

    • @talibong9518
      @talibong9518 Před 2 lety +8

      Regular exposure keeps your immunity in check, if you shelter your immune system it gets lazy and the slightest little illness can end up being fatal, don't be stupid and go around scared. The best thing you can do after having covid or being vaxxed is to expose yourself to the strains in the wild.

    • @mariemay1953
      @mariemay1953 Před 2 lety +2

      I have crohn’s and recovered quicker than my family. Research suggests Remicade helps recovery of COVID Symptoms, so I guess I was lucky.

    • @trusainthm
      @trusainthm Před 2 lety +2

      @@JennySimon206 Caveman were not the only ones to live in caves. There have been huge cities around the world built inside of the mountains. Turkey is the biggest one I can think of. Some cities, like mine, are built ontop of old cities. We could technically go under ground if we wanted. But the point is you can hide all you want in caves or underground, or wear two mask and goggles and restrict your life from fear all you want. Its not how the rest of the world wants to live. LIVE is the key word. You need to rethink your life and what you are trying to accomplish. You will die, might be by covid you might get hit by a car while not being able to see out your goggles, who knows. Those last few moments right before you die will you be regretting being so scared for something unavoidable. Just think about it before you keep living your life in fear. None of us has much more time left to enjoy it anyway. Also, check out the cave cities...amazing topic. ;)

    • @JennySimon206
      @JennySimon206 Před 2 lety

      @@talibong9518 yeah I tried that and got super sick in November. It hits me neurologicaly. I had already had the virus when the pandemic began. Neither were confirmed. I am getting an antibody test. I do not think it wise to get infected. There was a recent study where they tracked covid patients by retesting them every week to see how long they carry the virus. 7 months and counting. It doesn't clear as fast as you think. The low number was 70 days. Here is the study. You do not want a long term neurogical disease. Trust me on this. Avoid it. U will get exposed to small amounts either way. That is ideal. That is how old school live virus vaccines were invented. Tiny dose. Wear mask and goggles. Most likely you will still pick up tiny amounts from objects or whatnot.
      Patients test positive & harbor mutating SARS COV2 for 7 months. Infectious. insiderpaper.com/study-covid-can-remain-active-in-some-people-for-up-to-232-days

  • @petercasasola2432
    @petercasasola2432 Před 2 lety +47

    It's amazing how much better you feel when you hear the truth. Thanks John, I really think you are saving lives mate.

    • @prndownload
      @prndownload Před 2 lety

      You have not heard the truth so you should not be feeling better.

    • @businessacc179
      @businessacc179 Před 2 lety

      Agree! The mental health of the world would be markedly improved if THIS was the messaging every day.

    • @petercasasola2432
      @petercasasola2432 Před 2 lety

      @@prndownload This does not warrant a reply.

    • @prndownload
      @prndownload Před 2 lety

      @@petercasasola2432 Lol I just remembered one of the lesser points John was dead wrong on. Remember when he was saying kids don't get the virus and don't spread it lol. There has been so much illogical nonsense entertained here. The sad thing is pretty much everyone believes this kind of nonsense and then can't be convinced otherwise.

    • @petercasasola2432
      @petercasasola2432 Před 2 lety

      @@prndownload Just to clarify your statement, August 18 2020, Dr Campbell discusses the effects of Covid on children, and heartily agrees with the CDC information at the time which showed children's infection rates rising. During this episode, he postulates that his experience with communicable disease shows children readily get and distribute the same. What is true, however, is the effects of Covid on children and younger people are less than those in risk groups, and older people (also referenced from the CDC Information at the time). You are therefore blatantly wrong. An apology is expected to those who may believe your failing memory. I do not.

  • @JW-pq4pl
    @JW-pq4pl Před 2 lety

    Good video. I hope the good Doc doesn’t get censored for being reasonable and moving with the times. Well done Doc.

  • @corneliuiftode1317
    @corneliuiftode1317 Před 2 lety

    Thank you sir!

  • @faibigheart
    @faibigheart Před 2 lety +22

    Denmark is the best, I saw one of their DR, she explained very well regarding their decision to end this pandemic, very scientific explanation, no influenced by politics, business, pure scientific logical explanation.

  • @paulwood3609
    @paulwood3609 Před 2 lety +44

    Excellent video, Dr. Campbell. The emails you are getting from the US are spot on. There is an epidemic of poor health that preceeded Covid 19. The convergence of these two crises has been horrible.

  • @rosemaryryan6455
    @rosemaryryan6455 Před 2 lety

    Excellent presentation thanks

  • @alanus52
    @alanus52 Před 2 lety

    Thank you John