Ozone therapy to elimiate Ebola will be tested soon.


Doctor to Test Ozone Therapy Against Ebola

Wednesday, 24 Sep 2014 05:18 PM

By Nick Tate

Harold Robins, M.D., a New York City-based advocate of ozone therapy, says he is planning to fly to the Ebola outbreak zone in West Africa to test the alternative treatment’s potential against the deadly virus.

In an exclusive interview on Newsmax TV’s Meet the Doctors program, to air September 27, Dr. Robins says he believes that ozone therapy can be effective against the Ebola virus that has raged through West Africa.
He and two other American doctors were invited by Kojo Carew, M.D., of Sierra Leone, to fly to Freetown, the country’s capital and largest city, to train doctors at his Blue Shield Hospital, he says. The hospital has been a treatment center for many Ebola patients.
The team is preparing to head to the region in November, equipped with donated supplies and two ozone-therapy machines that will be used to train hospital staff there how to effectively use them.
Dr. Robins maintains that ozone therapy has been effective in treating rheumatoid arthritis, hepatitis B and C, diabetes, and infectious diseases.
“We’re planning on a humanitarian medical mission through Rotary International, which, I’m a Rotarian. A friend of mine, Dr. Robert Roan, an M.D. from San Francisco area and I, along with Dr. Bill Doan, who will be our documentarian, are going to be flying out to Sierra Leone to train the doctors in how to do this,” he says.
“We’ve gotten the machines— the ozone machines — donated because you can’t store it, you have to make it. We’re also going to be going to Nigeria and training their doctors there. So between this, and not just the treatment of Ebola, but we want them to treat malaria as well, which takes tens of thousands of lives every year in Africa …. And if it proves to be as effective as we expect, this is going to make international news.”
Dr. Robins notes ozone therapy is now being used in more than 50 countries by 45,000 physicians, even though it remains an alternative treatment in the U.S.

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