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I Don't Like Taking Medication

To those of you (and you know who you are) who have been pimping hyrodxychloroquine as a wonder cure or preventative for COVID-19, and using as a political tool to bash scientists and elected officials for listening to the scientists and being cautious in authorizing its wide use, please just stop.

Yesterday, the 5th study in a row showed that hyrodxychloroquine had no beneficial effect on groups of COVID-19 patients to whom it was administered. One of the studies showed a significantly greater death rate in seriously ill patients to whom it was administered. Another had to be terminated due to heart irregularities in the study group.

It is possible that in a few instances it helped individual patients. But it is also quite possible that it had no effect positive or negative on these individuals and they recovered due to other associated care, because the antibiotic that it has been paired with helped them fight off bacterial infection that took hold because of their compromised immune system or that they were simply lucky.

There are multiple treatments being studied, some of which are showing promise. But the hype about hyrodxychloroquine and the expense of its associated stockpiling (and the scarcity for people with Lupus) has done more harm than good.

Time to turn back to Science.
Livingwell · 61-69, M
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Agreed. Ask that person with RA or Lupus how good it works. It’s like a cancer drug that kills cells with the thinking that killing the bad cells is better than killing the good and the good cells will win.
Doomflower · 36-40, M
This makes me so angry I just want to scream.
PowerofStories · 61-69, M
@Doomflower I'm frustrated too. And I not even trying to deny that there may actually be specific cases where administration of hydroxychloroquine may be helpful. My two concerns are:
1. The data suggests that this treatment is, at best, a Hail Mary Pass -- to use a football analogy. It may have a place in the treatment tool kit, but to lobby for widespread indiscriminate use is irresponsible.
2. Seeking a cure for a disease should not be converted into a political tool for secondary motives, like winning an election. All of us, regardless of our political beliefs have a common interest in getting this right. From the debate on some of the threads here, and more disturbingly in the public policy realm, the tone has not been that of a unified country, but of two camps itching to go to civil war.
Never! Lord Trump save me! *foams at the mouth as he is hauled away*
hlpflwthat · M
You're blinding them with science.
PowerofStories · 61-69, M
@hlpflwthat Of course!
[media=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V83JR2IoI8k]

 
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