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These young adults aren’t changing a thing!
#COVIDiots
A lot of older people aren't either. Entire states in the South have barely changed a thing.
These young adults aren’t changing a thing!
#COVIDiots
No one is talking about this.
These young adults aren’t changing a thing!
#COVIDiots
Exactly what I was going to write. Nice work.Yep, interesting and encouraging. Some important basic medical research study critique notes:
- Very small sample size, not a true randomized trial. Control group was selected from a couple different sites other than the one where they gave the treatments
- Vast majority of patients had only mild disease or were asymptomatic. At this point. can't extrapolate the encouraging results to the sickest patients who could benefit most from active antiviral therapy with much level of confidence
- Main endpoint of interest was seeming to reduce the nasopharngeal viral load to undetectable levels in a decent % of hydroxychloroquine patients and all of the hydroxychloroquine+azithromycin patients. This finding *IF REAL & REPRODUCIBLE*, coupled with widespread screening of patients, could be a PROFOUND intervention to curtail rampant spread of the disease by mildly symptomatic/asymptomatic people.
BAD NEWS:
-In true panic fashion, since this has circulated like wildfire on social media, people are jumping all over this and hounding MDs for prescriptions whether they need them or not. Similar to what we saw with TP, most pharmacies & healthcare facilities already are in "backorder" status with usual suppliers trying to order these meds for patients.
I posted about this but disappeared.
They have run and some human trials in China, South Korea, France, Australia and Oklahoma and all have met with some success. I have been following the press on this for about a week. Very encouraging.
While we are all aware that China is unreliable, the others were all done by competent professionals.
Remdesivir and Favipiravir also seem to be working.
I have no clue how long it would take to start widely using these treatments. Anyone who knows more?
In English??
Obviously has little bearing here, but as a lay person with next to zero actual knowledge pertinent to the topic, my immediate thought upon reading that was, "Tell that to Pasteur."The history of medicine is littered with countless small, non-peer-reviewed and peer-reviewed uncontrolled observational "research" that ultimately turns out to be rubbish...
In English??
(1) Hydroxychloroquine has been used prophylactic for malaria for 40 years.
(2) It has some side effects including teratogenicity.
(3) While its mechanism of action as an anti-malarial is unknown it does have some topisomerase inhibiting activity.
So if they don't test, how are they treating those who show symptoms?My bosses' husband just tested positive. Luckily my company was pretty early and we've been working from home since last Thursday so I'm not too worried, but it's getting closer.
Not exactly surprising info but the doctor said they won't test the rest of the family. Said numbers are at least 10x higher than reported/tested and at this point they're not even testing most who show symptoms
As someone not in the medical field, what is "active antiviral therapy"? If someone gets diagnosed with Covid-19, what is the treatment? If someone can't get tested but shows symptoms, what is the treatment?At this point. can't extrapolate the encouraging results to the sickest patients who could benefit most from active antiviral therapy with much level of confidence.
How they normally treat flu: rest, hydration, OTC stuff.So if they don't test, how are they treating those who show symptoms?
do you think kids went to the beach in Korea on spring break??Vaccines take at least a year... better chance is that they discover a medicine or cocktail of medicines that reduce symptoms and shorten incubation. I have modest hope that’s coming within a few weeks.
The only real hope we have right now is people staying home. South Korea got hit on a similar timeline as us and is already looking up while we haven’t come close to seeing the worst because they took social isolation seriously. If people would really take staying seriously we’d have a chance against this but THIS IS MURICA AND ITS MY RIGHT TO SPREAD INFECTIOUS DISEASE DERPY DURRRR
My mom is 91 and lives alone..I live 1200 miles away but luckily my sis is only 5 miles away...daily calls and a weekly food drop off has been the plan. She tried to take the senior bus but we vetoed that...told her to walk in the park which is down the block if she wants to get out.My 88 year old father lives alone in his house. I'm itching to do a wellness check (lay eyes on him), even though I'm speaking to him daily. I want to do a fridge check (and store run if necessary) and my wife to cook a lot of meals and freeze. Perhaps do a thorough cleaning (he gets no visitors) of his 9 room house, just for comfort. Come up late afternoon, leave the next morning, after an early morning grocery run.
My wife and I are staying indoors with no exposure other than our mail delivery. I am positive we wouldn't be bringing anything to his house. Its just his age, and the uncertainty if we would be putting him at risk. He's all alone outside of neighbors who do look out for him to a certain extent, but I'm sure not lately.
Not sure if that's wise, advisable or even worth it. Or should we treat him like a one man nursing home.
Being the closest family member 90 miles away, this sucks.