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Proper antibiotic use is a complex topic, as is 'doctor mismanagement' which seems to break down into two factors: management mismanagement of doctors, and doctor error of diagnosing/treating problems - both of which happen both in the acute infection and longer term covid treatment.
Right now however the big error doctors are making is 'not wearing masks and following infectious disease protocols' leading to nosocomial infection across the board not just of covid but of other airborne diseases, such as whooping cough and measles.
> COVID didn't kill nearly as many people as secondary infections and doctor mismanagement.
That is a big claim and, although secondary infections do a lot of the heavy lifting, generally i don't see it.
I've seen one paper say the exact opposite even, that it's not secondary infections in the acute cases , most of the time.
However there's reason to believe it could be true, especially longer term - covid does the initial damage, and since day #1 most people live through the infection itself. And whatever kills people is likely to not be 'covid' or even 'covid again' but something else -- made more likely by the covid infection breaking internal redundancy within the body through internal organ damage, damage to the immune system, or damage to the cardiovascular system generally. So maybe it is true that the secondary infections are the real threat - - they *are* a threat - and especially stuff like whooping cough, measles and candida auris blowing up right now are signs that this is what is happening