There are probably dozens of treatments that could have saved many lives during the pandemic, if these treatments had been plucked out of the research environment, and deployed widely across the nations.
My personal idea for saving lives during the pandemic was taking echinacea.
Did you know that if you take the immune-stimulating herb echinacea at the very first signs of a cold appearing, there is a good chance you will never get that cold, because echinacea is able to destroy the cold virus on your mucous membranes before it gets a grip on you. There are many studies demonstrating echinacea can prevent colds.
If you take echinacea once the cold has already manifested, then it will not work, in my experience. But catch a cold early enough — like at the first few sneezes and when you are just starting to feel groggy — then you can often prevent it entirely. This is what I have found; I have used echinacea to help prevent colds for many decades, and it is particularly useful as a prophylactic to take at the end of the day, if you have been exposed to people with a cold at work; or as a prophylactic if you feel a cold coming on.
Given that SARS-CoV-2 is a coronavirus, and coronavirus is a cold virus, I suspect taking echinacea at the first signs of a COVID infection would wipe that infection out entirely.
I was using echinacea during the pandemic whenever there was risk of COVID exposure.
If people across the nations had been instructed to take echinacea at the first sign of COVID, it might have substantially reduced viral transmission and reduced COVID deaths. Not to mention reduced the incidence of the dreaded long COVID.
Echinacea is cheap and widely available in supplement stores. And you would not need to take it all the time, just when you feel the first signs of a cold coming on, or after a high risk of exposure to COVID, such as going out to a party or large social event.
So I suspect echinacea could have saved lots of lives. But the trick is convincing the medical community that such an approach would work. For that you need evidence.
Echinacea was my personal idea for how to better control the pandemic, and I discussed this approach on other forums back in March 2020 (see this post), before the pandemic took off in the West. (That post also gives evidence for how allicin might reduce the chances of catching COVID). But people all around the world were coming up with lots of different ideas to try to control the pandemic, and each person thinks their approach will be effective.
Evidence for echinacea efficacy: this meta-analysis of 14 studies on echinacea for preventing or treating colds found that echinacea reduced the chance of catching a cold by 58%.
EDIT: just found this study which demonstrates that echinacea does indeed work against coronaviruses.
Thanks for these articles.
I believe that I have had Covid 19 3 times, although I only tested positive for it one time. The first time I think it was Delta, summer 2021. I felt sick for 3 or 4 days, food and liquid tasted funny, I went for a PCR test which was negative, a week later, I was not better, no fever, lightheaded, throwing up occasionally, but golfing, and have normal daytime activities. I called the Dr. and asked for something to knock out a bad cold. They had me come in, Oxygen level was 87, blood pressure low, body temperature low 90's. Sent to X-ray, both lower lobes black, blood completely screwed up, kidney indicators showed kidney shutting down. PA said I had Pneumonia and had to go to the hospital. I refused and asked her to treat me there. I knew that if I went to the hospital they would test me, and I would be positive. Then, no treatment. She agreed to give me an IV and treat me with pneumonia protocol. After getting 3 antibiotics, and at the end of the IV bag she came in and told me that she could have tested me for covid, but decided not to. It took 8 weeks to recover to the point I could go back to normal activities. Pretty sure it was covid, but was never tested.
2nd was Omicron last September, woke feeling funny low fever, got rapidly worse, dizzy, malaise, puking. Tested positive on home test. Could not get Paxlovid in time, so I took the HCQ, Zinc, Zpack, Ivermectin combination Zelenko/FLCCC protocol. Symptoms did not get worse, and were gone by day 5.
Got it again mid December. Same symptoms, Same treatment, Same result. Did not bother with test. Once you have had it, you know what it feels like.
Why am I wasting your time telling you all this?
I am interested in finding something that helps prevent viral respiratory diseases. For an unknown reason, I seem to be vulnerable to viruses, even if 2 of the last 3 episodes were RSV or Flu instead of Covid, I have to treat them as if they were Covid. I would like to continue going to the gym, and restaurants, and living a normal life. It is not practical or healthy to take antibiotics every 3 or 4 months. I have been vaccinated for Covid, took the first 2. I Don't get flu vaccines because they rarely work, and got sick when I used to take them. I also took the Pneumonia vaccine, maybe it worked and I had Covid, which is what I think happened,
So your articles on Echinacea were of great interest with their conclusions that it is effective, to some extent in preventing Covid as well Flu and RSV. It also seems to be effective in reducing the length and seriousness of the illness,
I am definitely going to look into the Echinacea. If it does anything positive with regard to prevention, or suppression of the virus it is worth looking into. After all, this is what the vaccines were promised to do, but did not deliver.
I am pasting a paragraph from the discussion section of the last study in you post below and would be interested in the thoughts of others. I supplied the emphasis on the last sentence, couldn't resist.
Despite the limitations associated with this review (e.g., low number of studies), we believe that our findings are highly relevant, as they provide a rather consistent picture on antiviral and preventive benefits of Echinacea in coronavirus infections overall. Additionally, they have important implications for the preventive use of Echinacea during COVID-19 epidemic. The reduction of coronavirus loads is medically highly relevant as virus concentrations appear to correlate with community transmission, influence illness severity and progression in adults and children [36,37,38,39]. Two clinical studies have shown over 98.5% reduction of coronavirus concentration in nasal secretions obtained from children and adults treated with Echinacea. Evidence is still missing that vaccines significantly reduce viral loads, especially of SARS-CoV-2 delta variant and this asset would be a decisive argument for use of Echinacea during COVID-19 pandemic.