Monday, March 22, 2021

Shincheonji Love, How Plasma Donation?

Difference between Corona Vaccine and corona therapy


I start posting with thanks for the love of Daegu Shincheonji people.

Where and how is plasma donation used?




Wow, despite the fact that there are various aftereffects after plasma donation, there is also a Shincheonji saint who has donated plasma seven times?

That's a wonderful thing.

I want to post a news article to cheer up those who donated plasma today.

First, we distinguish the clear meaning of vaccines and treatments and post an article about plasma donation.


𐌠. Vaccines 

  1. Dictionary meaning: To activate the immune system by artificially injecting a pathogen into the human body before infection. The purpose is to prevent or minimize infection damage. (≒ a flu shot, etc. vaccination, etc.)
  2. Corona 19 vaccine: Prepare in advance to prevent corona (prevent soon)


𐀚. Therapy 

  1. Dictionary meaning: The goal is to neutralize the antigen of the virus by injecting antibody protein directly. 
  2. Covid-19 Therapy: A drug that is concentrated and purified at a high concentration after extracting plasma from patients who have recovered from Covid-19 and finding ingredients that can produce treatment effects. It's for treatment when you get corona. The plasma of the complete healer becomes the raw material for the development of the hematologic agent. (Treatment purpose)


※ Plasma donor: Helps develop blood system medications and study mutation viruses.



In Midst of Government Charges, 4000 Shincheonji Church Members Agree to Donate Plasma for Coronavirus

Source: https://prn.to/38sBQs0

"The separation of church and state" is a commonly thrown-around phrase that every educated American is almost certainly familiar with. This revolutionary idea has been intricately woven into the fabric of the government of the United States of America, and subsequently the democracies that the U.S. has influenced and helped establish. These effects are perhaps seen more strongly in none other than America's "little brother," South Korea. How is the doctrine of the "separation of church and state" faring in that country? Thepersecuted.org attempts to answer this question in its latest analysis, Church, and State: The Changing Landscape of Religion in South Korea.


Recently during the Coronavirus pandemic, a super-spreader event in February at Shincheonji Church's Daegu branch resulted in the infection of over 4,000 members as well as several deaths. Just this month, the vast majority of those individuals agreed to collaborate with the hospitals and government to donate their blood plasma for the Coronavirus relief effort. This Coronavirus-resistant blood donation is valued at over $8 billion dollars and will potentially result in many saved lives. This is an excellent example of the role religion can play for its society and government.


In the midst of this, the Korean government pressed charges against Shincheonji church. The church and its leaders were indicted on account of an inability to quickly produce a full and correct membership contact list of its 200,000 members worldwide for contract tracing. Several leaders were detained in prison and prosecuted for charges of "murder through willful negligence." and the church's license was also removed.

Read more in our feature on thepersecuted.org.


Plasma for those who have recovered from Shincheonji is being developed by GC Green Cross as a blood-based drug. On November 6 last year, a 78-year-old seriously confirmed patient who was being hospitalized at Chilgok Kyungbuk National University Hospital was tested negative for improvement after the administration of blood treatment. Since then, the effectiveness of blood treatment has been demonstrated in a number of severe patients.

"Only when a lot of plasma is secured can it serve as a kind of raw material for developing a blood-borne medication by collecting effective antibodies based on the Covid-19 completely cured plasma." - July 13, 2020 Central Quarantine Countermeasures Headquarters

 

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