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Ross River Virus (Fever)

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Dear Marilette,

 

Atma Namaste

 

I have a client who has been diagnosed with Ross River

Virus. Can you please advise a healing protocol? The

symptoms the client is experiencing at present is

fatigue & headaches.

 

(Ross River Virus or Ross River Fever also referred to

as epidemic polyarthritis, is a mosquito-transmitted

Alphavirus). On reading your

reply for the treatment of " Chikungunya fever " , would

you suggest following the same pranic healing

treatment?

 

Thank you

Blessings

Beverly

 

========================

 

 

Dear Beverly,

 

Atma namaste.

 

Thank you for your email.

 

 

Medical Background:

 

Ross River Virus (RRV) disease is the most common and

most widespread arboviral disease in

Australia....Disease notifications in Australia

average about 4,800 per year.

 

Infectious Agent - First isolated from Ochlerotatus

vigilax (previously called Aedes vigilax) mosquitoes

collected in 1959 near the Ross River in Townsville,

the cause of Ross River virus (RRV) disease was

confirmed in 1971 by its isolation from the blood of

an Aboriginal boy with the disease.

 

Identification

Clinical Features:

 

-Pyrexia and other constitutional symptoms are usually

slight.

 

-A rash can occur up to two weeks before, or after,

other symptoms. Absent in about one-third of cases,

the rash is variable in distribution, character and

duration and may be associated with buccal and palatal

enanthems.

 

-Rheumatic symptoms are present in most patients

except for the few who present with rash alone: these

consist of arthritis or arthralgia primarily affecting

the wrist, knee, ankle and small joints of the

extremities.

 

Prolonged symptoms are common. In some cases, there

may be remissions and exacerbations of decreasing

intensity for up to a year. Symptoms persisting longer

than a year may be due to other reasons.

 

-Cervical lymphadenopathy occurs frequently, and

paraesthesiae and tenderness of the palms and soles

are present in a small percentage of cases.

 

Incubation period - Usually three to 14 days.

 

The incidence of clinical infection varies

dramatically between endemic areas and epidemic areas.

Clinical features of infection are rare before

puberty, after which the disease has a similar pattern

at all ages.

 

The disease can cause incapacity and inability to work

for two to three months. About one-quarter of patients

have rheumatic symptoms that persist for up to a year

but rarely more.

 

Major outbreaks have occurred in all parts of

Australia, chiefly in the period from January to May.

RRV disease cases in the SW of WA generally occur from

September to May and in the north of WA the risk is

greatest during or just after the wet season. RRV has

been detected (and probably transmitted to humans) in

most major metropolitan areas of Australia, including

Perth, Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Epidemics

usually follow heavy rains or after high tides which

inundate salt marshes or coastal wetlands. Sporadic

cases occur in mainland and coastal regions of

Australia and Papua New Guinea at other times. In

1979, a major outbreak of RRV disease (probably

exported from Australia) occurred in Fiji and spread

to other Pacific islands, including Tonga, the Cook

Islands and Samoa.

 

Reservoir - The virus is maintained in a primary

mosquito-mammal cycle involving macropods (kangaroos

and wallabies), possibly other marsupials (eg

possums), flying fox and native rodents. A

human-mosquito cycle may occur in explosive outbreaks.

Horses, which may act as amplifier hosts, appear to

develop joint and nervous system disease after

infection with RRV. Fruit bats might act as vertebrate

hosts in some areas. Vertical transmission in

desiccation-resistant eggs of Ochlerotatus spp.

mosquitoes, may be a mechanism to enable the virus to

persist in the environment for long periods,

explaining the rapid appearance of cases of RRV

disease after heavy rains.

 

RRV is endemic throughout Australia, Papua New Guinea,

East Timor, adjacent islands of Indonesia and the

Solomon islands

 

Mode of transmission - It is transmitted by a number

of different mosquitoes, with Culex annulirostris

being the major vector in inland areas, whilst Oc.

vigilax, Ve. funerea and

 

Oc. camptorhynchus are the major vectors in coastal

regions.

 

Period of communicability - There is no evidence of

transmission from person to person in the absence of a

mosquito vector.

 

Infection with the RRV probably confers life-long

immunity.

 

Preventive measures

Ross River virus infection can be prevented by:

 

-Mosquito control measures.

-Personal protection measures (long sleeves and pants,

mosquito repellents and mosquito coils).

-Avoidance of mosquito-prone areas. Vectors usually

bite between dusk and dawn.

 

Control of case - Treatment is symptomatic with rest

advisable in the acute stages of the disease. Symptoms

may recur but this is not thought to be due to

re-infection.

 

Presently, there is no vaccine available commercially

to protect against RRV disease.

 

Control of contacts - Unreported or undiagnosed cases

should be sought in the region where the patient had

been staying during the incubation period of their

illness. All family members should be questioned about

symptoms and evaluated serologically if necessary.

 

Control of environment - To reduce/prevent virus

transmission, interruption of human/mosquito contact

is required by:

 

- suppression of the vector mosquito population

- avoidance of vector contact (personal

protection/education)

 

Outbreak Measures - Conduct a survey to determine the

species of the vector mosquito involved. Identify

their breeding places and promote their control.

- Promote the use of mosquito repellents and other

mosquito avoidance measures for persons exposed to

bites because of their occupation, or other reasons.

- Identify the infection among animal reservoirs, for

example, kangaroos and small marsupials.

 

Source - Department of Health and Aging, Commonwealth

of Australia

 

 

Pranic Healing in conjunction with medical treatment:

 

1. Invoke and scan before, during and after

treatment.

 

2. General sweeping using EV, 2 to 3 times.

 

3. Localized thorough sweeping on the front, bottom,

sides and back of the lungs. Energize the lungs

thoroughly through the back of the lungs with LWG, LWO

then ordinary LWV.

 

This may take several minutes.

 

Apply more localized sweeping.

 

4. Localized thorough sweeping on the basic chakra

alternately with LWG and LWO. Energize the basic

chakra with LWR or with W.

 

If the patient has fever or venereal disease, do not

energize the basic chakra; just apply thorough

localized ordinary sweeping on it.

 

5. Localized thorough sweeping on the arms and legs,

their joints, and their minor chakras. Energize the

minor chakras with LWR or with ordinary LWV.

 

If the patient has fever or venereal disease, energize

with ordinary LWV (not with LWR). If ordinary LWV is

used, do not apply this step more than once a day.

 

6. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back

spleen chakra, the kidneys and meng mein chakra, the

lower abdominal area and the navel chakra.

 

Energize the navel chakra with ordinary

LWV.

 

Energize the kidneys with W. Apply more localized

sweeping on the kidneys.

 

7. If the spleen is painful, energize the spleen

chakra with ordinary LWV. This has to be done with

caution.

 

Apply more localized sweeping on the spleen chakra.

 

8. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back

solar plexus chakra and the liver.

 

Energize the solar plexus chakra with LWG, LWB then

ordinary LWV.

 

Apply more localized sweeping.

 

9. Localized thorough sweeping on the throat chakra.

Energize with LWG, LWB then with ordinary LWV.

 

10. Localized thorough sweeping on the front and back

heart chakra. Energize the back heart chakra with LWG

then ordinary LWV.

 

11. Localized thorough sweeping on the entire head

area, the crown chakra, ajna chakra, forehead chakra

and back head minor chakra. Energize the chakras

with LWG then with more of ordinary LWV.

 

12. Localized thorough sweeping on the affected

area(s).

 

If the area is located below the neck but not near the

heart or spleen, apply localized thorough sweeping

alternately with LWG and LWO.

 

If the patient is between 20 and 45 years old,

energize the affected area with LWG-B. If the patient

is below 20 years old or over 45 years old, energize

the affected area with LWG then LWB.

 

If the affected area is located on the head, near the

heart or near the spleen, apply localized thorough

sweeping alternately with LWG and ordinary LWV.

Energize the affected area with LWG, LWB then ordinary

LWV or gold.

 

13. Stabilize and release projected pranic energy.

 

14. Repeat treatment several times a day for the next

several days or until the condition is substantially

improved.

 

After the condition has substantially improved, rescan

twice a day to check if there is a need to reapply

treatment, then based on scanning results, gradually

reduce frequency of treatment to once per day until

completely

recovered.

 

Love,

 

Marilette

 

Source materials for all MCKS Pranic Healing protocols are exclusively from the

following books by Master Choa Kok Sui:

Miracles Through Pranic Healing, Advanced Pranic Healing, Pranic Psychtherapy

and pranic Crystal Healing.

 

NOTICE:

1. Pranic Healing is not intended to replace orthodox medicine, but rather to

complement it. If symptoms persist or if the ailment is severe, please consult

immediately a medical doctor and a Certified Pranic Healer.

 

2. Pranic Healers who are are not medical doctors should not prescribe nor

interfere with prescribed medications and/or medical treatments. ~ Master Choa

Kok Sui

 

Miracles do not happen in contradiction to nature, but only to that which is

known to us in nature. ~ St. Augustine

 

Ask or read the up to date Pranic Healing protocols by joining the group

through http://health./

 

MCKS Pranic Healing gateway website: http://www.pranichealing.org.

 

 

 

 

 

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