@NeuroSjogrens In time... The research community (they do good work) approaches studying complex chronic disease within a vacuum. They need to look at everything, at the same. The person who is suffering from the condition already has the answer, listening to them is the key!
@royalhansen I will take a gander when I get the chance. I did alot of work studying the origins of the bird flu infecting residents of the US the last couple of years...
@einfachkaffee Hi Lukas, I already develop disease process flow maps for many data inputs including DNA/RNA. Actionable results. Follow and DM if want to know more.
@TWestphalia@32Sfc46582 Hi Treaty, you forgot the who.. the Who is me. The where is here and the when is now. I won't get into how I developed the framework here but if you follow back, feel free to DM me. You are basically an untapped data centre. All of your data is connected. Goal is to find root
@arianek@manruipa Manny produces great content that is relevant to the space. His contributions are greatly appreciated. The complexity of chronic disease is far greater than what's currently being hypothesized. Solving conditions in multiple people with different symptoms will be ultimate test.
@danaparish Agreed. But there are some studies that arrive at the conclusion of the stated time frame. They basically say that the bacteria has to be transferred from gut into saliva and that takes time. On the other hand, does it take 2 days for someone to notice a tick attached to them?
@WHO@mvankerkhove The remedy I developed for acute onset #COVID19 should help against #Ebola because the components have already been researched showing promising results.