Genetics and covid deaths

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2022
  • Neanderthal gene probably caused up to a million Covid deaths
    www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022...
    www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/s...
    LZTFL 1 gene
    The major genetic risk factor for severe COVID-19 is inherited from Neanderthals
    www.nature.com/articles/s4158...
    Clinical manifestations, asymptomatic to rapid progression to respiratory failure
    Co-morbidities do not fully explain variability
    Region (gene cluster) on chromosome 3
    Only region that is significantly associated with severity
    Odds ratio for requiring hospitalization of 1.6
    Death, 2.0
    Genome-wide association study
    www.nature.com/articles/s4143...
    www.nature.com/articles/natur...
    N = 3,199 hospitalized with COVID-19
    Population controls, 897,488
    The major genetic risk factor for severe symptoms
    Risk is conferred by genomic segment, 50 kilobases
    Inherited from Neanderthals
    Haplotype
    Group of alleles (one version of a gene) in an organism that are inherited together from a single parent.
    Sequence strongly associated with each other in the population
    Haplotype carried by
    50% of people in south Asia, at least one copy
    16% of people in Europe
    9% of admixed American
    Bangladesh
    63% heterozygous
    13% homozygous
    Bangladeshi origins, living in UK
    Hazard ratio of death, 2.0
    Almost absent in east Asia
    Neanderthals or Denisovans?
    Present in a homozygous form in the genome of Vindija Neanderthal,
    50,000-year-old Neanderthal from Croatia
    Founder of the clade
    Neanderthals and modern humans split 550,000 years ago
    www.imm.ox.ac.uk
    www.ox.ac.uk/news/2021-11-04-...
    Dr James Davies University of Oxford
    We used the technique and it identified a virtually understudied gene called LZTFL1,
    and at the time that this had not been linked to infection at all.
    It’s a single letter difference out of three billion.
    This tiny section of DNA doubles your risk of dying from Covid.
    It's position 45,818,159 on chromosome three,
    and it's a single change.
    If you've got a G at that site, it's low risk.
    And if you have an A at that site it is high risk
    adenine (A)
    cytosine (C)
    guanine (G)
    thymine (T)
    Gene changes cell reaction to binding of SARS-CoV-2 virus onto the ACE2 receptor
    Conformational changes
    In most people, this leads to the cell then changing shape
    Conformational changes reduces further binding
    High risk variant, less or delayed conformational change
    Deaths globally, is in the hundreds of thousands to a million
    Dr Davies and Dr Simon Underdown
    The Neanderthal gene first infiltrated humans 60,000 years ago
    One event, one child
    Neanderthal Introgression,
    Gene jumped into the Homo sapien lineage
    The reason that we know that is that it's inherited as this block with 28 single letter changes,
    and you can track that all the way back and it has to be a single event.
    It's just so unlikely that you get all 28 changes at the same time and in the same block

Комментарии • 3,9 тыс.

  • @Chemicznaja
    @Chemicznaja 2 года назад +1247

    This is how my Friday evening looks like: curiously listening to an intelligent person sharing his knowledge with the world. I salute to you, sir.

    • @brotherdodger8545
      @brotherdodger8545 2 года назад +16

      Are you complaining or bragging?

    • @Chemicznaja
      @Chemicznaja 2 года назад +2

      @ Thanks, I'll think about it.

    • @darrenmcintosh8471
      @darrenmcintosh8471 2 года назад

      forget the fact he intelligent he feeding you bs

    • @fintonmainz7845
      @fintonmainz7845 2 года назад +22

      He is not an intelligent person.
      An intelligent person knows the limits of their knowledge.
      Retired Nurse John does not.

    • @Chemicznaja
      @Chemicznaja 2 года назад +57

      @@fintonmainz7845 And your point is to make me aware of Dr Campbell's profession and by doing so perhaps hoping to diminutize him in my eyes? I already knew it, but you seem to have missed him saying on many occasions: 'I don't know'.

  • @FairyPodcaster
    @FairyPodcaster 2 года назад +633

    I really love how you start off each talk with the date and a summary and brief intro. Then politely say ‘so if you want to watch that’s what todays talk will be about’ ☺️

    • @brennadickinson3562
      @brennadickinson3562 2 года назад +5

      I like to stay in touch with many sides on these issues.

    • @chrisstevens4764
      @chrisstevens4764 2 года назад

      @@john0270 I have actually watched a fair few of them. It was very clear he is little more than a grifter, when he decided to set aside science, and medicine, in favour of idiot guesswork from those such as Ferguson, and socially engineered fearmongering, from the Nudge Unit........

    • @4runningaway417
      @4runningaway417 2 года назад +20

      a class act i like him and i appreciate his wit

    • @flxmkr
      @flxmkr 2 года назад +27

      Chris Stevens Um...nobody's pointing a gun to your head and forcing you to listen. That was exactly Silent Tiger's point.
      If you don't want to watch, don't watch. But don't be a hypocrite, either. You're coming on Dr. John's page offering your opinions that are opposite of his views. So I would think that's a more accurate example of force-feeding than Dr. John offering his data for people to ponder...and explaining what he's going to discuss before he begins. No bait and switch like many other videos.
      You disagree with what Dr. John is saying, then make your own videos. It's free Enterprise. I, for one, have found his videos to be spot-on accurate.

    • @angelablacksmith9653
      @angelablacksmith9653 2 года назад

      Top 10 lies of this world! Share the truth! ruclips.net/video/6nCI47ojdtQ/видео.html

  • @kayprice9844
    @kayprice9844 2 года назад +322

    I caught a virus in Madrid end of October 2019. I was really ill for 3/4 weeks and when the pandemic hit I realised I had had all the covid symptoms. The interesting thing about this is that I shared a restaurant with approximately 50 Chinese tourists (which could be verified) 4 days before becoming ill. I have believed all along that I had Covid. Fits with your question about whether the virus was circulating in China much earlier than Nov 19

    • @mariespi96
      @mariespi96 2 года назад +16

      Wow! Glad you were ok!

    • @Hulalulatallulahoop2
      @Hulalulatallulahoop2 2 года назад +22

      This is really weird but at around the same time I went to Manchester for the day and whilst there I felt VERY unwell and to this day how I got home is beyond me. I felt really unwell for only a few days but I could hardly put one foot in front of the other and felt like death warmed up. There was no reason for me to feel that unwell as I’m very healthy, I don’t drink or smoke and exercise 5/6 times a week. I still find it strange to this day.

    • @maggsmcguire8854
      @maggsmcguire8854 2 года назад +20

      My granddaughter has CF back in December 2019 between Christmas and New Year she had what we thought was a exacerbation. A bad cough and aches but unlike normal CF see also had a fever. At 19 she said to us "this is not my CF this is different" it lasted about three weeks. It obviously did affect her CF as she spent 3 weeks in February on IVs. We think now it may have been Covid-19. The fact that she hasn't caught it despite mixing with lots of people since supports this.

    • @ms-jl6dl
      @ms-jl6dl 2 года назад +27

      Yes it was we know that. Virus was all over Europe early in 2019 at least. Because of low mortality and standard symptoms it wasn't recognised earlier.

    • @jossfangirl
      @jossfangirl 2 года назад +1

      ​@@Hulalulatallulahoop2 to get so sick in such a short time spunds like ypu were exposed to a toxin not a virus

  • @altheacrawford3049
    @altheacrawford3049 2 года назад +6

    Thank you so much (!!!) for ALL of your continued excellent work on this channel Dr. Campbell. You have been able to consistently break down--for the average person--often incredibly complex medical/scientific information, within an everchanging context of reported "Science," guidelines, & mandates. I'm sure it is must be quite time consuming for you (reading most current journals, making notes, processing of info. read, et al). Your regular 'breakdowns,' are an incredibly important public service, that is so desperately needed! Thanx again for ALL of your continued work.
    Peace, x & gratitude to you & All. :)

  • @juvenalsdad4175
    @juvenalsdad4175 2 года назад +388

    There were some who, during the pandemic, were ascribing the disproportionate death rate among people of Bangladeshi origin in the UK to 'health inequities'. Perhaps this might be a lesson in the value of exploring all the multi variants of a problem, rather than just reaching for the easy answer.

    • @iggle6448
      @iggle6448 2 года назад +62

      Have just written a similar comment above. Everything is the fault of racism or Russia these days. We caught this R&R bug off the Americans.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 2 года назад

      This doesn't fit the political narrative so will be suppressed. The handout-to-vote feedback loop only favors those who dish out this garbage, while taxing those who (what a coincidence) don't vote for these very same political hacks.

    • @leonais1
      @leonais1 2 года назад +40

      Someone cycnical might say it was a not just an easy answer but a politicised answer. Could also say that a simple counting method (equity/diversity) will never understand complex causal factors. Plenty of politicisation possible when crossing science with politics nowadays.

    • @jamesgodfrey1322
      @jamesgodfrey1322 2 года назад +12

      Now 3+ generation house holds also play ed a part grandparents parents and children play it part culture is to look after ther grandparents at home

    • @juvenalsdad4175
      @juvenalsdad4175 2 года назад +6

      @@leonais1 In some cases yes, but I would be wary of tarring everyone with the same brush. I am, however, thinking of heading over to the 'Independent Sage' channel and leaving a comment FAO Dr. Zubaida Haque PhD. to see how sciency she is feeling today.

  • @domenicsaviniethicquest4411
    @domenicsaviniethicquest4411 2 года назад +406

    What a brilliant mind, lucid speaker and wonderful soul. Had my college or high school biology teacher been like Dr. Campbell i may have pursued the health sciences. Thank you for being such a gift to us all.

    • @stevenuk
      @stevenuk 2 года назад

      shame that so many other people are not allowed to talk about it: ruclips.net/video/M7DjIo0CsJM/видео.html

    • @lindamaxey3827
      @lindamaxey3827 2 года назад +1

      @Domonic Savini I agree 👍

    • @mana3735
      @mana3735 2 года назад

      John Lorimer Campbell[3] is a British RUclipsr and retired nurse educator who has posted RUclips videos commenting on the COVID-19 pandemic since January 2020 on his channel, Dr. John Campbell. Initially, his videos received some praise, but some latter videos contain misinformation, such as the suggestion that deaths from COVID-19 have been over-counted, repeated false claims about the use of the anti-parasitic drug ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment,[4] and misleading commentary about vaccine safety.[5][6][7] By January 2022, his videos had been viewed more than 429 million times.

    • @stevenuk
      @stevenuk 2 года назад

      @@mana3735 I think he's telling the truth that the Pharmaceutical Industry want to hide. The virus is man made, just like the vaccine. The whole thing is a sham and an attack against the population.

    • @mana3735
      @mana3735 2 года назад

      @@stevenuk There is no evidence that the virus is man made..stop with the "I think" bs...it's just mis-info and helps nobody.

  • @anatomicallymodernhuman5175
    @anatomicallymodernhuman5175 2 года назад +74

    This is the first thing I’ve come across that explains why a friend of mine spent weeks in hospital with an early variant and nearly died, despite having previously been a healthy young man in his late 20s with no known comorbidities.

  • @ms.information8747
    @ms.information8747 2 года назад +54

    This was such an interesting topic! It also highlights why government bureaucrats trying to outsmart an infectious virus was such a disaster. I wish the massive hubris of our medical bureaucrats may be reduced after this; there are SO many variables that the computer modeling is woefully inadequate to predict results.

    • @EtreTocsin
      @EtreTocsin Год назад +1

      Or perhaps intentional. Bio weapon to target certain races or ethinicities, maybe?

    • @EtreTocsin
      @EtreTocsin Год назад

      It reminds me of an old SNL skit where Eddie Murphy played a Jamaican Reggae singer who sang “kill the white people yeah…whoa but buy record first” “ when dey go to da record store, we gonna wait outside…we gonna hit ‘em in da’ head wit’ a bat and make dem cry…and den we kill da white people...yeah, whoa but buy record first”: 😂. This was back when SNL used to actually be funny

  • @susankerr9521
    @susankerr9521 2 года назад +384

    As the former owner of a couple Denisovan molars (Huge roots--and three of them on each tooth!), I suspect that we all carry more interesting genes than we care to think about. There is some evidence that interbreeding among humans, Neanderthals and Denisovans was not a one-and-done event but rather an ongoing situation as groups encountered one another again and again. Today's video is fascinating. Thanks so much.

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento 2 года назад +11

      Yes! I saw studies made and that is proven that there have been mingling at certain periods of time. Sorry, can not remember a resource.

    • @eyvonnehammonds3543
      @eyvonnehammonds3543 2 года назад +55

      Ok...now I'm curious. When I had my wisdom teeth removed, after the surgery, the surgeon came to my recovery room with my teeth in a jar. He said he had never seen such large roots on wisdom teeth (all had 3 roots and were over 2 inches long; he said they went all the way up into my sinus cavities). ALSO, he said I had "extra" wisdom teeth abd he had to remove a total of 8 of them....

    • @geoffmcintosh3
      @geoffmcintosh3 2 года назад +12

      I am impressed that you had Denisovan teeth. I was of the understanding there had only been a few ever found and most of the research was based on the genes from the jaw bone found. Where were the molars discovered

    • @roisinmc7442
      @roisinmc7442 2 года назад +34

      this has really interested me too as I had a lower molar removed by an oral surgeon who couldn't believe the length of the roots and kept saying to me "this isn't normal anatomy you know" and i kept thinking, what does he mean!! I'm a slim Irish female.

    • @eyvonnehammonds3543
      @eyvonnehammonds3543 2 года назад +11

      @@roisinmc7442 I'm of Irish decent as well (on my father's side)! I am also very slim (but very tall - 6'5", 190 lbs).

  • @laurenbrillante89
    @laurenbrillante89 2 года назад +230

    I find that U.S. biolabs studying airborne diseases how to wage biowarfare based on genetics and how they can deliver these selective diseases by drone extremely disturbing(this is what was discovered in U.S. funded biolabs in Ukraine). I am extremely distrustful of the Oligarchs ruling our world and the way they are 'playing with fire' with our future.

    • @G.Man-
      @G.Man- 2 года назад

      I'm surprised that this platform has not censored this comment. Not surprised that the mainstream-mislead-ya are silent on this though...

    • @joemckinley
      @joemckinley 2 года назад

      China were working on a genetically targeted bio weapon ages ago, and what do you know, this happened. I'm so not surprised

    • @richardb8104
      @richardb8104 2 года назад +25

      Also what is their endgame, and who is selectively removed? Crazy times we are in.

    • @chriswales1952
      @chriswales1952 2 года назад +2

      What’s your evidence that labs in Ukraine were working on this or are you just another Russian Troll?

    • @yuothineyesasian
      @yuothineyesasian 2 года назад +1

      @@richardb8104 their endgame is completely pliant population that has no chance of mounting a revolution against the global elite class (aka bankers).

  • @Schnazola
    @Schnazola 2 года назад +27

    Paleoanthropology never ceases to interest me. And making the genetic connection between Homo neanderthalensis and Covid morbidity is super fascinating. Thanks for explaining this, Dr. C.

    • @paulaanthis4031
      @paulaanthis4031 Год назад +1

      Have to wonder if this genetic link was somehow an intended target of this man made virus ?

  • @paulpyatt9942
    @paulpyatt9942 2 года назад +21

    Love to see the stats on blood types and response to covid infection.

  • @mariaalards6465
    @mariaalards6465 2 года назад +103

    Dear Doctor Campbell,from day one you have kept us informed in a simple but clear way,which in itself has stopped worrying.When you spoke about vitamin D3 and K2 it gave us a better protection and for me it helped with chronic rheumatoid arthritis in high enough doses.So thank you Doctor and much love from France 🇫🇷💕

    • @tomcartwright7134
      @tomcartwright7134 2 года назад +10

      Maria, I have been taking vitamin D3 for years. 10,000 I i u e each morning. If I forget to take it my joints hurt the next day. My doctors are curious about why I injest such a large amount. I tell them for Covid protection and for joint pain , they shrug and say , well it won’t do any harm.

    • @peggychurchill5518
      @peggychurchill5518 2 года назад +2

      MY MATERNAL FAMILY HAVE VERY LOW VITAMIN D LEVELS. WHILE D HELPS WITH RESPIRATORY ISSUSE IT CAUSES AWFUL HIP PAIN AND MOBILITY PROBLEMS? ANY INFO ON WHY?

    • @stuontwo677
      @stuontwo677 2 года назад +4

      @@peggychurchill5518 Peggy is your capslock broken? It seems like you're shouting.

  • @nycmermaid3158
    @nycmermaid3158 2 года назад +81

    What an extraordinary presentation!
    Your enthusiasm for the information is palpable! Always so very grateful for your expertise.
    I have been following you since the very beginning of the covid report’s from China. You have been and are THE finest voice of reason and scientific data throughout this unfortunately politicized pandemic. Here in the USA, politics has had a particularly tragic impact on the sense and health of too many.
    I am so profoundly grateful for you and your clear, science based reports. Thank you.

  • @johnmcclain3887
    @johnmcclain3887 2 года назад +25

    Thank you doctor, it's been fifty years since I studied genetics formally, but I still enjoy the information very much. This was a wonderful bit of odd data at a rather odd moment in time, fascinating indeed.

  • @mirageviral4875
    @mirageviral4875 2 года назад +9

    I've said to my friends since the beginning of the pandemic that it would be genetics that would guide us through the real knowledge about the risk factors. I treated for Hepatitis C 8 years ago and they already could tell who would respond to treatment or not by focussing on (the possession of) a certain allege of chromosome. I would tell people that science would come to know this at one point for Covid also. The problem is that it takes a lot of time to figure out. This video is encouraging as it seems to be a good start in that direction.

  • @paige8991
    @paige8991 2 года назад +144

    This makes me think about the connection ancestry DNA companies have to big pharma companies. It also makes me think about the money China has invested in both. I always was a little suspicious of China's interest in genealogy companies, but targeted virus's have never crossed my mind. I always brushed it off, who could be so stupid as to mess with something like viruses? It's playing with fire. But the lableak theory and US involvement in it sure proved me wrong.

    • @RazmiWellness
      @RazmiWellness 2 года назад

      Knowing that it's NOT just some crazy conspiracy theory and actual fact that some of the "powers that be" are known eugenicists, just confirms this particular suspicion.

    • @Ur2ez4me81
      @Ur2ez4me81 2 года назад +12

      My thoughts exactly… Very good point.

    • @PrincessAfrica3
      @PrincessAfrica3 2 года назад +9

      This comment blew my mind🤯

    • @ElinWinblad
      @ElinWinblad 2 года назад

      Old enough to remember when Israel was caught creating a bio weapon that targeted their enemy genetics so it wouldn’t harm themselves.

    • @terrymoney9718
      @terrymoney9718 2 года назад

      Exactly why mess with viruses? It serves no positives unless there's another motive

  • @craignedoff991
    @craignedoff991 2 года назад +136

    This man is an international treasure, one the most truthful and informative channels anywhere.

  • @bpjones2390
    @bpjones2390 2 года назад +4

    Thank you, Dr., Campbell for your excellent work. It is much appreciated. Please continue to keep us informed.

  • @dianekelley6310
    @dianekelley6310 2 года назад +139

    It would be interesting to see an overlay of the use of Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine on this genetic data. I’ve heard parts of Africa routinely take these drugs for various parasitic infections and Japan was an early implementer of the former.

    • @steveball20
      @steveball20 2 года назад +7

      I'm on hydroxy for another illness, didn't stop me contracting the virus. Was sick as for a few days and symptomatic for a week.

    • @louisevangaal7869
      @louisevangaal7869 2 года назад +2

      @@steveball20 nothing stops you from getting the virus. What is effected is the way you react. Sounds like the hydroxy was pretty good for you as you're well enough to comment.

    • @dianekelley6310
      @dianekelley6310 2 года назад +25

      @@steveball20 From what I’ve heard, it is a combination of HC and zinc (plus azithromycin for bacterial infection) that is used for neutralizing the virus. The HC helps facilitate zinc’s entry into the cells and the zinc does the job.

    • @ataurusqueenofzion916
      @ataurusqueenofzion916 2 года назад +4

      No Africans don't do thar sorry.

    • @Kay-pq1uo
      @Kay-pq1uo 2 года назад +10

      Dad is on HCQ for RA. My sister and I have had him add zinc, Vit D3/K2, Mg, vit C, Vit Bs. He was once last Jan 2022, tested + but no symptoms. His Vit D level has been 75, now 90 (because the K2/Mg is helping the Vit D develop). He is 83 and has had 3 joint surgeries in a span of last 20 mos (6 surgeries in past 7 yrs). Done well they then all

  • @KayCeeTX21
    @KayCeeTX21 2 года назад +217

    As an avid reader of the meticulously researched Jean. M Auel books (Clan of the Cave-bear series), I found this topic absolutely fascinating!!! Thank you for sharing it with us! ❤️

    • @JL-pw9bb
      @JL-pw9bb 2 года назад +14

      That’s immediately what I thought of too! :)

    • @eric2500
      @eric2500 2 года назад +19

      The facts may have been well researched but as the books went ON I just could not stand the heroine anymore. She invented almost everything, figures out almost everything, etc. Tiresome!

    • @christinetoevs6641
      @christinetoevs6641 2 года назад +12

      Likewise !!! Clan-of-Cave Bear ...jumped right to mind!

    • @KayCeeTX21
      @KayCeeTX21 2 года назад +17

      @@eric2500 😂 I agree. Ayla got a little too magical near the end. Although at that point I was so caught up in the Cro-magnon romance, i didn’t care. I had accepted that Ayla was idealized as an incredibly lucky, wildly intelligent, intuitive shaman/surgeon pharmacist…aka the embodiment of all things awesome and perfect. . I mean…it could have happened. But dang….you’d almost want to hope she at least had bad breath in the morning…although she invented the toothbrush as well…so probably not. Book 3 was my favorite. Though I loved them all. I will forever thank my Humanities teacher in high school who assigned the first book to us. We groaned and complained. Then we were hooked. 🐻

    • @anitagolke1678
      @anitagolke1678 2 года назад +5

      I agree, great book

  • @lawrencestovall7680
    @lawrencestovall7680 2 года назад +34

    Thanks again Dr for an interesting topic. The gene topic was mentioned early on but, was on the tail end. Sometime you could read about a complete family dying when one got infected. This information helps us understand what we are facing in the future about one treatment fit all approach. I appreciate that you bring up topics that's normally not discussed outside the scientific community. Neanderthal did in fact pass on genes that were protective as well as destructive.

    • @m-bronte
      @m-bronte 2 года назад

      Early on I was reading that higher numbers of covid was found in certain blood types, that being blood type A mostly.

  • @galespressos
    @galespressos Год назад +1

    Love your program. Was on early before you’d been discovered by the masses so to speak. Excellent information. So interesting. Thank you much, even if it’s not the best of news sometimes. Fascinating indeed.

  • @Maria-k0
    @Maria-k0 2 года назад +2

    I’m lost for words Dr Campbell. Your knowledge and insight, and the way in which you deliver such interesting and compelling information, from research around our world. Thank you sincerely.

  • @douginorlando6260
    @douginorlando6260 2 года назад +119

    This was known very early on (when the virus hit northern Italy very hard). But alas, the fact this key genetic co morbidity existed was severely censored. 18% of native Europeans have this and 3% inherited it from both parents. One copy increases severity same as adding 10 years of age. 2 copies increased risk same as 20 years of age. This would have made a huge difference in treatment, testing vaccines, targeting those needing to take extra precautions.

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 2 года назад

      You DO realize that you are assuming they knew these details from the get go right?
      Unfortunately covid needed to spread around the globe for a long time BEFORE they knew who was more susceptible to covid.

    • @eyvonnehammonds3543
      @eyvonnehammonds3543 2 года назад +4

      I wonder how this ties in with the Von Willanbrant (sp?) Factor.

    • @anatomicallymodernhuman5175
      @anatomicallymodernhuman5175 2 года назад +1

      Censoring info that would reduce the deaths of a segment of the population would be an indirect (but not necessarily unintentional) form of genocide. The fact that the censoring began so early in the pandemic implies that it could have been the plan all along. Uncomfortable thought.

    • @lawrencestovall7680
      @lawrencestovall7680 2 года назад +21

      Even with this topic today, it reflects how few people knew about the subject. So someone did a good job of keeping the information hidden.

    • @Vanessa-sv4ub
      @Vanessa-sv4ub 2 года назад +13

      Also, very early on they began to make connecions with differet types of blood. The studies have evolved, but from the beginning with the first study having been conducted in china, they said blood type O was more resistant to the virus. That finding has been maintained through out the various studies that have followed since 2020.

  • @teresafry3295
    @teresafry3295 2 года назад +40

    So fascinating! I have been asked to participate in a study looking at DNA and Covid hospitalization. This has peaked my interest in participating. As always love your daily chats. 💕

    • @quietdove5090
      @quietdove5090 2 года назад

      Hi may I ask how I can find more out about this study? I may have internet in it also 👍🏾

    • @teresafry3295
      @teresafry3295 2 года назад +2

      @@quietdove5090 it’s a Canadian study at the university of British Columbia. Stuart Turvey is the lead.

    • @quietdove5090
      @quietdove5090 2 года назад +1

      Thank you! Have a safe and uplifting weekend!!

  • @lisamac8503
    @lisamac8503 2 года назад +3

    Excellent presentation and fascinating I had always thought that there was a genetic component Thank you so much for the time you took to do this presentation It was wonderful listening to someone intelligent !

  • @colinbaldwin3833
    @colinbaldwin3833 Год назад +3

    Thank goodness we have the good people of Utube overseeing the information we’re allowed to hear.
    Thank you Dr Campbell for all your hard work.

  • @imbadger6096
    @imbadger6096 2 года назад +187

    Dr. John, thank you SO much for this beautiful and fascinating look into the amazing story of our collective evolutionary history! Thank you sharing your brilliant intellectual curiosity with all of us. Your marvelous gift for sifting quickly through scientific data chaff to find the essential kernels of relevant information, and to then present them succinctly to non-scientists like me is breathtaking!

    • @jax9349
      @jax9349 2 года назад +3

      Thank you for beautifully expressing what Dr John does 😊

    • @williamtyndale1402
      @williamtyndale1402 2 года назад

      Interesting monologue from Neil Oliver from GBnews on what governments attitude to education. ruclips.net/video/v9MTEQuj7zI/видео.html

    • @gabegrace8333
      @gabegrace8333 2 года назад +4

      A hypothesis NOT proven
      ...discussion contains words..
      . likely.....pretty correlation?...we don't know.,
      What a joke

    • @williamtyndale1402
      @williamtyndale1402 2 года назад +3

      A hypothesis not proven but worthy of debate. .perhaps. Another hypothesis which is currently taboo and censored is that African and the Indian subcontinent populous regularly take antivirals.

    • @markshanahan8147
      @markshanahan8147 2 года назад +1

      @@gabegrace8333 Ya I Fake N G

  • @mermeridian2041
    @mermeridian2041 2 года назад +12

    "Genetics" fascinates me, has for a long while. Loved researching and back-tracing back my haplogroup (and re-re-re-retracing as newer information pops up...). Very interesting, would like to hear more!

  • @melsvids73
    @melsvids73 2 года назад +2

    You learn something new watching Dr J every time a new vid comes on! I swear I wished Dr J's youtube was around in 1999 I would probably did better and be more interested in my biology and autonomy courses in university Thanks again Dr J!

  • @marymacdonald8277
    @marymacdonald8277 2 года назад

    I must have missed this on the upload date so glad I watched it today. I learned so many new facts. Thank you Dr. Campbell

  • @wandad4017
    @wandad4017 2 года назад +37

    You are on your way to becoming a RUclips legend Dr John !

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 2 года назад

      He's a you tube villian.
      Someone needs to figure out how many people have died because of his vaccine hesitancy he preaches.
      We can expect 100m covid cases by winter, and with a death rate of 0.5% you get 500k deaths.

  • @annhamer2734
    @annhamer2734 2 года назад +5

    I cannot express how grateful I am for your taking the time to teach us and to share with us your immense knowledge with your incredible talent to explain things! Thank you so very much!

  • @PeggyKayeDoeschot
    @PeggyKayeDoeschot Год назад +6

    Our family is 100percent Dutch . Our family had 7 Immediate family members hospitalized for Covid. One was a male 50 years old perfect health he died from Covid. One was the 30 year old good health physically fit had to have a double lung transplant because of Covid. We all had A or A positive blood of the ones who were hospitalized. Everyone always said there must’ve been something in our genetics that Cause our family members to get so sick.
    I find this very interesting.

    • @debrab9179
      @debrab9179 Год назад

      I’m half danish ( grandfather came to USA from Denmark when he was a young man) and type A blood, Iv not yet had covid and I’m 65 and unvaccinated. I do have CCR5 Delta mutation but it shouldn’t prevent me from getting covid .Iv had antibody test 2020, 2021, 2022 and zero antibodies.

  • @nunoesteves1358
    @nunoesteves1358 2 года назад +2

    Amazing as usual. Thank you for your efforts to bring light into these issues.

  • @aeridyne
    @aeridyne 2 года назад +5

    I look forward to your videos daily now for some time. Lots of fascinating stuff, this was really interesting. Thanks for your work and contributions to humanity.

  • @ronrg9518
    @ronrg9518 2 года назад +17

    Dr John what a pleasure to learn from you , thank you for your research and videos

  • @billroy7860
    @billroy7860 2 года назад +15

    Dr. John Campbell - Can I just say 'Thank You'. The service you provide to both professionals in the medical world and non-medical world (which I am part of) is outstanding.

  • @devimenon5337
    @devimenon5337 2 года назад +4

    You are absolutely a very caring and brilliant Dr Thank you for sharing all this wonderful information with us God bless you

  • @Go.suck_a_duck
    @Go.suck_a_duck 2 года назад +156

    Dr John we waiting with baited breath to hear your take on the Pfizer docs released this week , from your reaction from the last Pfizer release showing there’s 9 pages of adverse reactions to look out for, this should be an even better read 🍿

    • @hedwigwendell-crumb91
      @hedwigwendell-crumb91 2 года назад +8

      Do you know where we can access these?

    • @MaxStArlyn
      @MaxStArlyn 2 года назад

      This sounds like excuses. I saw someone in another video he made, responding to him when he was trying to condemn China, and his comment was something like this., “Mainland China, total population 1.45 Billion, Active Cases 1,872 Source Worldometers June 3 Taiwan, total population 23 Million, Active Cases 1,574,750 Source Worldometers June 3”. So please don’t make excuses. Taiwan and mainland china, are made up of the SAME people.

    • @davehughes4042
      @davehughes4042 2 года назад +27

      Yes especially about all the babies that died and miscarriages

    • @gammakap
      @gammakap 2 года назад +1

      Somebody’s been using Brand X…

    • @MaxStArlyn
      @MaxStArlyn 2 года назад

      China, Russia, India, Japan,. and Countries in Africa, used other drugs. We were forced to ONLY use the western poisonous glοβαlιςτ Vaχ. China, Russia, and India, don’t have the crazy side effects we do. Japan and nations in Africa, used I’verMectin.

  • @nancylavigne3171
    @nancylavigne3171 2 года назад +64

    Thank you, Dr. John, you have just confirmed my suspicions that genetics is playing a huge roll in who is getting ill, and those getting very ill.

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj 2 года назад

      T'was ever thus. Add in gut biome, skin biome, and diet. Genes are basis for my massive heart attack despite being very fit by usual measures but fitness delayed it, helped survive the event, helped recovery afterwards. Many tubby couch potatoes I know have no heart attack vulnerability according to tests. Jealous? No, I don't like the couch and I do wind in hair as cycle or run

    • @megsarna7429
      @megsarna7429 2 года назад

      Genetics yes but this theory is just speculation

    • @ThePantygun
      @ThePantygun 2 года назад

      @@megsarna7429 The said genetics - neanderthal, or "neandertal" - is the same genetics featuring the "underlying issues" that lead to a vaccine based immunization preference.

    • @ChrisLJM8760
      @ChrisLJM8760 2 года назад

      @Will R Thomson What is the obvious one?

  • @b.c.sattler2667
    @b.c.sattler2667 2 года назад +1

    Thank you, Dr. John. That was totally fascinating. Expanded my mind's knowledge. Please continue doing so. Brilliant.

  • @jedilegoarts9882
    @jedilegoarts9882 2 года назад +6

    I have autoimmune disease. My ancestors survived the Eyam plague in Derbyshire. They have discovered that this may be due to a gene mutation, which they have linked to an ability to avoid HIV infection too. There was some suggestion of Neanderthal links to this. But sadly it is also linked to developing some hideous autoimmune disease. As a secondary school teacher I have been surrounded by people coming down with covid, have been tested two times a week throughout and have not had it once. I am fascinated by the gene links.

    • @dayamitrasaraswati6276
      @dayamitrasaraswati6276 Год назад

      I had only one Pfizer vaccine and had an attack of angio-edema (swelling). I have the same reaction to flu vaccines. I cannot have more COVID vaccines because I enjoy breathing (haha).
      I was at my first (and last) meeting one day and someone tested positive to COVID that afternoon. I'd been sitting right opposite this lady! Two more people tested positive two days later. I was completely unvaccinated at the time yet never got COVID. I wish I knew if there was some natural immunity for me as I've never had the flu, despite not being able to have the vaccines.
      Still, cannot take chances as my husband has two auto-immune diseases and chronic arthritis and a hiatus hernia.

  • @sittinandwatchinit2
    @sittinandwatchinit2 2 года назад +39

    Thanks for your work Dr Campbell!!!

  • @edgarmuller6652
    @edgarmuller6652 2 года назад +29

    It explains why in Africa there’s is a relative low Covid death rate even with low vaccination rates. Thanks

    • @davehughes4042
      @davehughes4042 2 года назад +3

      That's why ! More vacanated sick than un vaxed .

    • @AlexHillsCandles4Assange
      @AlexHillsCandles4Assange 2 года назад +8

      I think you will find a stronger link between legacy media watching habits and covid fear (deaths)

    • @MaxStArlyn
      @MaxStArlyn 2 года назад

      This sounds like excuses. I saw someone in another video he made, responding to him when he was trying to condemn China, and his comment was something like this., “Mainland China, total population 1.45 Billion, Active Cases 1,872 Source Worldometers June 3 Taiwan, total population 23 Million, Active Cases 1,574,750 Source Worldometers June 3”. So please don’t make excuses. Taiwan and mainland china, are made up of the SAME people.

    • @scythianking7315
      @scythianking7315 2 года назад

      No, it doesn't. Africa also has more Lions. Maybe Covid spread based on how many lions are in the region --_____--.
      Correlation does not equal causation. There are much more likely reasons for their low rates.
      Also, that map of the genes he showed makes no sense, the highest Neanderthal genes deep into SouthEast Asia? That makes no sense for anyone who has studied Anthropology. Neanderthals are from Central EUROPE. The interbreeding occurred in that region as well. Why is the map showing these Genes as being the most high halfway across the planet from where the Neanderthals were?

    • @jackd1582
      @jackd1582 2 года назад

      ( compared to say India at least ) Less so with usa , UK, Europe

  • @costrow3100
    @costrow3100 2 года назад +7

    Very interesting. We need more research like this. It’s amazing we can research remains from someone who died over 14,000++ years ago and compare death rates for Covid. Remarkable really. Thanks for the info.

    • @heide-raquelfuss5580
      @heide-raquelfuss5580 2 года назад

      How more research, how more they can damage us. Every knowledge will be misused to have power and control over humans, plants, space, the oceans and all animals.

  • @Guide504
    @Guide504 2 года назад

    Really fascinating John one of your best if not the most overtly salacious, many thanks for all the time putting it together.

  • @kathykimball5415
    @kathykimball5415 2 года назад +6

    I was just listening to lectures UC San Diego last night! This topic is incredibly interesting. Thank you for your presentation! 👏

  • @kathcoles9108
    @kathcoles9108 2 года назад +9

    This is absolutely fascinating. Still bringing us up to date knowledge. Thank you.

  • @jenwendy7
    @jenwendy7 2 года назад +5

    This is fantastic Dr. C! Absolutely love this type of information ❤

  • @datgrrl5698
    @datgrrl5698 2 года назад +15

    This is gobsmackingly brilliant... great work as always Doctor Campbell... cheers for your time and energy and wisdom...be safe sir

  • @susanangelo7737
    @susanangelo7737 2 года назад +16

    I have been waiting for genetic info relating to covid. Thanks for this video. I found it fascinating.

  • @michaelbass5966
    @michaelbass5966 2 года назад +10

    I find this very, very interesting and an "update" to my understanding as to this Covid-19 and other virus's too, so many thanks indeed for your investigation and further study on this and I also follow your updates.

  • @fuddyduddyhorsemanship
    @fuddyduddyhorsemanship Год назад +8

    There are quite a few people who say here that they think the've had covid at the end of 2019. I have to include myself in this group. Apart from having the mother of all coughs that at one stage caused me to vomit, which did my back in as well, I also lost my sense of smell and taste. I was slowly getting it back over the next few months but I think I got covid again in the second half of March 2020 just before the first lockdown in the UK. My sense of taste and smell left me again and until now has never recovered to pre-loss levels. Since then I have met a number of people in the UK, two of them who had been in Asia in December, who also are convinced that they had covid at the end of 2019...

    • @rn4l62
      @rn4l62 Год назад

      Yes, this! I too fell very ill at the holidays, end of 2019, specifically christmas, through the first weeks of January. Doctor could not pinpoint the ailment, but because my primary symptoms were respiratory and i have asthma, he prescribed Prednisone and a strong antibiotic. Gradually became better, but the cough persisted well into February

    • @willtricks9432
      @willtricks9432 Год назад +1

      Me and my better half had a severe virus in 2014, total lose of smell and taste for 3 weeks, could not breath well at all, congested lungs and air ways. beyond anything before. Real body aches and savage headache for days. Also had a uncomfortable mental feeling.
      Locked the door and kept everyone away. had shopping dropped off.
      When I finally did walk 100m to shop and back I had to lie down for an hour panting and sweating.
      Nobody else caught it but when we got the virus in 2021 it was the same but milder

  • @annasusanti7621
    @annasusanti7621 2 года назад +4

    Most people only got a little sick after their j@ b5, but a lot people got 1njur3d or even k1ll3d aft3r getting their j@b5 (I'm talking about young healthy people, not those old people with comorbidities).

  • @MrBobbyCrane
    @MrBobbyCrane 2 года назад +3

    Truly fascinating and so logical when explained in simple terms. It will be interesting to see what further info comes from this research that may come. Thank you Dr Campbell.

  • @oldervermonter7396
    @oldervermonter7396 2 года назад +118

    My wife says that most women today are sure they are living with a Neanderthal.
    PS - Thank you for your work.

    • @freesk8
      @freesk8 2 года назад +9

      I've always thought that there was more Neanderthal DNA in males than in females! :)

    • @pearljohnson4365
      @pearljohnson4365 2 года назад +1

      ☺️

    • @flxmkr
      @flxmkr 2 года назад +1

      Naw, we just like saying the word, "Neanderthal". A four-syllable put-down makes us sound smart...especially when it follows something like harnessing a hamster to a drone. 😁

    • @jennifs6868
      @jennifs6868 2 года назад +1

      @@freesk8 i think it's actually the other way around: neanderthals were the smarter gentler ones, and the humans more like the hyena packs.

    • @Anastashya
      @Anastashya 2 года назад

      She’s right 😂

  • @geoffreywitte3784
    @geoffreywitte3784 2 года назад

    Thank you Dr. Campbell; to be able to makes such clear observations about a subject so intensely complex is a great achievement, not to mention your enthusiasm is infectious. ..please forgive the pun.

  • @ronaldkaipio8324
    @ronaldkaipio8324 2 года назад +1

    I have been a critic throughout this pandemic but you always bring good data to discuss

  • @Aussie_Sue
    @Aussie_Sue 2 года назад +14

    This is absolutely fascinating.
    The academic outcomes from the pandemic can only push our understanding of humans forward. After all, there has been so much material gathered over the last two years that can be worked with.
    Again, thank you John for educating me and increasing my awareness of this world we live in.

  • @robcarson6127
    @robcarson6127 2 года назад +3

    I watch a lot of your stuff and they're all great but this one was really fascinating.

  • @reggiegorney6486
    @reggiegorney6486 2 года назад

    so imprest by your research have watched you for some time and will continuwb to watch your you tubbe info tanks so much for educating us daily

  • @LDeeWalker
    @LDeeWalker 2 года назад +3

    Too bad you weren't my teacher growing up. I would've learned a lot more then. Wow! Thank you for breaking that down for us. I got COVID one time and I had mild symptoms. Unjabbed and I WON'T get it because I don't need it. My immunity system is topnotch and now ... this explains a LOT! Thank you much!

    • @shauncarney8504
      @shauncarney8504 2 года назад

      I had all 3 COVID JABS AND STILL GOT COVID SYMPTOMS AT CHRISTMAS IT'S MAD HOW IT EFFECTS PEOPLE

    • @LDeeWalker
      @LDeeWalker 2 года назад

      @Shaun Carney Ouch. I'm sorry to hear that. I refuse to get them because they do not have any long-term effects information about it - because they are still looking into it. I don't trust it. I don't like what I have researched about it. Not getting it now or never. People who have had the "vaccinations" have had it multiple times. I have yet to be sick again.

  • @vincentnonnenmacher9352
    @vincentnonnenmacher9352 2 года назад +4

    Fascinating is an understatement !
    Thanks a lot professeur for your presentation, you’re such a nice teacher and human being :-)

  • @holaramirez
    @holaramirez 2 года назад +7

    Thank you for taking time to research such interesting topic. We truly appreciate it.

  • @gustigould8365
    @gustigould8365 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating. Thank you, Dr. Campbell.. You're such an excellent teacher.

  • @mgk284
    @mgk284 2 года назад +1

    It is a long video but very engaging and interesting. I hope we will find out in time more about why some people ( not all) have a worse clinical outcome.

  • @gailbreslin5441
    @gailbreslin5441 2 года назад +12

    Fascinating information Dr. John. Thank You!👍💖

  • @ritcha02
    @ritcha02 2 года назад +32

    I’ve had a laypersons hunch for a while that there would turn out to be a genetic component to this just from observing in my own life the tendency for families to get Covid repeatedly or not at all. I’ve not had it and neither has my husband although our 10 year old tested positive a couple of times but no symptoms. We know people who’ve had it several times despite vaccination.

    • @phillipmaddern6452
      @phillipmaddern6452 2 года назад

      Vaccines do next to nothing lol

    • @rhondanighman
      @rhondanighman 2 года назад

      Vaccinations do nothing in stopping someone from catching Covid or the Flu .. it’s main purpose is to lessen the severity if you do get either one

    • @phillipmaddern6452
      @phillipmaddern6452 2 года назад +1

      @@rhondanighman don't even do that lol. Really useful stuff.

    • @lucylu530
      @lucylu530 2 года назад +1

      Agree, one of brother's entire family got covid over a year ago but he hasn't so far. This may explain it.

  • @katemcbride8715
    @katemcbride8715 2 года назад +3

    Really interesting. I remember from watching online conferences during the early covid 19 race to understand the virus, when the aspect of viral load effect came to the fore. I would love to know what viral load and this gene sequence have to do with each other

  • @kathleenann631
    @kathleenann631 2 года назад

    Thks for all ur research work and clear, easy-to-understand presentations since the start of the pandemic. U, kind sir, are incredible!!!!!

  • @eric2500
    @eric2500 2 года назад +90

    This is amazing and reminds me of the slight resistance to HIV Aids found in Europeans (and their diaspora) which seemed to be a result of the gene found in survivors of the waves of Black Plague in the Middle Ages, which killed about 1/3 of the population of the time, maybe more in some places.

    • @gulaggreens296
      @gulaggreens296 2 года назад

      That's because a virus caused the Black Death, one that reduces immunity to things like bubonic plague, one with HIV genetics....
      Kinda like SARS-CoV2....
      Hmmmm....

    • @dennispickard7743
      @dennispickard7743 2 года назад

      I think you may be wrong ruclips.net/video/zf5SNIxAY1o/видео.html

    • @patthewoodboy
      @patthewoodboy 2 года назад +1

      Eric , I have been told that by a guy I know who worked with HIV positive people.

    • @jeanthompson9873
      @jeanthompson9873 2 года назад +7

      I remember a TV programme about the Derbyshire village of Eyam.The descendents of the plague were less susceptible to HIV?

    • @blickiemcsplashu6485
      @blickiemcsplashu6485 2 года назад

      Thats a lie that was taught to u!!! The BLACK PLAGUE didnt come from rodents...The BLACK PLAGUE came from NEANDERTHALS from Europe not knowing how to bathe and LEPERS started to spread!!!

  • @goldenphoenixpublish
    @goldenphoenixpublish 2 года назад +33

    Deeper question: Does this particular Neanderthal gene influence proteins on the cell wall (where the spike protein attaches) or does it have more to do with mRNA propagation within the cell or ribosome replication? (I guess you could get a second doctorate pursuing the above question...)

    • @altergreenhorn6455
      @altergreenhorn6455 2 года назад +3

      In the last 5 years Neanderthal genome become quite unpopular, because Neanderthal genome can endanger politically correctness (we are all the same) because this genome is present in all human species apart for black afrcans, thats why it was smeared and downplayed in every possible way, namely someone could calculate 1+1 and said something very unpopular like why are white Euro/Asia peoples since a long time more advanced that Africans? Could it be because of the difference in DNA?
      Back to the case somebody forgot that africa have the youngest population in the world also africa have a lot of sun(vitaminD) last but not the least Africa statistic is a joke.
      BTW
      how come that afro americans suffer the most in the US because of the virus?

    • @touriel8943
      @touriel8943 2 года назад

      It puzzles me that if we are suppossed to come from apes in Africa (and chimps are A ad gorillas B) why are Africans group O?!

    • @touriel8943
      @touriel8943 2 года назад +2

      @@sw3783 I remember seeing a speech by a Chinese official, calling tailored gene bio warfare 'more civilised', but I can't find it now.

    • @ergker2243
      @ergker2243 2 года назад

      👍

    • @Dez083
      @Dez083 2 года назад

      @@sw3783 well of it was they didnt do a very good job at it

  • @InAHandBasket
    @InAHandBasket Год назад +2

    Really interesting! Thank you, Dr. Campbell. Great content as always!

  • @Loom-works
    @Loom-works 2 года назад +2

    Amazing! Thank you for doing this work and confirming my suspension.
    1 million points to Dr. John Campbell

  • @marikotrue3488
    @marikotrue3488 2 года назад +62

    According to a DNA site, my genetic structure contains 2% Neanderthal genes. Not the exotic mix I was hoping for when I entered the system! Interestingly full-blooded Neanderthal were typically stockier than early modern humans with a larger lung capacity along with a probable need for more oxygen. Not sure about Omicron variant, but the Delta variant seemed to target the lungs in the later portion/more deadly period of the infection.

    • @timmothyburke
      @timmothyburke 2 года назад +6

      I had an x-ray done of my lungs once and the x-ray people were like oh my God I never seen lungs like this ever seen lungs like that. Also I have an extra sinus cavity which apparently is extremely rare. Could talk about other body parts but it might be an appropriate. These days you know you could just get banned from RUclips by saying a comment that is considered inappropriate.

    • @general_alexus2533
      @general_alexus2533 2 года назад

      You know that thouse DNA sites that "totally protect your data" are in fact selling it to china for them to be able to do research. If I want to be dark, this research could help develope B-weapons targeting specific groups, just like Europeans with neanderthal genes are now targeted by Covid, what comes froma chinese lab. Oh wait....

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj 2 года назад +3

      Might be interesting to look at DNA of extreme endurance athletes who have massive lungs and cardiovascular capacity, eg Pogacar, the cyclist

    • @karenvickery6070
      @karenvickery6070 2 года назад +10

      @@timmothyburke my youngest son who is 29 had a chest X-ray a few years ago and the drs said the same thing, they have never seen lungs so long before, they were passing his X-rays around to all the drs as it was the most unusual thing they had ever seen, one dr said they looked similar to a particular disease I can’t remember what it was called, but my son didn’t have that disease so they had no idea why his lungs were so long. And he got the delta variant of covid and he did really well with it. He is also asthmatic and yet still was fine when he had delta.

    • @gabsy6443
      @gabsy6443 2 года назад

      @@timmothyburke is it good or bad?😉

  • @searose6192
    @searose6192 2 года назад +11

    Omg!!! I hypothesized this to my mom and husband back in 2020 when we found out that blood type and continental differences had an effect of severity. Wow....that was a good hunch I had. Patting myself on the back for that one. I'll be grinning all day.

    • @searose6192
      @searose6192 2 года назад

      @@selcuk1479Well at the time they showed people with A and to a lesser extent AB faired worst while those with O did best.

  • @neilhobson3624
    @neilhobson3624 2 года назад +2

    Just tested negative on Tuesday 21st of June. I never thought I’d ever catch it which is an utterly stupid thing to say. It’s not a very nice thing to catch and my heart goes out to those poor souls who didn’t make it and to those who have been really ill with it.
    All through the pandemic I was pretty careful and then all of a sudden I got complacent and caught the bloody thing.
    It’s still knocking about 👍🇬🇧.

  • @josiepkat
    @josiepkat 2 года назад +5

    My infection was brutal - although NO issues breathing, no lung damage. But I have autoimmune and it hurt like crazy to touch my skin, I got a high fever which I haven't had in 30 years. I had one very bad illness with a fever when I was young and never seemed to get a fever again until c19. I assumed C19 hit me hard due to inflammation from autoimmune. My husband has NEVER got it that we know of. Tested for antibodies last summer and if he had it he cleared it fast. I had it in March 2020 when the weather was cold and all the windows were shut in a 200 square foot apartment. I was sick for 3 weeks so it's incredible he did not get it. He also worked in NYC during this time and that we know of he never got it.

    • @anatomicallymodernhuman5175
      @anatomicallymodernhuman5175 2 года назад +1

      Similar experience here. My wife, who has hashimotos, got very sick with it, almost took her to the ER. I never even tested positive despite sleeping in the same bed the whole time she was sick. That was a very early variant, before “lockdown” started, though. Neither of us got Delta. We both got very light cases of Omicron this year. 2-3 days of fatigue and headache, and it was over. That by itself shows me that Omicron should be considered a different virus.

  • @tonyk438
    @tonyk438 2 года назад +40

    I watched a Nova show, I think, that showed a gene sequence that protected against the black death that made it impossible to get AIDS. The role of genetics is so understudied.

    • @carlenekingery2246
      @carlenekingery2246 2 года назад +2

      I saw the same show! It was FASCINATING… I wish I could watch it again but don’t remember the title. It was probably put out by the History channel, or the Science channel.

    • @gulaggreens296
      @gulaggreens296 2 года назад

      SARS-CoV2 could be black death, reduces immunity (AIDS) leading to prevalence of bubonic plague.

    • @jenhaganey
      @jenhaganey 2 года назад +7

      @@carlenekingery2246 not the show itself but an article about the science the show was based on in ScienceDaily is entitled "Biologists Discover Why 10 Percent Of Europeans Are Safe From HIV Infection" from 2005 ...another from PUBMed is "The Black Death and AIDS: CCR5-Delta32 in genetics and history"

    • @SatumainenOlento
      @SatumainenOlento 2 года назад

      @@jenhaganey Thank you so much!

    • @stage6fan475
      @stage6fan475 2 года назад +1

      It was a PBS Secrets of the Dead show from around 2002. The title was Mystery of the Black Death. I searched around a found an upload on a competing video platform. Watched it-still fascinating.

  • @debbeborders5762
    @debbeborders5762 2 года назад +11

    This is fascinating information. Thank you for sharing this John.

  • @claudiathorgood8656
    @claudiathorgood8656 2 года назад

    Just my cup of tea. Real research that incidentally explains some of what has gone on with covid19 varying degree of severity. Thank you John Campbell!!!

  • @alisonsueadams3710
    @alisonsueadams3710 2 года назад +1

    thank you for such a great presentation on a complex subject! Fascinating.

  • @SomeOne-mp6ym
    @SomeOne-mp6ym 2 года назад +11

    So interesting! Important information. Makes one wonder about what we will learn over time!

  • @shannonnonnahs6943
    @shannonnonnahs6943 2 года назад +3

    Your so full of Wisdom and knowledge. Thank you for sharing it with us all.

  • @helencollier5317
    @helencollier5317 2 года назад +1

    You give such a remarkable presentation. I always learn something. Thank you!

  • @tomhahnl1927
    @tomhahnl1927 2 года назад +3

    Another great Video, thank you. Could you maybe make one about Blood-Types, is there anything to it?

  • @lahabitacioncompartida830
    @lahabitacioncompartida830 2 года назад +6

    Simply fascinating! EACH life matters. Thank you so much Dr. Campbell!!

  • @Level11561
    @Level11561 2 года назад +5

    Thank you Dr. John! I always find your videos fascinating but this one has really stolen my imagination!!

  • @gail9982
    @gail9982 2 года назад

    Brilliant! …as the esteemed Dr. John Campbell would say. I wish I had found you before I retired my career in epidemiology in a USA city! You are smart and have cojones as we’d say in Spanglish slang.

  • @DarklightTarot
    @DarklightTarot 2 года назад

    Absolutely fascinating video. I have always been interested in this topic and how we have become the species we are today. My biggest interested is different species of human in different part of the world. I thoroughly enoyed this video. I'd love more on this topic. Thankyou.

  • @carolerosario1201
    @carolerosario1201 2 года назад +7

    I always feel more smart after listening to Dr. John’s reports. Thank you sir!

    • @martinswillaim3146
      @martinswillaim3146 2 года назад

      Hello Carole how are you today ✋?

    • @crazyratlady3438
      @crazyratlady3438 2 года назад

      "smarter"..not more smart. Not trying to be that person but in this case it seems appropriate.

  • @eric2500
    @eric2500 2 года назад +15

    Despite the grim evidence and the topic of this risk factor, I am enjoying this for what light it casts on the early migrations of human and human like people around the earth.

  • @2Goiz_1ShanDA
    @2Goiz_1ShanDA Год назад

    Fantastic works just to make sure the implications here are absolutely astounding terrifying great job

  • @graceyloufreebush3747
    @graceyloufreebush3747 2 года назад +7

    I wonder why getting genetic testing isn't a common procedure for everyone. So many things could be prevented and understood about ourselves and others. Appreciate the vid, good stuff as always!

    • @mishaanton5436
      @mishaanton5436 2 года назад +4

      Because 1) You don't own the information
      2) You do not and are not privy to how that information is used. I.e. insurance or science research.

    • @peggychurchill5518
      @peggychurchill5518 2 года назад +3

      SUSPECT SOME WOULD USE IT TO DISCRIMINATE FOR INSURANCE , HEALTHCARE AND JOB OPPORTUNITIES?

    • @lynet1998
      @lynet1998 2 года назад +1

      And perhaps target a drug at a specific group of people

    • @cindy2418
      @cindy2418 Год назад

      I bet they have been collecting gene information with covid testing. Why go so deep in your nostril almost reaching your brain.

  • @mandyjane1234
    @mandyjane1234 2 года назад +17

    WOW, thank you so much, I have bored my daughter rigid with my interest in the Neanderthal gene. I had never thought there might be a health consideration.

  • @scottnewman9241
    @scottnewman9241 2 года назад +9

    Dr. Cambell, You are such a great communicator! I have forwarded links to friends that have "different" beliefs, and it has been helpful. You mention higher death rates in the US and that they might be attributed to other risk factors...but I wonder how much is due to not encouraging early treatments.
    Suggested Future Topics:
    1) Compare outcomes in countries or areas utilizing early treatments versus here in the US, where many were told to "go home and come back if your lips turn blue"? I don't know if the data is available...of course, if would have to be presented in such a way as to not be censored.
    2) Treatment type vs outcomes for common treatments, such as remdesivir, monoclonal antibodies, Paxlovid, Iverm...., viltamin D, zinc, or others. Thanks, Scott

    • @percheroneclipse238
      @percheroneclipse238 2 года назад +1

      Largest reason for bankruptcy in the US are medical bills. Even if one has insurance, there is no guarantee of coverage. This is a shame. Health issues are ignored because of overwhelming cost.

    • @sharronbennett8990
      @sharronbennett8990 2 года назад +1

      Retired from nursing in early 2019. It made me so angry to hear the medical professionals advice to stay home unless you start having trouble breathing. Absolute insanity IMO! So many might have been saved.

    • @tjmarie6554
      @tjmarie6554 Год назад

      @@sharronbennett8990 k

    • @tjmarie6554
      @tjmarie6554 Год назад

      Sorry - that response was an error

  • @jo-nathan.thomas
    @jo-nathan.thomas Год назад +2

    Brave and bold exploration and sharing. Explains a lot about why we didn’t see many native Africans get sick or die throughout the pandemic ❤️🖤💚

    • @amb3385
      @amb3385 Год назад +1

      The same goes for African Americans...i don't know the statistics on it, but I've known more white Americans to die from it than black Americans

    • @jo-nathan.thomas
      @jo-nathan.thomas Год назад +1

      @@amb3385 That was my eye-test as well 👍🏽

    • @dplj4428
      @dplj4428 Год назад +1

      In some countries the reporting was lacking for political reasons, lack of infrastructure or war. Ever wonder how the civil and religious conflicts interfered with healthcare? Plus distrust of help from 😅WHO, NGO, etc? And also Russia and China are lending and certainly discourage any reports.
      Lots of people got sick in 2020 but back then your average doctor didn’t know what the heck was going on.
      As for African Americans, they have big trust issues from a history of being used as Guinea pigs. Don’t trust people who might or not consider them fellow human beings.
      What happened to all the sick people in the meat packing companies? I don’t know. But at the time, most were new immigrant, others were poor blacks, whites, Latinos, etc.
      In fact if you got sick, the hospitals didn’t want you to show up at the hospital. Naturally, people were extremely ill when they did come to emergency.
      February March 2020, the USA capital and several nearby cities hosted political events that proved later to be superspreaders. It was scary.

  • @kathleengainor8532
    @kathleengainor8532 2 года назад

    Thank you for how intellectually truthful. I feel so joyful listening to someone speaking truthfully and with understanding!! I always thought the degree of Covid-19 severity was related to genes because what else could if be when all other things being equal? How can we get our genes checked? I want to know if I have any translocations. Maybe I can intercept risk and the next time someone calls me a Neanderthal I can say, Well I am related."