Diabetic Foot Ulcer Treatment Could Kill COVID-19 Virus, Researchers Say

Research is always going on all over the world. The Covid 19 vaccine is good but there is also a need for new research to continue so that we can come up with a cure for the virus rather than just getting the vaccine for protection.

So in such research, there had been something that we see in the new research done by a group of researchers. It is possible that the formula of medicines for the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers is also able to kill the coronavirus.

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Treatment Could Kill COVID-19 Virus

Diabetic Foot Ulcer Treatment Could Kill COVID-19 Virus, Researchers Say

A new foot ulcer formulation had been developed by scientists at the University of South Australia. This is said that the formula can kill the Covid 19 virus that had been terrorizing people all over the world. This can be something promising to the world.  Let’s see.

“This paper presents a strategy utilizing cold plasma for the “on-demand” activation of acetyl donor molecules. The process generates an aqueous-based antimicrobial formulation comprising a rich mixture of highly oxidizing molecules: peracetic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and other reactive oxygen and nitrogen species,” the group explained regarding the research and the solution.

“The synergistic potent oxidative action between these molecules is shown to be highly effective at eradicating common wound pathogenic bacteria (Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus) and at inactivating a virus (SARS-CoV-2).”

That is all that we have for now. We hope that this turns out to be something good and worthwhile to be used. To know more about the matter, stay tuned to the very topic, and if there is any further news, then we will tell you about it.

Having a Job At Insulin

Much of the national fury over medicine costs has been generated for years by the ever-increasing price of insulin. At the outset of the epidemic, the American Diabetes Association urged states to make insulin and other glucose-lowering drugs fully covered by insurance without any out-of-pocket expenditures to patients.

As the ADA pointed out, however, not a single state has implemented its recommendations in full. As at the beginning of July, Vermont no longer required patients to pay out of pocket for preventative drugs like insulin.

Some other states have mandated that insurance providers increase the frequency with which prescriptions can be refilled, but they have avoided addressing the issue of how much this will cost patients.

68-year-old Robert Washington was aware that his diabetes put him at risk for contracting COVID-19. In order to continue paying for his insulin, he opted to maintain working as a security guard at the Lone Butte Casino in Chandler, Arizona after it reopened in May.

Final Words

Washington’s daughter Lina said her father had been given the go-ahead to patrol in a golf cart independently by his superiors. But once he got back to work, Robert told his daughter, he was posted at the front door, where a lengthy queue of gamblers, most of them without masks, was waiting.