ea1060 said:
I think it's funny how a lot of people here discount some posters (including me) first hand experiences with taking ivermectin for covid. Almost every post I've seen from people who have taken ivermectin has said it made them feel better instantly and zero side effects.
Yet some posters are still like well it was probably placebo or there's no evidence suggesting it works. Uh huh. Ivermectin could cure covid, cancer, AIDS for the entire world and people would still be like well its still unproven and potentially harmful lol. I really don't get it.
See the problem with first hand accounts is that, one, there is no way to verify them, and two, human perception is incredibly unreliable. I had one patient tell me how well Ivermectin worked for her, as her oxygen saturation was 80% on room air.
Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc, or "After this, therefore, because of this" is a logical fallacy of presuming that something occurred because of what happened just before. This a very common logical fallacy that we frequently see in medicine, even among physicians. If I were to go purely on my experience with patients taking Ivermectin without any prior knowledge of how ivermectin works, its side effects, or the studies on outcomes vs COVID, I could realistically come to the conclusion that Ivermectin is causing these patients to get worse, as I have seen several individuals on ivermectin who have required hospitalization due to having severe hypoxia. Obviously that is not true, but I hope you get my point. This is exactly why randomized controlled trials are necessary to determine the safety and efficacy of therapeutics.
If Ivermectin had high quality double blind placebo controlled trials demonstrating efficacy for cancer, AIDS, COVID, etc. I would absolutely be on board. Unfortunately, the highest quality double blind, randomized controlled trial has shown absolutely no benefit for ivermectin. I wish it did, I honestly do, but it doesn't.
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