HotardAg07 said:
First of all, I do agree both sides have turned this into a partisan issue. However, not all people approaching HCQ with skepticism are approaching this as a partisan issue.
Infection Ag 11, who is a Republican-voting Infectious Disease Doctor says that he has skepticism about HCQ. I don't find his insight to be partisan-driven, yet he has been routinely dismissed on this thread.
I don't think I have posted much about any cures from a position of knowledge, because I'm too ignorant on the topic to chime in, so I just read what the doctors on the board are saying. However, as a person who knows very little about the science, it's still easy to read this thread and see a lot confirmation bias going on. I don't believe this anecdote, I believe these anecdotes.
First, I don't think anyone has claimed ALL skeptics are politically motivated. Some people do question hydroxychloroquine skepticism precisely because of the backlash in the media against Trump for even expressing some hope for a potential answer. The fish tank drug brouhaha was just the silliest example. When you hear so much criticism that is purely politically motivated it's harder to identify and separate that which isn't from the noise.
Second, there are people on this thread who read doctors' skepticism and take it at face value and people who read it and don't. There are a lot of people in this discussion. The bigger debate on this thread was over the question of whether we should wait on double blind trials before even using hydroxychloroquine, which ultimately fell out to where everyone realized not even the more skeptical doctors agreed with that.
Third, call ME a bit skeptical about someone who hasn't even acknowledged the massive error in his argument re Remdesivir, and who can't even fathom why, other than political motivations, anyone would be biased in favor of believing hydroxychloroquine worked.
Maybe a better culprit for any confirmation bias might be because if it did work it truly would be a gamechanger? A prophylactic or early stage treatment that is cheap, available, and has a long history of minimal side-effects? That's about the most perfect solution imaginable, short of a vaccine, to returning the world to normal. That seems like a pretty huge reason for confirmation bias that isn't politically motivated.
Or maybe because at the time Trump touted its potential, bringing it to the forefront of the coranavirus discussion in the US, there were already many of us on here who had already heard about it and were excited. And after Trump mentioned it there were several more anecdotal examples, none of which seemed to be politically motivated, which supported the idea that it was really working. The anecdotal evidence has had a lot of people excited. People want something that makes the virus a non-threat. Remdesivir isn't nearly as available and also doesn't keep you out of the hospital.