It's good enough stuff, for a drug. Israeli one looks perfect so far, but if you are reduced to taking drugs instead of nature, yes that may help you.
I don't understand what you mean. It doesn't require being "reduced" to anything.
It's a simple question, whether someone is within the risk category or is not. For people in the risk category, before needing to be in the hospital or needing oxygen support, the monoclonal antibody treatments (along with whatever best effort people made including sunlight, vitamins, rest, fluids, and anything else) prevented deterioration into more severe disease, it prevented hospitalizations, and it prevented deaths, compared to an equivalent group
in the same risk category who had placebo instead of antibodies and did the same best efforts at sunlight, vitamins, rest, fluids, or whatever other natural things were available and that people naturally do when they are sick.
We don't know and cannot predict who among outpatients will deteriorate into a worse, severe case that will require hospitalization. The entire population has a certain basal rate at which that occurs to a subset of people who begin as outpatients with mild/moderate disease. The higher risk population also has a basal rate but it is higher than the broader population (which is why it's more important to treat proactively than a lower risk group). We do not know who among that high risk category will be within the subset that gets worse and turns into a severe case. But we do know that multiple monoclonal antibody treatments are now proven to *prevent* this from happening and they
lower that basal rate in that population, to a large degree (ie large amount of benefit).
Maybe it will turn out that the Israeli drug also performs similarly, but it will have to go through robust testing to confirm it. It would be great if there are more treatments. Then no one will have to suffer with this disease.
Still just have water fall on the lava rocks in your sauna all night and no covid in the morning, if you consume liquids. By me 0% death rate. Gambling with drugs if fun though.
Whatever you just recommended is impossible to behave the way you describe. Even if that was an effective treatment, it would not eliminate an infection and make it disappear overnight! It is very likely NOT an effective treatment of an infected person, and therefore it would be gambling for someone to rely on that, especially someone in a high risk category.
2. Given all the objective evidence I cited, monoclonal antibodies are no longer a "gamble" for Covid outpatients. They are a proven effective treatment.
Gambling with vaccines and getting vaccine herpes-shingles is not fun. https://www.naturalnews.com/2021-04-20-israeli-scientists-covid-19-side-effect-herpes-zoster.html#
1. A vaccine is too late for someone who is already infected. They need a treatment and to recover from their infection. Immunity takes weeks to develop from a vaccine. So your antivax propaganda doesn't belong in this thread.
2. In the report on this side effect of Herpes-Zoster, all 6 of the people who got it (An extremely low number given how many millions have now been vaccinated) were people who had mild cases of autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic diseases. Obviously people with autoimmune conditions like that may have more complications from a vaccine, just as they do from infections. Herpes Zoster is easily treated with oral antivirals for a week. If you don't believe me, go ask any doctor.
Your fearmongering is pathetic and it is endangering people's health if they listen to you.