The next covid? American College of Physicians says super-deadly FUNGUS with 60% kill rate is an “urgent threat” spreading across America

INFECTION

 By Ethan Huff 

 

Just one week after the hit zombie show “The Last of Us” wrapped up, United States health chiefs came out with a new warning about the alleged rise and spread of Candida auris, or C. auria, a microscopic yeast strain that authorities claim is very deadly.

Like the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) before it, C. auria is not a natural occurrence in the environment. The fungus also rarely appears in test tubes at laboratories that deal with associated pathogens, which begs the question: Where did C. auria come from?

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), C. auria kills upwards of 60 percent of the people it infects. The corrupt federal agency, which is actually just a private corporation in disguise, warned in 2019 right before the covid scamdemic that C. auria was an “urgent threat.” And it is apparently, we are told, still an urgent threat today.

(Related: Learn more about how colloidal silver is a powerful natural remedy for fungi, as well as harmful bacteria and viruses.)

“Experts” claim C. auria is spreading more because of global warming

Between 2020 and 2021, we are told, case numbers for C. auria have more than tripled compared to prior years. New multidrug-resistant strains of C. auria have also emerged and are becoming increasingly more common.

The most common form of transmission occurs in healthcare facilities occupied by the elderly. Residents with indwelling devices like a pacemaker, or who use mechanical ventilators, are said to be most at risk of contracting it.

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Healthy people generally need not worry about C. auria, but for the frail and vulnerable, it kills anywhere from 30 to 60 percent of those it infects.

The authors of a new study about C. auria claim that transmission of the fungus is largely driven by “poor general infection prevention and control practices in healthcare facilities.” Their research is published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

C. auria is receiving fresh attention this year due to The Last of Us, which the corporate media is referring to as a “hit HBO show.” In it, characters become afflicted with a cordyceps mushroom strain that evolved to infect humans, controlling their minds and turning them into “bloodthirsty zombies that see vines explode out of their bodies and can infect others.”

The timing of the show’s airing and the CDC’s earlier warnings about C. auria, followed by the American College of Physicians (ACP) more recently trying to scare the public about the fungus, is likely no accident. Are they gearing up for another scamdemic, round two?

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