>"Studies including only patients receiving HCQ, receiving HCQ from August 2020 onwards, and patients already treated with HCQ for autoimmune conditions were excluded, as well as studies from countries for which mortality data were lacking."
I was not talking about a particular study when I mentioned people with autoimmune disorders. I was talking about people I _knew in real life_ who had autoimmune disorders before COVID started but suddenly couldn't get HCQ because the people running the Covid response decided the best course of action was to take HCQ off the market.
How were people supposed to be using it for covid if the people who had valid prescriptions from licensed rheumatologists and were taking it so they could WALK or use their hands couldn't get any?
>Did you look? Quick Google: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle...
>"remdesivir treatment was associated with significant 17% lower risk of inpatient mortality among patients hospitalized with COVID-19"
I know there's a probably a paper that says that. that's why I distrust all the idiots pretending to be doctors and scientists these days.
At the time she was given it and died I found out later that the World Health Organization was recommending _against_ its use.
Here's the links:
[0]: https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-remdesivi...
[1]: https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/521319-who-study-finds...
[2]: https://www.science.org/content/article/very-very-bad-look-r...