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Dr Raoult Roars — new articles on findings and issues about HCQ + Cocktails for Covid-19

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IHU- Méditerranée Infection, Marseille, is a significant French research institute that has continued its work on CV 19. For the record, here are excerpts from some recent work, headlined from threads where such would be buried:

EXH 1: >>COVID-IHU #15

Version 1 du 27 Mai 2020
Early diagnosis and management of COVID-19 patients: a real-life cohort study of 3,737 patients, Marseille, France

Abstract

Background:
In our institute in Marseille, France, we proposed early and massive screening for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Hospitalization and early treatment with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin (HCQ-AZ) was proposed for the positive cases.

Methods:
We retrospectively report the clinical management of 3,737 patients, including 3,054 (81.7%) treated with HCQ-AZ for at least three days and 683 (18.3%) patients treated with other methods (“others”). Outcomes were death, transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU), ? 10 days of hospitalization and viral shedding.

Results:
By testing 101,522 samples by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from 65,993 individuals, we diagnosed 6,836 patients (10.4%), including 3,737 included in our cohort. The mean age was 45 (sd 17) years, 45% were male, and the fatality rate was 0.9%. We performed 2,065 low-dose computed tomography (CT) scans highlighting lung lesions in 581 of the 933 (62%) patients with minimal clinical symptoms (NEWS score = 0). A discrepancy between spontaneous dyspnoea, hypoxemia and lung lesions was observed. Clinical factors (age, comorbidities, NEWS-2 score), biological factors (lymphopenia; eosinopenia; decrease in blood zinc; and increase in D-dimers, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), creatinine phosphokinase (CPK), and c-reactive protein (CRP)) and moderate and severe lesions detected in low-dose CT scans were associated with poor clinical outcome. Treatment with HCQ-AZ was associated with a decreased risk of transfer to the ICU or death (HR 0.19 0.12-0.29), decreased risk of hospitalization ?10 days (odds ratios 95% CI 0.37 0.26-0.51) and shorter duration of viral shedding (time to negative PCR: HR 1.27 1.16-1.39). QTc prolongation (>60 ms) was observed in 25 patients (0.67%) leading to the cessation of treatment in 3 cases. No cases of torsade de pointe or sudden death were observed.

Conclusion
Early diagnosis, early isolation and early treatment with at least 3 days of HCQ-AZ result in a significantly better clinical outcome and contagiosity in patients with COVID-19 than other treatments. Long-term follow-up to screen for fibrosis will be the next challenge in the management of COVID-19.>>

EXH 2: >>Adjusting series of patients for trial comparisons for COVID –
19 treatments

Author list :
3Audrey GIRAUD -GATINEAU1,2,3,4 (PhD student); Jean Christophe LAGIER 1,4,5 (MD); 4 Yolande OBADIA 1
(MD); Hervé CHAUDET 1,2,3 (MD); Didier RAOULT 1,5* (MD)

Abstract:

Background
: SARS – COV-2 has emerged and spread around the world since December 2019. Studies initiated in Marseille by our hospital centre have suggested significant clinical effectiveness of treatment by combining hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin (HCQ+AZ). However, due to the
urgency of responding to the pandemic, they were not obtained through randomized controlled trials. Alternative assessment methods are therefore needed.

Methods:
We compared our data in silico with those published by two studies comparing 32 other antiviral drugs. For this purpose, random sampling was performed in our cohort to 33 obtain similar groups for disease severity, gender, age and comorbidities associated with 34 chronic diseases with patients included in the remdesivir and lopinavir-ritonavir trials.

Findings:
Dual HCQ+AZ therapy was associated with 3 times fewer deaths than
similar 37groups treated either with lopinavir-ritonavir(9% vs 20%, p-value = 0·03) or standard care 38 (8% vs 25·2%, p-value = 0·001). Compared with patients included in the remdesivir
study by 39 Wang et al., we also showed a significant difference in the clinical outcome (proportion of 40cured patients with negative viral load) in favour of HCQ+AZ (77.8% versus 58·2% p = 0·0001). 42 43

Interpretation:
Although comparison of HCQ+AZ with other antiviral drugs has limitations 44due to aggregated data, this study provides additional evidence showing that HCQ+AZ should 45 be the systematic treatment of choice after diagnosis of COVID -19 -positive cases. 46 47

Funding:
This work was supported by the French Government under the “Investments for theFuture” programme managed by the National Agency for Research (ANR), Méditerranée- Infection 10-
IAHU – 03 , and was also supported by Région Provence Alpes Côte d’Azur and European funding FEDER PRIMMI (Fonds Européen de Développement Régional -51 Plateformes de Recherche et d’Innovation Mutualisées Méditerranée Infection)>>

EXH 3: >>Assay
Randomised Controlled Trials during epidemic

Philippe Brouqui, Pierre Verger, Didier Raoult
Aix Marseille Université, IRD, MEPHI, VITROME,
ORS Paca, IHU-Méditerranée Infection, Marseille,
France

In epidemics there is an urgent need for new knowledge on drug efficacy to help policymakers fight the crisis. Yet the best research methodology to do this is a matter of de bate, write Philippe Brouqui, Pierre Verger and Didier Raoult .

The outbreak of an emerging infectious agent needs the rapid involvement of research to bring new knowledge. Past experience with Ebola virus outbreaks and, more recently SARS-CoV 2, have raised a question over the place of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) as the methodology of choice to
answer clinical questions in an novel epidemic situation. Drug safety and effectiveness is a long process which can take years. For antimicrobials, just 25% of drugs submitted to phase 1 succeed to Phase 3 and further licensing (1). This is why, in an epidemic, drug repurposing is often looked at, because drug toxicity has already been evaluated (2).

An RCT isdesigned to attempt to reduce bias, particularly in trials evaluating new drugs. The principle is to random assign volunteers into two or more treatment options and then compare them against a measured outcome. As RCTs reduce causality and spurious bias, they are considered to be the most reliable form of scientific evidence. For these reasons, they are required for market authorisation of a new pharmaceutical drug and cited by healthcare policies as a mandatory means for decision -making about treatments.

When gold standard becomes unethical

In emerging disease outbreaks, there is an urgent lack of treatments for the new pathogen. When a particular therapeutic option is supported by scientifically demonstrated efficacy in vitro and or in animal model, and supported further by clinical case reports and/or pilot series in humans, it is ethically difficult to argue that the data still needs to be confirmed in an RCT before it can be made available to patients. Especially if it seems “obvious” that control (untreated) subjects will have poorer outcomes than those receiving treatment. As one study mocked, there would be few volunteers for the placebo group in an RCT on the parachute’s effectiveness in avoiding death by jumping out of an airplane, unless the jump had an average height of 0.6 m (3).

When even imperfect scientific data show a particularly obvious effect, it is no longer ethical to perform an RCT since it forces patients to accept either not to be treated (in the control arm), or to be treated with a molecule known to be effective. Consider the advent of penicillin. It took five
patients before Sir Edward Abraham could definitively demonstrate that penicillin saved 100% of patients with staphylococcus or streptococcus infections. Nobody today would dare to test the efficacy of penicillin on pneumococcal pneumonia compared to placebo . . . >>

Food for thought, especially given the fiasco of the seemingly decisive Lancet paper which then had to be withdrawn. The remarks on the gold standard fallacies are particularly significant.

The underlying issue is that selective hyperskepticism is leading to ignoring of cumulatively adequate but somehow unwelcome findings, tracing to ethical weaknesses including the error of imagining skepticism an intellectual virtue and using it to substitute for prudence. We need to restore that due balance to our reasoning and decision-making.

A useful brief summary on prudence is:

Prudence is the virtue that disposes practical reason to discern our true good in every circumstance and to choose the right means of achieving it; “the prudent man looks where he is going.”65 “Keep sane and sober for your prayers.”66 Prudence is “right reason in action,” writes St. Thomas Aquinas, following Aristotle.67 It is not to be confused with timidity or fear, nor with duplicity or dissimulation. It is called auriga virtutum (the charioteer of the virtues); it guides the other virtues by setting rule and measure. It is prudence that immediately guides the judgment of conscience. The prudent man determines and directs his conduct in accordance with this judgment. With the help of this virtue we apply moral principles to particular cases without error and overcome doubts about the good to achieve and the evil to avoid.

Further food for thought, on seven indicative, inescapable first duties of responsible reason: to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to sound conscience, to neighbour, so to fairness and justice, etc. . END

Comments
What evidence are you using for this? And how does that square with the evidence saying no effect (e.g. the VA study, the Recovery trial, the Chinese and French studies mentioned here, or the Minnesota study)?
These are all inappropriate studies or inappropriate surveys. Everyone of them. What does it say when bogus evidence is provided to make an argument?jerry
June 15, 2020
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BO'H, high quality studies implies meeting the do no harm ethical yardstick. That is what is on the table, tied to the use of a gold standard fallacy to fallaciously disqualify cumulative empirical evidence. KFkairosfocus
June 15, 2020
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kf @ 48 -
BO’H: guaranteed success is not in the gift of any empirical, inductive field of study.
True. and that's why you need to have high quality studies that minimise the chances of getting the wrong result.
What you have is credibility and accumulating evidence, which in this case then led to evidence of efficacy with people.
What evidence are you using for this? And how does that square with the evidence saying no effect (e.g. the VA study, the Recovery trial, the Chinese and French studies mentioned here, or the Minnesota study)?Bob O'H
June 15, 2020
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While France has banned HCQ for early use for which it is appropriate, doctors in France resorted to Azithromycin and zinc to help treat patients with good results based on reports from individual doctors. Actually several thousand formed their own little network to get around French prohibitions. https://bit.ly/2XZSkD1 It is interesting to watch the stupidity or the greed of the world's top medical community and press relative to HCQ and Azithromycin. In the article linked to above, French doctors resort to Azithromycin after HCQ was banned but then HCQ was tested inappropriately and then falsely reported by the fake news as harmful in the fake study. And no one is embarrassed. Above India has outlawed Azithromycin. Maybe a thousand dollar drug is in the works and all the researchers will get nice side gigs from the drug companies.jerry
June 14, 2020
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The Lancet study essentially made the medical world conclude that hydroxychloroquine was not only ineffective, but harmful in COVID-19 disease, with 23.8 percent of patients dying v.s 9.3 percent in the placebo arm. This caused the World Health Organization and drug companies to halt all trials of hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine. The authors were from prestigious institutions. Among them: Dr. Amit Patel and Dr. Sapan Desai, a vascular surgeon who ran a little-known company called Surgisphere, based in Chicago. But the studies unraveled, not because of our medical leadership at these prestigious institutions, but because of simple questions asked by regular clinicians, when the data did not make any sense. I couldn’t make this up if I wanted to. They were all on TV, talking about the dangerous effects of hydroxychloroquine, with Desai even questioning the need for further randomized trials in the presence of such, ahem, robust data. More than likely chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine will not be the magic pills we are searching for. Those generally don’t exist and the preponderance of other data seem to indicate that. The WHO trial named “Solidarity” has resumed. We have shifted to other crises. Our heroes, as always, haven’t failed to disappoint. https://www.news-journalonline.com/opinion/20200614/how-medicine-was-hoodwinked-by-bogus-covid-19-studies--dr-dinesh-arabrhampton7
June 14, 2020
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A new drug for preventing lung damage and blood clots in people with coronavirus (Covid-19) is set to be trialled in UK hospitals with support from researchers at our British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence at Imperial College London. In the trial, half of the patients will be given TRV027, and half the patients will be given placebo along with the usual care. The researchers will observe the patient condition and track the levels of important markers in the blood which indicate the severity of illness, in particular markers of abnormal clotting which they anticipate will be lower in the group receiving TRV027. If the findings are promising, the team aim to secure funding for a larger clinical trial to determine whether it made a meaningful difference to patient’s health. The researchers hope the study will answer many pressing questions about the link between severe Covid-19, blood pressure, and the ACE-2 pathway. https://www.bhf.org.uk/what-we-do/news-from-the-bhf/news-archive/2020/june/london-researchers-to-test-promising-coronavirus-treatmentrhampton7
June 14, 2020
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BO'H: guaranteed success is not in the gift of any empirical, inductive field of study. What you have is credibility and accumulating evidence, which in this case then led to evidence of efficacy with people. Evidence that is consistently being shunted aside through a gold standard fallacy. KFkairosfocus
June 14, 2020
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The antidote to RHampton.
Indonesia Claims Five Drug Combinations Effectively Reduce Novel Coronavirus
https://bit.ly/3hpE4ex
Researchers from Airlangga University, Government’s Covid-19 Task Force, and State Intelligence Agency (BIN) have claimed to have found combinations of medicine that effectively reduce the number of Sars-Cov-2, the coronavirus that causees Covid-19 disease, in the human body... the first medicine combination comprises of Lopinavir, Ritonavir, and Azithromycin. The second combination includes of Lopinavir, Ritonavir, and Doxycycline. The third combination includes of Lopinavir, Ritonavir, and Clarithromycin. The fourth combination comprises of Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin. Meanwhile, the fifth combination comprises of Hydroxychloroquine and Doxycycline
From India https://bit.ly/2MY1BFw
Health Ministry issues fresh clinical management protocol for COVID-19 patients... In the case of anti-malaria drug HCQ, it should be used as early in the disease course as possible to achieve any meaningful effects and should be avoided in patients with severe cases.
They however did not like Azithromycinjerry
June 14, 2020
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For the moment, all scientifically admissible studies (conducted double-blind versus placebo) on hydroxychloroquine have concluded that it is ineffective, whether in patients hospitalized in serious condition (including the HYCOVID and RECOVERY studies) as well as prophylaxis in contact cases (two studies conducted on 800 patients in Minnesota and on 2000 patients in Barcelona gave negative results). Dr. Raoult and his supporters raised two objections: 1) the treatment he recommends must be taken as soon as the first symptoms appear, 2) the antibiotic azithromycin must be combined with hydroxychloroquine. There remains therefore a doubt as to the possible interest of associating hydroxychloroquine with azithromycin in the initial symptomatic phase and the fragmentation and poor coordination of competing clinical trials as well as the recent drop in the number of cases in Europe. make it difficult to complete the ongoing assessments. Nevertheless, a study piloted by the NIH is carried out in the USA (patient recruitment started in mid-May). This study plans to include 2000 patients suffering from mild to moderate symptoms but some of whom may suffer from various comorbidities (diabetes, obesity, age over 60) due to the structure of the American population. We should therefore soon know whether the mixed treatment recommended by Raoult offers significant benefits or not. (The follow-up being planned for a total duration of 23 weeks, the final publication of the results will only arrive in a few months, but if significant results were to appear in one direction or the other, they would be the subject of a very rapid pre-publication associated with stopping the placebo if the treatment works, or conversely stopping the treatment prematurely if the side effects prove to be deleterious without any other sufficient benefits being observed.) https://blogs.mediapart.fr/michel-delarche/blog/130620/levaluation-de-lhydroxychloroquine-et-dautres-medicamentsrhampton7
June 14, 2020
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A globally available vaccine is not likely to be ready until June 2021. That’s more than enough time for the French doctors to run several RCTs.rhampton7
June 14, 2020
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China reported its highest daily total of new coronavirus cases in two months on Sunday and infections in South Korea rose, showing how the disease can come back as curbs on business and travel are lifted. Elsewhere, governments including Egypt, Ukraine and North Macedonia have reported their highest single-day totals of new infections since Friday. In the United States, case numbers are rising in some states as President Donald Trump pushes to reopen businesses despite warnings by public health experts. The world is seeing more than 100,000 newly confirmed cases every day, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. https://www.haaretz.com/science-and-health/china-south-korea-egypt-all-report-rise-in-virus-cases-as-curbs-ease-1.8919177rhampton7
June 14, 2020
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With the number of people hospitalized for the new coronavirus continuing to climb in Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott said Friday that there’s “no real need to ratchet back the opening of businesses in the state.” One of the reasons, he said in an interview with KYTX television in Tyler, is “because we have so many hospital beds available to anybody who gets ill.” The state reported Friday that the number of people hospitalized in Texas who are confirmed to have the coronavirus has increased to a new peak of 2,166. That came after three days of record highs this week — reaching 2,153 hospitalized patients Wednesday — and a one-day dip Thursday to 2,008. On Saturday, the state broke another record and reported 2,242 hospitalized patients. I n the television interview, Abbott urged people to still take precautions. “There is this need, however, and that is, every single one of your viewers, they have the total ability themselves to make sure they do not get COVID-19,” he said. “It is their choice about whether or not they are gonna go out and congregate with others or go to a store, whatever it is they may want to do. It is incumbent upon every individual in Texas to make sure that they are doing all they can not to get or transmit COVID-19 as we do open up the economy. You have your own control of whether or not you will be getting this disease.” https://www.khou.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/with-coronavirus-cases-climbing-texas-gov-greg-abbott-says-no-real-need-to-scale-back-business-reopenings/285-88f6e421-d566-4698-82a3-ad0fed1e17efrhampton7
June 14, 2020
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While no new deaths were reported, Utah saw an increase of 332 positive COVID-19 cases Sunday, according to the Utah Department of Health and the state set a record for active hospitalizations at 137. Sunday ended a week in which the state saw the outbreak worsen as cases rose by 1,991 and 18 more people died. Overall, Utah has had 14,313 people contract the coronavirus, and of those, 5,922 are estimated to be battling the disease. That is the highest active case rate the state has seen, rising nearly 1,000 cases in the week. In all, the disease has killed 139 Utahns. Gov. Gary Herbert kept Salt Lake City at the “orange” risk level. But he moved San Juan County’s Bluff and Mexican Hat to “yellow,” and Kane County to “green.” He did say, however, that Utah as a whole won’t be going to “green," which is a removal of restrictions, any time soon. https://www.sltrib.com/news/2020/06/14/coronavirus-utah-daily/rhampton7
June 14, 2020
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Coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths continue to rise in North Carolina. On Sunday, the state reported 1,443 new cases of coronavirus out of the 15,440 new tests were conducted in the past 24-hours. Nearly 800 people are hospitalized with the coronavirus and the state's virus death toll has reached 1,164 people. But, Gov. Roy Cooper said he and his health advisers are still weighing whether or not to move North Carolina into the next stage of their three-part pandemic recovery plan. When he announced the move into Phase 2 of the plan last month, he said it would last at least five weeks, and that period would end June 26. https://www.wral.com/coronavirus/wake-county-tops-3-000-coronavirus-cases-lockdown-restrictions-ease-across-the-world/19144285/rhampton7
June 14, 2020
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kf @ 32 - I don't think this, from Raoult's team, is generally seen as correct:
When a particular therapeutic option is supported by scientifically demonstrated efficacy in vitro and or in animal model, and supported further by clinical case reports and/or pilot series in humans , it is ethically difficult to argue that the data still needs to be confirmed in an RCT before it can be made available to patients.
In vitro studies and animal studies don't guarantee that the treatment will be effective in humans and also won't guarantee that the dose is sufficient. Case studies tell you what happens to individuals, but don't give any reason to generalise (if you treat one person and they recover, that doesn't mean that the next person will recover. A lot of people who get COVID-19 will recover). Pilot series are, well, pilot series, so are with a small number of patients. Unless the cure is a miracle cure, it's difficult to get enough statistical power to conclude there is an effect. Oh, and you might want to look at the fatality rates in the different arms of Raoult's original "pilot study".Bob O'H
June 14, 2020
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Effective treatment? OTC supplements, proper nutrition and a healthy lifestyle
Quercetin and zinc plus other things. https://bit.ly/2YA206n First heard of quercetin from ET on this site.jerry
June 14, 2020
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Here's an eye opener. I assume it is accurate. https://bit.ly/37udEUljerry
June 14, 2020
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Effective treatment? OTC supplements, proper nutrition and a healthy lifestyleET
June 14, 2020
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Acartia Eddie:
Ethical issues that most medical professionals disagree with.
Or they just don't care about them. They took an oath- the Hippocratic oath. That oath is very different from your oath to be a hypocrite.ET
June 14, 2020
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KF
EG, your say-so does not change the long known ethical issues on using placebos. KF
Ethical issues that most medical professionals disagree with.Ed George
June 14, 2020
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EG, your say-so does not change the long known ethical issues on using placebos. KFkairosfocus
June 14, 2020
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KF
BO’H, you skipped over two crucial issues, one epistemological, one ethical. Both come up in:
There is nothing unethical about RCTs. Participants are informed that they may receive a placebo. The canard about “intentionally mislabeled sugar pills” is a great big red herring. They are mislabeled so that neither the patient nor the doctor know who is getting what. And the time factor is also a big stinking red herring. Without RCTs, we wouldn’t have the success rate that we do with cancer and many other fast acting diseases. Raoult‘s refusal to conduct a proper RCT just means that we still won’t have a proved effective treatment if a second wave hits in the fall. An effective treatment that both Brazil and India could benefit from.Ed George
June 14, 2020
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BO'H, you skipped over two crucial issues, one epistemological, one ethical. Both come up in:
When gold standard becomes unethical [--> in text subtitle] In emerging disease outbreaks, there is an urgent lack of treatments for the new pathogen. When a particular therapeutic option is supported by scientifically demonstrated efficacy in vitro and or in animal model, and supported further by clinical case reports and/or pilot series in humans [--> epistemological i/l/o cumulative inductive warrant], it is ethically difficult [--> ethics of knowledge i/l/o first, do no harm] to argue that the data still needs to be confirmed in an RCT before it can be made available to patients. Especially if it seems “obvious” that control (untreated) subjects [--> deliberately mislabelled sugar pills etc] will have poorer outcomes than those receiving treatment [--> do no harm]. As one study mocked, there would be few volunteers for the placebo group in an RCT on the parachute’s effectiveness in avoiding death by jumping out of an airplane, unless the jump had an average height of 0.6 m (3) [~ 2 ft]. When even imperfect scientific data show a particularly obvious effect, it is no longer ethical to perform an RCT since it forces patients to accept either not to be treated (in the control arm), or to be treated with a molecule known to be effective. [-- > so much for, but they signed up]
It is that persistent resort to demands for an ethically challenged gold standard tantamount to no treatment will be approved until the epidemic is over, joined to selective hyperskepticism regarding cumulative evidence that tells me that prudence has been supplanted by an anti-virtue, skepticism. When that is backed by bias, it leads to unresponsiveness to first duties of reason, to truth, to right reason, to prudence, to sound conscience, to neighbour [here, do no harm], to fairness and justice. Something is seriously wrong. KF PS: Cardinal virtues, wiki:
Four cardinal virtues were recognized by Plato and in the Bible, classical antiquity and in traditional Christian theology: Prudence (????????, phrón?sis; Latin: prudentia; also Wisdom, Sophia, sapientia), the ability to discern the appropriate course of action to be taken in a given situation at the appropriate time. Courage (???????, andreía; Latin: fortitudo): also termed fortitude, forbearance, strength, endurance, and the ability to confront fear, uncertainty, and intimidation Temperance (?????????, s?phrosýn?; Latin: temperantia): also known as restraint, the practice of self-control, abstention, discretion, and moderation tempering the appetition. S?phrosyn? can also be translated as sound-mindedness. Justice (??????????, dikaiosýn?; Latin: iustitia): also considered as fairness, the most extensive and most important virtue;[1] the Greek word also having the meaning righteousness These principles derive initially from Plato in Republic Book IV, 426–435 (and see Protagoras 330b, which also includes piety (hosiotes)). Cicero expanded on them, and Ambrose, Augustine of Hippo, and Thomas Aquinas[2] adapted them while expanding on the theological virtues. The term cardinal comes from the Latin cardo (hinge);[3] virtues are so called because they are regarded as the basic virtues required for a virtuous life. They also relate to the Quadrivium.[4]
kairosfocus
June 14, 2020
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RHampton continues to link to fake news about HCQ. It is remarkable how consistent it is. But we now have names of major players in the fake news chain., Novartis and US National Institute of Health. We know the press is continuously pushing fake news. In a time before the internet this corruption would have taken years to expose. Now, unfortunately,it is measured in unnecessary lives lost because it is happening so quickly.jerry
June 14, 2020
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kf @ 21 - I did read it. His arguments are: 1. RCTs take time 2. Conflicts of interest 3. Bias is everywhere Only the first is specifically relevant to a pandemic The second is true, but not so relevant in a pandemic, when governments are more likely to want to throw money at a potential treatment). The third is also true, but it's true everywhere, so isn't specific to a pandemic. Also, alternatives to RCTs are even worse in terms of bias. So, the only relevant objection is time. But, as I've pointed out, Raoult has seen enough patients to have already run a decent sized RCT. By not doing so, he's failed to check to see if his treatment works. Which means that if it does work, he's failed to show it in a way that is convincing to most of the medical community.Bob O'H
June 14, 2020
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Folks, notice, after a considerable period, refusal to directly address what Dr Raoult has put on the table. That speaks. KFkairosfocus
June 13, 2020
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The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) has confirmed five COVID-19 outbreaks at churches in West Virginia, with the most recent outbreak occurring in Greenbrier County. At least 17 cases have been identified at a Greenbrier County church. Gov. Jim Justice immediately ordered the DHHR, West Virginia National Guard, and Greenbrier County Health Department to respond to this outbreak. The Greenbrier County Health Department is managing the outbreak with good cooperation from the church and contact investigation is underway. Gov. Justice has ordered the National Guard to immediately go to the site to begin decontamination, and they will be on site tomorrow. The church has closed for 14 days for environmental cleaning with support from the National Guard and the health department is providing guidance on prevention measures. “I want to strongly encourage all West Virginians, especially when in church settings, to follow the guidelines and use every other pew, maintain social distancing, and please wear masks,” Gov. Justice said. “A lot of the attendance at our churches are those that are elderly and at higher risk, so we are cautioning everyone to strictly follow our guidelines. As I have said many times, we will have stormy seas before we get a vaccine, so it is imperative that we strictly follow the guidelines or the seas will only get rougher.” https://www.mybuckhannon.com/dhhr-confirms-five-covid-19-outbreaks-at-w-va-churches-including-one-affecting-17-people-in-greenbrier-county/rhampton7
June 13, 2020
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There are more than 130 active or planned clinical trials testing the ability of hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine to treat or prevent COVID-19. With negative results from two major trials, some scientists now wonder if the chloroquine craze is over. “RECOVERY is an excellent trial, and probably the best evidence we will have,” says Paul Glasziou, director of the Institute for Evidence-Based Healthcare at Bond University. “We need more trials on other treatments.” Some researchers say there is no definitive proof that hydroxychloroquine is ineffective, however. Novartis and the US National Institutes of Health are both pushing ahead with independent placebo-controlled trials of the drug in people hospitalized with COVID-19. Other groups say the Minnesota study is not the final word on prevention. They are continuing their own post-exposure studies to assess whether the drugcan help prevent infection in thousands of people recently exposed to the virus. Researchers are also proceeding with even larger pre-exposure studies this summer, in which tens of thousands of healthyhealth-care workers will be given chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine to see if the drugs can prevent infection. Results are expected by late summer or early fall. https://cen.acs.org/pharmaceuticals/drug-development/Hydroxychloroquine-trials-turmoil/98/i23rhampton7
June 13, 2020
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Early on in the pandemic, the drug hydroxychloroquine emerged as a potential treatment, following two studies that suggested it might be beneficial. As a result, many patients were given the drug, which is already approved for malaria and rheumatoid arthritis. But doctors soon found the drug was not useful in treating COVID-19, and subsequent research has shown it does not appear to help. Now, doctors in ICUs are turning to the drug remdesivir. It's not a cure, but it's the only treatment that's been shown in a clinical trial to have an effect on the illness so far. Some physicians are also finding success with other pharmaceutical approaches, though evidence remains anecdotal. Cassiere has given ventilated patients steroids to reduce inflammation in the lungs. "I was gun-shy up front about doing that, because I was concerned I could be doing more harm," Cassiere said, citing research from the 2003 SARS outbreak that suggested steroids cause coronaviruses to linger longer in patients. He found that combining the steroids with convalescent plasma, an antibody-rich blood product of recovered COVID-19 patients, appeared to cancel out that risk. https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/what-icu-doctors-have-learned-about-covid-19-how-they-n1225801rhampton7
June 13, 2020
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India’s Union Health Ministry is likely to revise protocols for the use of azithromycin in combination with anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) for the treatment of patients with the severe form of novel coronavirus admitted in hospitals. T he combination was earlier recommended by the ICMR for mild, moderate and severe cases of Covid-19. However, as per the new protocol for treatment, use of azithromycin in combination with HCQ has been removed. However, HCQ will be continued to be administered for mild and moderate cases of coronavirus. "Mild Covid-19 cases may be given symptomatic treatment such as antipyretic (Paracetamol) for fever and pain, adequate nutrition and appropriate rehydration. Tab Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) may be considered for any of those having high-risk features for severe disease (such as age> 60; Hypertension, diabetes, chronic lung/kidney/ liver disease, Cerebrovascular disease and obesity) under strict medical supervision," the new guideline states. For moderate patients, the guideline states the first protocol is oxygenation. ECG has to be done before administering HCQ. Only after ECG assessment should HCQ be given. Remdesivir (under Emergency Use Authorization) may be considered in patients with moderate disease (those on oxygen) and for severe patients if steroids don't work. Tocilizumab (Off Label) may be considered in patients with moderate disease with progressively increasing oxygen requirements and in mechanically ventilated patients not improving despite the use of steroids," state the guidelines. “ Use of azithromycin with hydroxychloroquine should be avoided as both prolong the interval between two waves in ECG also known as QTc prolongation. It causes heart problems. One can substitute doxycycline or amoxycyclin+ clavulanic acid as they are not known to cause this heart-related toxicity," said a top ICMR official. https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/health-ministry-may-rollback-use-of-azithromycin-to-treat-covid-19-patients-1688457-2020-06-13rhampton7
June 13, 2020
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