Hydroxychloroquine - done

Surfdog

Duke status
Apr 22, 2001
21,768
1,988
113
South coast OR
You think they'll stop prescribing it for malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis since it's so "deadly" and basically poison in it's use the last 50-65 years? If you listen to CNN/MSNBC and others with a negative narrative to push?

It's legally prescribed by doctors in the USA over 40,000 times a month and by the millions in the world for malaria treatment in the past with few problems.

Sounds like these people have a malpractice lawsuit goldmine, ya?
:rolleyes:

Ya, using it in very late stages of CV-19 probably don't help much. It not used as a "cure". It's used to alleviate worst case symptoms if taken early on. 100's of doctors have prescribed it with very good results in preventive and early stage care. Many are willing to put their jobs and careers on the line to defend its use and effectiveness.
 

Surfdog

Duke status
Apr 22, 2001
21,768
1,988
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South coast OR
Sounds like they haven't ruled out usage in the future, yet.
But ya, it's POISON in the meantime, and Trump wants you to take poison!:rolleyes:

"Swaminathan says they expect to decide whether to resume testing hydroxychloroquine in the Solidarity Trial in a week or two."
 
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PRCD

Tom Curren status
Feb 25, 2020
12,782
8,805
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You think they'll stop prescribing it for malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis since it's so "deadly" and basically poison in it's use the last 50-65 years? If you listen to CNN/MSNBC and others with a negative narrative to push?

It's legally prescribed by doctors in the USA over 40,000 times a month and by the millions in the world for malaria treatment in the past with few problems.

Sounds like these people have a malpractice lawsuit goldmine, ya?
:rolleyes:

Ya, using it in very late stages of CV-19 probably don't help much. It not used as a "cure". It's used to alleviate worst case symptoms if taken early on. 100's of doctors have prescribed it with very good results in preventive and early stage care. Many are willing to put their jobs and careers on the line to defend its use and effectiveness.
the NIH started a phase 2b study 10 days ago.

It sounds like hyrdroxychloroquine needs to be pulled from the market as a treatment for those other diseases and the FDA hasn't been doing its job for decades.

Or the media is running another spin.
 

Mike_Jones

Tom Curren status
Mar 5, 2009
11,521
2,323
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'Course saying this had nothing with Trump busting the head of the WHO for facilitating China's deception. Together they at minimum allowed the virus to explode all over the world. Probably the head of the WHO facilitated this after the virus was released from a Chinese bioweapons lab. Now the head of WHO looks poised to lose his job and millions of Chinese dollars. But no, he's not pissed about that.

Whether hidroxychloroquine passes or fails, according to your ilk orange man bad because he advertised hope for a treatment.



Bullshit.
.
 

afoaf

Duke status
Jun 25, 2008
49,592
23,185
113
look, the monkey is still dancing!

dance chloroquine monkey, dance!
 

Clayster

Miki Dora status
Oct 26, 2005
5,677
1,280
113
Many doctors prescribed it worldwide for covid. I don't know if it works or not, but turning it into a political issue is so typical. The doctors prescribed it, and I seriously doubt Trump's opinions about it even entered their thinking.
 

2surf

Duke status
Apr 12, 2004
15,334
2,094
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California USA
www.allcare.com
JUNE 04, 2020
WHO resumes hydroxychloroquine trial after problems are found with a study calling the drug dangerous

(Note) the “media” fed you erbb Karen’s sh!t and you licked it up like honey.
 
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Duffy LaCoronilla

Duke status
Apr 27, 2016
39,121
28,656
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Total fraud.

Derp. Orange man bad!

A study that suggested antimalarial drugs such as hydroxychloroquine were dangerous for those with COVID-19 has been retracted. The study was withdrawn over concerns about the study's data, which was provided by an obscure U.S. analytics company called Surgisphere.
oops, never mind...

What's more, when The Guardian reached out to seven Australian hospitals included in the database, none of them had heard of Surgisphere, and they denied any involvement in the database.
They just fuckking made it up!

Desai told the Guardian that the company has 11 employees. Three of those employees were listed on the company's LinkedIn page as of Wednesday (June 3), The Guardian reported.


"Surgisphere came out of nowhere to conduct perhaps the most influential global study in this pandemic in the matter of a few weeks," physician and entrepreneur Dr. James Todaro, told The Guardian. "It doesn’t make sense … It would require many more researchers than it claims to have for this expedient and [size] of multinational study to be possible."
Couple dudes with a fax machine.