The whole video was 36 seconds long. There is nothing on the video that
a) Confirms it was in the aftermath of the chemical attack
b) Confirms that those shown in the video were victims of the chemical attack
c) Confirms the source of the video.
Putting that aside
Some doctors have, apparently, watched a video and diagnosed a child as having been overdosed with opiates?
Based on what symptoms?
They then claim that the adrenaline injection was clearly fake. They don't explain
a) What makes the injection clearly fake
b) What makes the injection "adrenaline"
They claim that the injection of adrenaline was fake because the plunger was not pushed down. The video that I watched only showed about 2 seconds of the little boy with a syringe in his chest.
Further, the video does not confirm that the little boy
a) Was alive at the time of the injection
b) Was dead as a result of the injection
c) Was dead following the injection.
"Behind the fake translation of the videos, the actual Arabic included stage directions for positioning the child for the video, not for medical treatment."
Again,
There is nothing on the video that
a) Confirms it was in the aftermath of the chemical attack
b) Confirms that those shown in the video were victims of the chemical attack
c) Confirms the source of the video.
Putting that aside.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedis...r_Human_Rights
The Wiki page has a few "issues". Namely
The neutrality of this article is disputed. (April 2017)
This article relies too much on references to primary sources. (April 2017)
This article needs more medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources. (April 2017)
This article may contain improper references to self-published sources. (April 2017)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2017)
Actually, further research suggests this video was taken last month but,
it poses more questions than it answers in my opinion.