Sorry, I didn't realize you have been working for the past 2 years saving patients. Quercetin (or Hydroxychloroquine) is not intended to be used as an anti-inflammatory. Both are zinc ionophores that don't work well without zinc. As I heard explained in this video (11:45 mark), zinc is the bullet and the zinc ionophore is the gun. It is harder for one to be effective without the other. Maybe that is why some of the HCQ studies fail?
https://rumble.com/vqjt12-doctors-orders.html"There is evidence that vitamin C and quercetin co-administration exerts a synergistic antiviral action due to overlapping antiviral and immunomodulatory properties and the capacity of ascorbate to recycle quercetin, increasing its efficacy."
Thanks for the info on Azithromycin. As I said, we chose not to use it.
As recent as 2 weeks ago, Ivermectin appeared on the NIH website as 1 of 3 treatments being evaluated. After at least 6 months, they still haven't rejected it.
From what I have heard, Remdesivir appears to work for some if used within the first 5 days. We chose not to use it because we didn't want to go to the hospital, the cost, and because it was dropped from the NIH study in 2019.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/nih-research-matters/two-drugs-reduce-risk-death-ebola"Overall, about 50% of people who received either Zmapp or remdesivir died during the trial. In contrast, only about 35% of people who received either Mab114 or REGN-EB3 died. Three participants died of side effects thought to be related to treatmenttwo in the ZMapp group and one in the remdesivir group."
Not sure how you can say there aren't studies on both sides for HCQ.
https://c19hcq.com/