VIDEO engl. (31 min) Dr. Campbell: Unsere Medien entdecken Vitamin D

  • Dr. Campbell hat über 600 000 Youtube Abonnenten. Dieses Video hatte innerhalb eines Tages  über 130 000 Zuschauer gehabt.

  • Sein begleitender Text: "Eine erschreckende Grafik zeigt, wie Covid-19-Patienten, die im Krankenhaus landen, mit ziemlicher Sicherheit sterben werden, wenn sie einen Vitamin-D-Mangel haben"

  • Als unabhängige Stimme aus Großbritannien bestätigt der Kollege Campbell unsere Position: "Vitamin D als Schutz vor Covid-19"

  • Er stellt Studien als Beweis für die Wirkungsweise von Vitamin D vor.

Mehr dazu:

www.VitaminDZeitung.de  Wissenschaftliche Beiträge.
www.virus-video.de    Das Video, in dem im Februar der Nutzen des Vitamin D schon vorhergesagt wurde.
Corona-Mediathek Unsere Video-Sammlung zum Coronavirus.






Capmbell

welcome to this video today I want to
00:03
think about the recent attention that
00:06
vitamin D has been getting because I
00:09
think that's a really good thing because
00:11
the combination of vitamin D and
00:13
dexamethasone correctly used I believe
00:16
has got the potential to save a lot of
00:19
lives and I want to focus on vitamin D
00:22
today but just before I do that I'm just
00:24
gonna say a couple of things about
00:25
dexamethasone lots of people have
00:28
written to me saying I knew
00:30
dexamethasone worked weeks ago or months
00:32
ago well the answer to that suggestion
00:37
is that you didn't know you didn't know
00:39
you guessed we only knew when we had the
00:43
trial data this is why we had to have
00:46
the trial data so quite a few people are
00:49
looking back and saying oh yeah well we
00:51
had it right all along yeah that's right
00:53
you did but you were guessing you only
00:56
know when you've got the trial data so
00:59
moving on to the vitamin D now the
01:00
reason I'm a bit optimistic has been
01:02
quite a lot of publicity lately so that
01:05
this is a from the Daily Mail and tarifa
01:08
it's not my style as you'll see
01:09
terrifying chart shows out covered 19
01:11
patients who end up in hospital maybe
01:13
almost certain to dive they're a vitamin
01:15
D deficiency now this is from a study in
01:17
Indonesia which I'm going to give you
01:19
the link again for but we did report on
01:21
this in great detail at the time quite
01:23
some time ago now good six weeks ago
01:26
more probably of Indian is in Indonesian
01:29
experts of analyzed hospital records of
01:31
780 people who tested positive now those
01:35
who were vitamin D deficient so those
01:38
were vitamin D deficiency this study
01:42
shows that ninety eight point nine
01:44
percent of those died but for the ones
01:47
that had plenty of vitamin D only four
01:49
point one percent died and I remember at
01:53
the time jumping up and down about this
01:55
saying how important this was and at the
01:58
time it was basically ignored but now it
02:00
seems to have been picked up by the
02:01
media which is good so we've got we've
02:03
got these figures here we've got 98.9%
02:06
dying in those that were deficient 4.1
02:09
percent dying in the group
02:10
that weren't deficient so that's pretty
02:13
interesting straight away isn't it
02:15
and this is now to be reviewed by scan
02:18
now scan is the UK government body
02:22
responsible for investigating these
02:24
things and it actually started looking
02:26
at this last month in May and it stands
02:30
for the SLO committee against nutrition
02:33
oh no sorry I've just made a mistake
02:36
it doesn't actually stand for the SLO
02:38
committee against nutrition slip of the
02:40
tongue it actually stands for the
02:42
Scientific Advisory Committee on
02:45
nutrition which advised the British
02:47
government and public health England to
02:50
apologize for that sarcasm but it just
02:52
it just beggars credulity that he only
02:54
started working on this last month
02:57
public health England NHS regulators
03:00
nice are doing a separate review so
03:03
we've got this Scientific Advisory
03:05
Committee on nutrition now looking at it
03:07
looking at vitamin D public health
03:09
England and looking at it and of course
03:11
this committee feeds into public health
03:13
England so they're looking at it and the
03:16
National Institute for clinical and Care
03:18
excellence is also looking into it
03:20
they're doing a separate review some
03:23
might say better late than never
03:25
now if you want to look back I mentioned
03:28
this first on the 28th of January and
03:32
then in great detail on the 9th of March
03:35
and a couple times since then now I put
03:39
this on this is not to me mouths off
03:41
saying I guessed it right because the
03:44
this the these statements I was making
03:45
on the 28th of January when guesses what
03:49
I did was I looked at the data now I'm
03:52
just one ordinary guy it just happens I
03:54
can read and I read the scientific
03:56
papers and I thought ah vitamin D viral
04:00
infections and had joined the two
04:02
together I mean how hard is that I'm not
04:04
particularly bright I just did it it was
04:06
easy you know and many many of you did
04:08
the same thing as well and yet the
04:10
government groups don't quite seem to
04:12
have got there so the government group
04:15
started work in May we fronted up in
04:20
January but this was just based on
04:22
things that were in the
04:23
basic just things from the basic public
04:27
domain scientific information that was
04:29
out there this is not this is not
04:31
anything mystical just basic reading
04:35
with a bit of common sense and as you
04:38
know since then our most days I've been
04:39
taking this and there's 25 micrograms of
04:43
vitamin D which is a thousand
04:46
international units now how much vitamin
04:49
do you take you need to talk about that
04:51
with your doctor I deal because it is a
04:52
bit complicated I might go into some of
04:54
the complications of why it's
04:57
complicated later on but I want to get
04:58
some basic information out first
04:59
although lately I've been I've been
05:01
working at the allotment in the Sun with
05:03
my shirt off which has been unpleasant
05:05
as I've said before but I haven't
05:07
bothered with this because I've been
05:08
getting plenty of Sun and it turns out
05:10
people in the states don't know what
05:12
allotments are so an allotment is a
05:13
small patch of ground that you rent off
05:15
the council then you grow food on it and
05:16
that's what the block mint is now this
05:19
Indonesian study that they're talking
05:20
about here this is the study here and do
05:25
check it out for yourself
05:27
patterns have covered 19 mortality and
05:30
vitamin D and Indonesian study so we
05:32
talked about this I think pretty well as
05:36
soon as it came out it was on it was on
05:38
the video as soon as it came out we
05:39
talked about this in some detail with
05:41
other evidence and what we did we also
05:43
compared this with other evidence that
05:44
that supported the case for the efficacy
05:47
of vitamin D and Prevention and you
05:49
might remember the graphics that Liz did
05:51
for us that I will show you again later
05:52
in this video as well that we did as a
05:54
consequence of this information and
05:57
vitamin D is a risk factor so this group
05:59
adjusted for confounders in other words
06:01
in this study they found what you would
06:03
expect they found that older people were
06:04
more likely to die they found that men
06:06
were more lighter died than women they
06:08
found that people with diabetes or
06:10
hypertension or heart failure or chronic
06:12
obstructive pulmonary disease were more
06:14
or dementia they found that those people
06:16
were more like it's diet we knew that
06:18
but they are justed for all that so that
06:20
was all adjusted for and when that was
06:23
interested for people with vitamin D
06:24
insufficiency
06:26
so people whose vitamin D was down a
06:27
little bit were of seven point six three
06:29
times more likely to die and people that
06:31
had the very low blow what levels of
06:33
vitamin D were
06:36
10.12 times more likely to die so I mean
06:40
this this date has been clear for some
06:41
time and the p-value there is high so
06:44
the probability well the p-value is low
06:46
that means the probability that this
06:47
result arose by chance is very low so
06:50
there's a 1 in 1,000 chance that this is
06:54
not a genuine resolve the peak or naught
06:56
point naught naught 1 so this highly
06:58
significant data and we emphasize this
07:00
at the time you know this is not newest
07:03
stuff but it's coming to press attention
07:07
now which is good vitamin D supplement
07:11
to prevent acute respite tract infection
07:13
this is just one example we talked about
07:15
this on the 15th of February we talked
07:18
about this so vitamin D supplement was
07:20
safe and it protected against acute was
07:22
prior to tract infection overall British
07:24
Medical Journal so the British Medical
07:26
Journal knew on the 15th of February I
07:29
knew on the 16th of February and this
07:31
committee seems to start its work in May
07:33
I don't know if it was early May or late
07:36
May but you know what were they doing
07:39
all this time it really is quite
07:40
incredible disparities and the risk and
07:44
outcomes of covered 19 now this was the
07:47
report that the government was all
07:49
singing and dancing about a couple of
07:50
weeks ago because we knew that's tragic
07:53
tragically as I've been flagging up for
07:56
some time as many of you have known for
07:57
some time
07:58
in fact I'll just show you the graphic
08:01
that's highly pertinent we've known that
08:05
people from black Asian and ethnic
08:07
minority groups in the UK are more
08:09
likely to die when infected with Kovac
08:14
19 so Liz kindly did this super graphic
08:18
for us weeks ago and it shows this that
08:22
the lighter colored skin is bad because
08:25
it burns more easily in the Sun but
08:28
produces vitamin D more quickly darker
08:31
colored skin is good because it protects
08:33
from sunburn but produces vitamin D at a
08:35
slower rate and for example we know that
08:38
African Americans are the vast majority
08:41
of them are deficient in vitamin D and
08:43
at the time I suggested this to be the
08:46
principal calls
08:48
the principal cause in my view of why
08:50
people from black and Asian ethnic
08:52
minority groups were dying at such a
08:55
disproportionate rate in the UK and so
08:58
the government commissioned this great
08:59
big thing on it and I ready all is
09:02
remarkably boring and they talk about
09:04
combina but they talk about economic
09:06
factors and sociological factors and
09:08
institutional factors no mention of it
09:10
some indie I mean it's just unbelievable
09:14
and yet lizzard provided this graphic no
09:18
no again this is this is not me and Liz
09:21
being particularly clever this is this
09:23
is well-established well-known stuff and
09:28
the government the UK government manages
09:31
to write a whole report and completely
09:36
ignore this basic obvious variable now
09:41
in the last few days The Guardian
09:43
newspaper now The Guardian does some
09:46
good information on health don't like it
09:49
for everything but it does good
09:50
information on health and and the garden
09:53
have published an exclusive now The
09:55
Guardian have said it's an exclusive so
09:57
it must be an exclusive the bottom the
10:00
fact we were talking about it in January
10:01
of course but the garden says an
10:03
exclusive so that's good enough for me
10:04
must be an exclusive Scientific Advisory
10:07
Committee on nutrition scam does that
10:11
not stand for slow Committee Against
10:13
Nutrition no The Guardian I've got it
10:15
right besides if ik Advisory Committee
10:17
on nutrition that I'll be right so they
10:19
began work last month May hooray hurrah
10:23
they've managed to start considering
10:26
recent evidence on our I apologize I'm
10:30
being and being a bit sarcastic and I
10:33
it's really not good enough I'm going to
10:34
stop it now but it really is difficult
10:38
to understand how the bin so obtuse
10:43
obtuse is the word the bin obtuse
10:49
considering recent developments of
10:51
vitamin D and acute respiratory tract
10:52
infection good like to see they're doing
10:55
it at last evidence will be considered
10:58
on specific population groups good as
11:01
per Liz's poster and that National
11:04
Institute for Health and Care excellence
11:05
are also working on this now this is
11:09
what the Guardians reported so that they
11:12
conducted a rapid are they're conducting
11:14
a rapid evidence review on vitamin D in
11:16
the context of Kovac nineteen so this is
11:19
the Guardian exclusively reporting
11:22
exclusively reporting that nicely doing
11:27
this rapid assessment and they also
11:30
quote professor of respiratory medicine
11:32
in immunity vitamin D could almost be
11:36
thought of as a designer drug for
11:38
helping the body to handle viral
11:39
respiratory infections so me and the
11:43
professor agree I'm not a professor
11:47
Noblet seriously it's good to it's good
11:49
to hear people of this caliber making
11:52
such clear statements and then there's a
11:53
couple more he also said it boosts the
11:57
ability of cells to kill and resist
11:59
viruses and simultaneously dampens down
12:02
the harmful inflammation which is one of
12:05
the big problems with covered now we
12:08
know this don't we the the lungs become
12:10
inflamed as part of this so-called
12:13
cytokine storm and again Liz had all
12:17
this covered
12:18
weeks ago in this poster that you may
12:21
well remember of all the vitamin D plays
12:25
in protecting your lung so this
12:27
inflammatory reaction in the lungs where
12:29
the lungs fill up with fluid the vitamin
12:31
D are making this less likely because
12:33
it's modulating the effects of these
12:36
white cells so in the same way that
12:43
dexamethasone combats the cytokine storm
12:47
this is postulating as well as making
12:50
the viral infection less likely in the
12:51
beginning as well as having an
12:53
immunological function to help the body
12:55
protect against the virus the vitamin D
12:59
of also modulates the immune Oh me
13:01
immune
13:02
inflammatory response and stops the
13:04
inflammation going into overdrive
13:05
causing too much inflammation so again
13:10
it's working in both ways it's working
13:12
in this antiviral but it's working in
13:16
this immune system optimizing way which
13:18
is de-facto antiviral but it's also
13:21
dampening down this fatal or potentially
13:26
very fatal cytokine storm so another
13:32
good effect there high levels of melanin
13:34
in the skin lead to lower levels of
13:36
vitamin D this is the Guardian saying
13:38
this so if the Guardian are saying it
13:40
then the Guardian aren't known for
13:43
pointing out differences between races
13:46
shall we say high levels of melanin in
13:48
the skin lead to lower levels of vitamin
13:50
D creation which are exacerbated in
13:53
countries which have less sunlight like
13:55
the UK like the northern United States
13:57
like Canada this causes the immune
13:59
system to be weaker in other words I'm
14:02
going to put it in a less delicate way
14:04
I'm going to say darker skin produces
14:06
vitamin D more slowly and that is I
14:09
believe why many of these people have
14:11
died now that brings us on to the report
14:15
on ethnicity now this is is from the
14:20
government it's the UK government report
14:22
on ethnicity victim Indian health so
14:27
it's a bit slow but they are addressing
14:29
this directly now so that's good it's
14:31
just a pity that so many people have had
14:34
to die in the meantime vitamin D and
14:37
health annualized mean vitamin D
14:41
concentrations so this studies been done
14:44
now in the UK so what they're taking is
14:47
what they're doing is that what they did
14:48
was they took they took vitamin D blood
14:52
samples from different people in the UK
14:54
at different times of the year now what
14:57
you have in the UK is people tend to go
15:00
out in the Sun more in summer so the
15:01
vitamin D levels go up and then they
15:04
don't go out in the Sun in winter cuz
15:06
it's too cold so what you find is the
15:09
vitamin D levels progressively drop over
15:11
winter an hour are at their lowest about
15:14
April and then
15:15
they start going out in the Sun again
15:17
and then the levels start to pick up
15:18
again so the varies that the levels vary
15:21
throughout the year as you would expect
15:24
due to sun exposure so they took the
15:27
average concentrations the mean serum
15:29
concentrations that that's the amount
15:30
the serum is the part of the blood that
15:33
you spin down in the lab when when you
15:34
want to test for things that are present
15:37
in the plasma in life so white adults
15:41
they had forty five nine and moles per
15:46
liter as an average Asians Indian
15:52
subcontinent primarily in the UK now in
15:54
the UK when we say ages we mean
15:56
primarily Bangladeshi Pakistani Indian
15:59
in the States when you say Asian you
16:01
mean tend to mean more Chinese Japanese
16:03
Korean so Asian in this country are
16:06
people who are from the Indian
16:09
subcontinent primarily so their levels
16:12
were half less than half twenty point
16:14
five nine and moles per liter and people
16:20
that were black in the UK twenty seven
16:22
nanomoles per liter now first you might
16:27
think this is surprising so why people
16:28
no surprise but people with so black
16:32
people obviously have darker colored
16:33
skin than ages and they have higher
16:35
levels so what accounts for the
16:37
difference well it's behavioral
16:39
black people are quite happy to go out
16:41
sunbathing as a rule whereas many Asians
16:45
don't especially women especially Muslim
16:49
women who are covered all year-round and
16:52
are very deficient in vitamin D so that
16:57
accounts for the different levels but we
16:58
can see even even in the the black
17:00
British population twenty seven point
17:02
seven as opposed to forty five point
17:04
eight and this is already quite low this
17:06
is already quite low so basically I
17:11
would say that means the entire
17:12
population is vitamin D deficiency and
17:14
particularly Asians and black people are
17:17
vitamin D deficient how hard is this to
17:21
work out so that they recommend the
17:25
government are recommending ten
17:26
micrograms of vitamin D which is 400
17:29
units proposed for the general UK
17:32
population aged four and above not for
17:35
me to advise you what to take but I'm
17:37
taking 25 micrograms in fact most of the
17:40
time I've been taking 50 micrograms a
17:41
day the British government
17:43
recommendation is 10 micrograms a day
17:45
I'm taking 50 micrograms a day when I
17:49
take it and they say to serum
17:54
concentrations to be greater than 25
17:57
nano moles a litre which I will consider
17:59
to be well into the deficient range
18:01
people should take 10 nanograms per mil
18:04
so we see that the recommendations here
18:07
are very very conservative these are in
18:11
my view remarkably small doses but hey
18:15
it's not for me to argument go argue
18:17
with government reports is it Scottish
18:19
government likewise has already
18:20
published so the Scottish Government's
18:22
ahead of the game a vitamin D advice for
18:25
all age groups published on the 3rd of
18:26
June remember when we started talking
18:29
about this January Scottish government
18:31
published on the 3rd of June again the
18:34
basically revising 10 micrograms or very
18:36
small dose specifically recommending
18:42
that groups at a higher risk of vitamin
18:43
D deficiency that is people with dark
18:46
colored skin people that stay inside all
18:47
- all the time take a supplement or
18:50
pregnant and breastfeeding women they
18:51
had rise to take a supplement infants
18:54
and children under 5 years old to advise
18:55
to take a supplement and people who have
18:59
low exposure to the Sun particularly
19:04
people in care homes for example whose
19:06
died most in this outbreak the people
19:10
were the lowest that was a bit some
19:11
indeed in camps this is the Scottish
19:17
government again I'm not gonna bother
19:18
reading it all it's a bit boring it's
19:21
fairly obvious well we'll pick people
19:23
from minority ethnic groups with dark
19:25
skin such as African afro-caribbean
19:28
South Asian origin who require more sun
19:30
exposure to make as much vitamin D so
19:33
these are the people that should be
19:34
taking supplements according to the
19:36
government the Scottish government
19:39
Scottish government recommendations 10
19:41
to 15 minutes of unprotected sun
19:43
exposure is safe 10 to 15 minutes in
19:47
Scottish Sun it's not is not much for
19:49
most of the year now this is an
19:52
important point so I will concede to the
19:55
Scottish government on this and they
19:57
again we've been saying it for years
19:58
once sunscreen is correctly applied
20:00
vitamin D synthesis is blocked so this
20:03
is unprotected sun exposure we're
20:05
talking about here staying in the Sun
20:08
for prolonged periods without the
20:09
protection of sunscreen increases the
20:11
risk of skin cancer okay that's true
20:14
it's that they're being remarkably
20:18
conservative here basically reading
20:21
between the lines they're trying to sit
20:22
say you need vitamin D but I'm not going
20:24
to take the risk of recommending how you
20:25
get it that seems to be what they're
20:27
saying to me rather pathetic actually
20:30
too much vitamin D may be harmful but
20:32
you have to take an awful lot daily
20:35
supplements of the recommended amount
20:36
will be enough so they say avoid a high
20:40
daily dose vitamin D supplements more
20:43
than a hundred micrograms for adults and
20:44
more than eleven and children from the
20:47
age of eleven so what what they are
20:49
saying is so that these are these are 25
20:51
micrograms tablets that I've told you
20:52
repeatedly I'm taking what the Scottish
20:55
government is saying he should not take
20:57
more than 100 micrograms that's four of
20:59
these so the Scottish government is
21:02
saying don't take more than 100
21:03
micrograms in other words it's saying
21:05
don't take more than four thousand
21:07
international units a day but I've been
21:10
taking 2,000 international units which
21:12
is 25 and of course you probably saw the
21:15
excellent interview with Rahul who's
21:18
originally from Kerala living in Germany
21:20
and he he started in January I think
21:24
taking he started off taking one of
21:26
these a day then he won fairly quickly -
21:28
- and his vitamin D levels were five
21:32
nanograms a mill in January and I think
21:37
when he took it again in early June I
21:41
believe he took it again by taking two
21:43
of these a day that gone up to 33
21:46
nanograms per mil so
21:50
the holes vitamin D levels were
21:52
dramatically improved by taking two of
21:54
these a day he took 50 micrograms a day
21:58
that's what we all did and this it that
22:01
is consistent actually with what the
22:02
Scottish Government saying because
22:04
they're saying don't take more than four
22:06
of those a day so in other words the
22:09
Scottish government is saying you should
22:10
take if you take ten like my own
22:12
micrograms a day that's what they're
22:16
recommending but then the same don't
22:17
take more than 100 which is a heck of a
22:21
range of course so you can see why
22:22
they're being rather conservative so my
22:26
duty is to report to you that the
22:28
Scottish Government is saying don't take
22:29
more than hundred micrograms a day
22:33
advising not more than 50 micrograms for
22:35
children and more than 25 micrograms for
22:41
infants under 12 months so they're the
22:45
upper doses that they are they are
22:47
suggesting now I've talked to quite a
22:51
few people in India I've got quite a few
22:53
contacts in different parts of India and
22:55
I've told them to go to the doctor and
22:58
an Indian doctors in different parts of
23:00
the country that there and not say I'm
23:03
not telling you saying do this but that
23:05
they are giving what they're doing in
23:08
India the Indian doctors in two or three
23:11
circumstances have talked about that
23:13
they're giving sixty thousand units a
23:15
week for six weeks to top them up and
23:17
then 60 thousand units per month for six
23:19
months so that's what Indian doctors do
23:22
now I will mention this we talked about
23:24
this in detail when we talked to Matt
23:28
how much vitamin D you need to top you
23:31
up depends on how low late year levels
23:32
are to begin with so if you if you've
23:35
got very low levels of vitamin D and
23:38
you're obese for example then it's going
23:40
to take quite some time and quite large
23:42
doses to get your vitamin D up because
23:43
when you swallow the vitamin D if you
23:45
take it by mouth the vitamin D goes into
23:47
the fatty tissue and it's stored there
23:49
and you have to fill up the fatty tissue
23:51
first before the vitamin D spills over
23:53
into the blood and if you've got a lot
23:57
of adipose tissue that can take a long
23:59
time so people that are very deficient
24:02
and obese can take a lot of vitamin D to
24:06
top them up whereas people that have got
24:08
relatively reasonable levels of vitamin
24:10
D and are quite thin then obviously then
24:12
you're going to need much smaller
24:13
amounts that's why I keep saying going
24:15
to your doc go to your doctor to get a
24:16
specific recommendation for yourself so
24:23
there we go so we've got we've got this
24:25
scientific advisory committee on
24:27
nutrition
24:29
working on it we've got the National
24:31
Institute for Health and Care excellence
24:33
working on it and we've got public
24:34
health England now working on it so
24:37
that's good so what I'm hoping is they
24:39
come up with realistic expectations soon
24:42
so realistic results soon and when we
24:47
get those results it'll be interesting
24:50
to publicize those results because this
24:55
has got the potential to save huge
24:58
numbers of lives all around the world
25:00
so as we speak now that we know
25:05
dexamethasone is efficacious in severe
25:09
reactions to covered 19 that can cause
25:13
inflammatory reactions in the lungs by
25:15
cytokine mechanisms in people that are
25:18
on oxygen therapy and people that are
25:20
ventilated now that knowledge is know
25:21
now that doctors can read that a lot of
25:24
lives are being saved with dexamethasone
25:25
now as we speak
25:27
because we have the trial data so we
25:31
really do need the trial data on vitamin
25:33
D this really needs to be done but in
25:36
the meantime until good trial data is in
25:38
we look forward to the renewed
25:41
recommendations from the Scientific
25:43
Advisory Committee on nutrition from
25:44
public health England and from the nice
25:47
Institute and they should be out in the
25:51
next week or two so that means that
25:54
probably out in the next month or so so
25:58
we'll look forward to those and of
25:59
course as soon as they're available I
26:01
will be I will be reporting on them my
26:05
last up of some of you lovely people we
26:11
are today
26:13
here we have Caroline from Liverpool so
26:21
Caroline from Liverpool as we see is
26:25
taking vitamin D and watching on her
26:28
smartphone wonderful Caroline thank you
26:30
for that I'd like to see you're watching
26:33
in Liverpool good ah this is Francis now
26:40
on the way Francis is from well I can't
26:46
say it what
26:47
well worst worst Chester I guess sorry
26:51
about that I'm a bit dyslexic anyway
26:53
it's in Massachusetts Francis and
26:55
delighted you're watching let's just say
26:57
in Massachusetts and my rap I think is
27:02
going around the world now I strongly
27:06
suspect that there's people out there
27:09
who are better singers than me so if
27:13
they would like to sing this for me I'm
27:16
more than happy to play it
27:18
it's Rewald rock you isn't it no mask on
27:21
your face you big disgrace Thank You
27:24
Francis spreading your germs all over
27:27
the place
27:31
good to see you watching Francis in
27:33
Massachusetts thank you for watching
27:35
now this was interesting um know who
27:38
sent me this in Frank Fran Francisco
27:44
from Barcelona now this is interesting
27:47
so barcelona northern spain of course it
27:53
looks like the milk there is fortified
27:55
with vitamin d so without this it's
28:01
reasonable to assume that the death
28:03
rates would have been even higher so it
28:08
looks like there's 1.5 UJ e that that's
28:12
a mu that's micrograms well i wrote as
28:15
mcg micrograms per 100 mils of milk and
28:22
3 micrograms per 200 mil glass of milk
28:26
so we don't do this in the UK so it
28:33
could be that it transposes that trial
28:35
data shows in the future we'll know for
28:39
sure or more like much more certain to
28:42
know that that saved a lot of lives in
28:45
Spain well this is galvo watches in a
28:48
city called old rishi which is Edinburgh
28:53
my dad told me that when as a cleared
28:55
Edinburgh court was called old Ricky
28:57
which means a smelly place but of course
29:02
Edinburgh now are a very very clean city
29:04
apart from the diesel fumes and the
29:06
micro particulates anyway I digress
29:09
glad you're watching Gavin at Edinburgh
29:13
this is hum Bart and a pinnate who live
29:17
in the Upper East Side in Manhattan so
29:20
glad to see you're watching ah yes yes
29:25
yes this is Michael in Herefords gonna
29:27
get a special mention because Michael
29:32
not only watches my videos he makes
29:34
broccoli soup and you may remember that
29:38
I showed you how to make broccoli soup
29:41
on a video while talking about the
29:43
nutrition so my poor link to that again
29:46
it was quite good fun so broccoli of
29:50
course is very very good for you so that
29:52
was a Mike linear food actually looks
29:54
better than 9 Michael I must say so to
29:57
do hope you enjoyed your your super good
30:03
one this is a oh this is ninja granny
30:08
better known as a Judy in Toronto Canada
30:13
so great so you're watching Judy in in
30:16
Canada thank you for the picture it's
30:22
Mindy and vitamin k2 very good this is
30:26
Paul who also watches in Toronto Canada
30:31
just guessing but Paul might be a Star
30:33
Trek fan that glad you're watching Paul
30:38
great to know you're watching in Canada
30:41
this is Raymond and kit in st. Paul
30:46
Minnesota in the States so glad to know
30:51
you are watching together in San Paul
30:55
thank you for the picture
30:58
this is Robin who's in British Columbia
31:01
in Canada
31:03
looks like Robins a musician so you
31:05
might record us something you never know
31:07
but good to know you're watching Robin
31:09
thank you for sending that picture in
31:10
from British Columbia in Canada this is
31:17
Wayne in Oregon I think Wayne might make
31:20
models of the virus which is course is
31:22
very interesting so that's that looks
31:25
pretty cool and we're glad to know you
31:27
watching Wayne in Ontario good news