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by capn_cabbage 2166 days ago
The opposite can be just as dangerous * . "Medlife Crisis" has an [informative video][1] that explains some of what can happen.

* Edit: I shouldn't have equated the dangers here. This was a bad take. I still believe there are good bits of info provided in the video, but the relevance to this thread is less than I considered and I should have thought more about what I was sharing.

Edit 2: I didn't mean to link to a specific timestamp of the video in the original link. That has been removed.

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNzQ_sLGIuA

2 comments

I clicked on his COVID-19 video[1] on a whim and while I have not watched it yet, my god is the comment section alarming. Is the YouTube comment section always like this when it comes to this topic?

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ts8X3HDtPE

Yes that seems to be typical. YouTube comment sections tend to be of poorer quality when the topic is popular or if the channel has a large enough audience.
Yes. Youtube comment sections are among the lowest quality information sources available on the Internet.
At the population level, chemotherapy increases survival rates and remissions.