Many of the F16 threads go a bit overboard. But if the Army is shipping HCQ and zinc to clinics in theatre then there's probably something to it. At least to the physicians that keep requesting it.
This is a pretty nice example of correlation =/= causation with a nice sprinkling of the seven countries study bias, except they picked 8.Picadillo said:
https://c19study.com/countries.html
ETFan said:This is a pretty nice example of correlation =/= causation with a nice sprinkling of the seven countries study bias, except they picked 8.Picadillo said:
https://c19study.com/countries.html
Quote:
Now primarily a marketing machine to sell drugs of dubious benefit, this industry uses its wealth and power to co-opt every institution that might stand in its way, including the U.S. Congress, the Food and Drug Administration, academic medical centers, and the medical profession itself.
- Marcia Angell, former editor-in-chief of The NEJM, The Truth About the Drug Companies
Introduction
In the history of medicine, no single drug has been so singularly attacked by the media, World Health Organization, government officials and institutional health experts as hydroxychloroquine. Approved as a "safe and cost-effective" essential medicine by the WHO, CDC and regulatory authorities across Europe, hydroxychloroquine has been prescribed to millions of patients over the past 65 years. Despite decades of known safety, hydroxychloroquine was labelled "dangerous" and a "poisonous substance" after showing promise as a therapeutic for COVID-19.
Many attribute this negative publicity to anti-Trump sentiment from mainstream media outlets including CNN, MSNBC, Washington Post, New York Times and Huffington Post. This thesis does not entirely hold up to scrutiny though. President Trump named both hydroxychloroquine and Gilead's remdesivir as a "game changer" in his breaking March 19th press conference.
Quote:
Remdesivir vs hydroxychloroquine
Gilead's stock rises and falls based on the successes and failures of both hydroxychloroquine and remdesivir. Immediately before Trump first announced hydroxychloroquine as a promising therapeutic for COVID-19, GILD traded at a local high of $85 per share, a price unattained since early 2018. Hours after Trump's press conference, GILD dropped 8.7%, and then continued to plummet to $69 per share the following weekerasing $21 billion from its market cap in mere days. Immediately after Dr. Fauci announced the success of remdesivir in the NIH trial, GILD stock surged back to $85 per share. Compared to the largest pharmaceutical companies by revenue, Gilead has consistently outperformed in this pandemic with GILD gaining over 20% YTD while most of its competition struggled with losses or meager gains. This growth is almost certainly attributed to remdesivir's promise as an effective treatment for COVID-19.
Gilead has a direct financial incentive for hydroxychloroquine to fail. Actually, based on its share price, Gilead has 21 billion reasons to discredit hydroxychloroquine. Perhaps no other company has more to gain in the immediate future from hydroxychloroquine's failure than Gilead.
This is a woefully simplistic argument seeing how the two medicines have two different mechanisms of action. You would actually want both medicines to work so you can stop viral propagation, completely and in all patients. It would be like treating cancer with a single med (albeit, cancer is a different beast but even HIV treatments are a cocktail.)Picadillo said:
Gilead: Twenty-one billion reasons to discredit hydroxychloroquine
https://www.medicineuncensored.com/twenty-one-billion-reasonsQuote:
Now primarily a marketing machine to sell drugs of dubious benefit, this industry uses its wealth and power to co-opt every institution that might stand in its way, including the U.S. Congress, the Food and Drug Administration, academic medical centers, and the medical profession itself.
- Marcia Angell, former editor-in-chief of The NEJM, The Truth About the Drug Companies
Introduction
In the history of medicine, no single drug has been so singularly attacked by the media, World Health Organization, government officials and institutional health experts as hydroxychloroquine. Approved as a "safe and cost-effective" essential medicine by the WHO, CDC and regulatory authorities across Europe, hydroxychloroquine has been prescribed to millions of patients over the past 65 years. Despite decades of known safety, hydroxychloroquine was labelled "dangerous" and a "poisonous substance" after showing promise as a therapeutic for COVID-19.
Many attribute this negative publicity to anti-Trump sentiment from mainstream media outlets including CNN, MSNBC, Washington Post, New York Times and Huffington Post. This thesis does not entirely hold up to scrutiny though. President Trump named both hydroxychloroquine and Gilead's remdesivir as a "game changer" in his breaking March 19th press conference.
Quote:
Remdesivir vs hydroxychloroquine
Gilead's stock rises and falls based on the successes and failures of both hydroxychloroquine and remdesivir. Immediately before Trump first announced hydroxychloroquine as a promising therapeutic for COVID-19, GILD traded at a local high of $85 per share, a price unattained since early 2018. Hours after Trump's press conference, GILD dropped 8.7%, and then continued to plummet to $69 per share the following weekerasing $21 billion from its market cap in mere days. Immediately after Dr. Fauci announced the success of remdesivir in the NIH trial, GILD stock surged back to $85 per share. Compared to the largest pharmaceutical companies by revenue, Gilead has consistently outperformed in this pandemic with GILD gaining over 20% YTD while most of its competition struggled with losses or meager gains. This growth is almost certainly attributed to remdesivir's promise as an effective treatment for COVID-19.
Gilead has a direct financial incentive for hydroxychloroquine to fail. Actually, based on its share price, Gilead has 21 billion reasons to discredit hydroxychloroquine. Perhaps no other company has more to gain in the immediate future from hydroxychloroquine's failure than Gilead.
jpb1999 said:
So why has every doctor I talked to said they would take it if they got Covid-19. They must all be stupid...
Zobel said:
Because it's relatively low risk and it might help. The same could be said for any placebo.
That is not what he said . . . . he said even if it is just a placebo there is still upside.Quote:
It's disingenuous to pretend the potential upside to hcq is the same as the upside to placebo.
They haven't read the same articles that twitter Ph.D.'s have read of course...duhjpb1999 said:
So why has every doctor I talked to said they would take it if they got Covid-19. They must all be stupid...
Windy City Ag said:That is not what he said . . . . he said even if it is just a placebo there is still upside.Quote:
It's disingenuous to pretend the potential upside to hcq is the same as the upside to placebo.
I don't know why this topic attracts such reactionaries.
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Because it's relatively low risk and it might help. The same could be said for any placebo.
Quote:
It's because on a message board where you can't talk things out, what someone leaves unsaid becomes as important as what they say. If they were trying to make the clarification you are making, they should have said so.
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Undoubtedly, the biggest medical scandal of our age is the coordinated suppression of the science that proves hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) is not only a safe medicine, it is clinically proven to treat many serious diseases other than malaria and COVID-19.
Below we show the evidence from the scientific literature on Google Scholar that HCQ works against many cancers, diabetes, HIV, herpes, rheumatoid arthritis, Lupus, Lyme disease, etc.
Among the top 128 drugs prescribed by doctors, HCQ features in dozens of peer-reviewed studies in respected science journals, testifying to its 'wonder drug' epithet. The shocking truth is that it took a global pandemic and the heroism of informed and selfless men and women to stand up and expose the evil done to us.
Thankfully, most doctors still put treating patients before profit and speak out about the inflated COVID death tolls.
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In univariate analyses, zinc sulfate increased the frequency of patients being discharged home, and decreased the need for ventilation, admission to the ICU, and mortality or transfer to hospice for patients who were never admitted to the ICU. After adjusting for the time at which zinc sulfate was added to our protocol, an increased frequency of being discharged home (OR 1.53, 95% CI 1.12-2.09) reduction in mortality or transfer to hospice remained significant (OR 0.449, 95% CI 0.271-0.744). Conclusion: This study provides the first in vivo evidence that zinc sulfate in combination with hydroxychloroquine may play a role in therapeutic management for COVID-19.
Quote:
The study looked at the records of 932 COVID-19 patients treated at local hospitals with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin.
More than 400 of them were also given 100 milligrams of zinc daily.
Researchers said the patients given zinc were one and a half times more likely to recover, decreasing their need for intensive care.
One theory is that hydroxychloroquine may aid a cell's ability to absorb the zinc which has antiviral properties and responds to the infection.
"It sort of boosts the zinc activity which is one of the reasons we thought to look at zinc here and in this observational study we did see a difference suggesting that maybe that boosting activity of the hydroxychloroquine with the zinc helps the zinc to work better and lead to a benefit," Rahimian said.
Because you have probably only talked to 2 doctors you know who likely have a significant political bias and/or have a poor understanding of medical literature appraisal, which is surprisingly common among physicians. Medical school does a terrible job of teaching statistics and study design. I happen to know 100s of doctors, and the first and only time I have heard of physicians supporting HCQ use in the last 2 months outside of the AAPS wackos was here on TexAgs.jpb1999 said:
So why has every doctor I talked to said they would take it if they got Covid-19. They must all be stupid...
Read the last sentence of my postoldyella said:
If I want to give it a try why not? Worse case I am pissing money away and will still be able to follow the other protocols if things turn south. Doc, MY BODY MY CHOICE! Let me have the COVID cocktail! You have your opinion and respect your decision not to use it and I have mine.
Dr. Not Yet Dr. Ag said:Because you have probably only talked to 2 doctors you know who likely have a significant political bias and/or have a poor understanding of medical literature appraisal, which is surprisingly common among physicians. Medical school does a terrible job of teaching statistics and study design. I happen to know 100s of doctors, and the first and only time I have heard of physicians supporting HCQ use in the last 2 months outside of the AAPS wackos was here on TexAgs.jpb1999 said:
So why has every doctor I talked to said they would take it if they got Covid-19. They must all be stupid...
There is a facebook group I am apart of, EMDocs, which is a group of around 20k+ emergency physicians. This is a group that leans slightly conservative. They actually posted a poll the other day regarding HCQ and who supports it. Certainly this is not in any way scientific, but I think the results below will illustrate the point I am trying to make. And hey, if no one can convince you that this med doesn't work, and you can find a doctor that will prescribe it to you, knock yourself out.