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The Ivermectin discussion

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 853 ✭✭✭MilkyToast


    Sorry, did you not mean to cast the anti-ivermectin side as detached data-seekers and the pro-ivermectin side as loony conspiracy theorists?

    Because I'm not sure that it would be fair to say that I randomly interpreted that from your post rather than your post very strongly suggesting it.

    “Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." ~C.S. Lewis



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    No, not a bit, they have their own issues. However, I think their position has been more wide ranging from disappointment to outright opposition. Much of that conspiracy stuff sadly is true, a situation that would have been helped as I said by better trial data. TBH my view of them is irrelevant because they never came close to showing regulatory authorities that matter that it worked.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    I don't understand this emphasis on peer reviewed RCDB studies during a pandemic.

    If a substance has excellent safety profile, and been administered in some 3.5 billion doses, and it has a chance of working why would anyone be against its use under a doctor's care?

    Then add all the studies showing various rates of efficacy, it must be even more compelling.

    Certainly I see no reason at all to disallow its use for anything .... whether that be a sore toe or a virus. If it works all good. If not then use something else.

    Doing so is definitely much better than doing nothing at all, which is what was done - nothing until sick enough to be hospitalised.

    As for the studies .... some want studies to be carried out costing millions but for what?

    There is no need to study safety. That has been well proved over the decades.

    All is needed is efficacy ..... and there are multiple studies showing its efficacy, even if one might have some doubts about some of them.


    To add to the list of studies that some dismiss out of hand here is another .... now peer reviewed

    https://www.cureus.com/articles/82162-ivermectin-prophylaxis-used-for-covid-19-a-citywide-prospective-observational-study-of-223128-subjects-using-propensity-score-matching



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,668 ✭✭✭✭odyssey06


    They ran the studies as a treatment using random controlled trials. It failed.

    It wasnt tested at the doses cited for prevention on 3.5 billion people so that is nonsense. It has side effects, last thing someone battling covid is coping with those for a random medicine which doesnt actually do anything to treat covid.

    Cos thats what Ivermectin is.

    "To follow knowledge like a sinking star..." (Tennyson's Ulysses)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    Last I heard Ivermectin is still in use in some 27 countries and those seem quite happy with its efficacy ..... else why continue to use it?

    For those who made a huge deal about its use in Uttar Pradesh, and claimed it was all fake, here is a pic I came across today from that state. Apparently they continue to use it for their 230+million people.




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,533 ✭✭✭Former Former Former


    To add to the list of studies that some dismiss out of hand here is another .... now peer reviewed

    but but but... that's the same study that was posted a couple of days ago. And it's still absolutely ridiculous. Honestly, just read it.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 823 ✭✭✭Liberty_Bear


    That has just brightened up a quiet evening...lovely comment!!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 41,164 ✭✭✭✭Boggles


    That looks completely legit. "Covid 19 Drug Kit".

    Name of drugs in one language, doses in another.

    No way did someone just get a baggy, stick some drugs and a crude print off in it.

    What site did you say you saw it on? Would love to order a pallet.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,668 ✭✭✭✭odyssey06


    List the 27 countries, when they were used as a covid treatment, and the source for it. A real source, not some pro-Ivermectin fake news factory.

    Otherwise based on previous posts, you are either making it up or fallen for some fake news.

    "To follow knowledge like a sinking star..." (Tennyson's Ulysses)



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I genuinely have no idea why you are asking questions that have been answered (including by me) many times before.

    For example you ask here why we would have an issue with a drug that has a "safety profile" that "has a chance of working" being used. I answered that more than once before. Including directly to you.

    To repeat myself (again) however with points I have made to you and others multiple times already (which just makes a comedy out of you claiming we have dismissed you "out of hand" when your approach is to ignore response - then return days/weeks later throwing out the same already rebutted crap again):

    1) There are 1000s of drugs with good safety profiles. Why arbitrarily pick one for no good reason and say "This is safe - lets use it"? That makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.

    2) You claim it "has a chance" of working. Based on what? What level of "chance"? None of the studies I have seen so far suggest it does anything whatsoever. And even when administered directly to the virus in vitro - the dosage required to have any effect at all is simply massive. Many 1000s of times larger than anything you'd get in any actual prescription.

    3) Any drug has the potential to interact with any other. Even "natural" remedies which seem safe enough on their own can interact very badly with other drugs (Random example, look up St. Johns Wort used for treating, among other things, depression). The more drugs we have "in the wild" the more potential we have for negative interactions that cause actual genuine harm. So throwing a drug out there saying little more coherent than "Ah shure it seems safe and shure it might do something if you pray hard enough" is simply awful "thinking" (were I to laud it with the phrase "Thinking" at all).

    4) The number of doses of a drug that has been administered is simply irrelevant on it's own. The question is what has it been administered FOR. Saying "It has been administered 3 billion times" is irrelevant if your argument is essentially "So lets administer it for this totally and entirely different other thing for no other reason than that".

    5) You say "add all the studies showing efficacy". What studies exactly? I am sure I asked you before (maybe it was another user, apologies if it was) and was simply ignored.

    6) You ask why countries would continue to use a drug if it does nothing. Again I wrote answers to this multiple times already in this thread. But this is not uncommon. Doctors for example know antibiotics do nothing against a virus yet they still prescribe them when demanded - despite their knowing that over use of anti biotics is one of the big disasters of modern medicine. And recent review of drugs perscribable in the UK showed an absolutely depressing number of drugs that are in common use - and a drain on the social medical system resources - for which we have no evidence they do anything at all. There is also optics to think of. If a government has a population that strongly demand a drug be used they can absolutely give in to pressure. But even if you ignore all of this (again) the simple fact remains that a groups willingness to use a drug is simply not evidence the drug is doing what is claimed. Every. Single. Government. On. The. Planet. Could decide to implement the drug tomorrow. That still would not be evidence. What you are doing here is - essentially - a variation of the "argumentum ad populum" fallacy. Go look it up. However what you are doing here is claiming there are "27 countries" implementing it's use. But you do not say what they are using it for. Because once again you are conflating it's use for what it has actually being shown to work for in those countries - with your wish to see it used for something else entirely for which there is no supporting evidence.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    1. From where did you get 'arbitrarily'? Medical professionals determined its likelihood of being efficacious based in what is known about the substance and its actions in vivo. You are making things up.
    2. Then you need to read a few more studies I guess, if you have not read any that show efficacy. Do you claim that in vitro is a true reflection of what will happen in vivo?
    3. How does "its use under a doctor's care" have anything to do with this rubbish?
    4. More nonsense ...... great use does provide the safety profile for that substance.
    5. I am sure you are quite capable, should you wish, of finding studies showing efficacy of the drug. But you do not accept any of them because those studies do not come up to your expectations and are not properly funded by some pharma company.
    6. Yet those countries use the substance and claim efficacy. If you dispute that you should take it up with them and have them deny efficacy. Until they do I will accept that they see efficacy in it use.

    It all boils down to one thing ...... believe many many medical professionals worldwide who have used the drug on Covid patients or believe you.

    An easy decision.



  • Registered Users Posts: 757 ✭✭✭generic_throwaway


    Do you honestly think there was someone MORE in search of useful treatments than the frontline medics who saw patient after patient die in agony?



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    1. From where do I get arbitrary? I already explained where I get it in several parts of my post. There are any number of drugs with a good "safety profile". If we are going to pick one out of those 100s even 1000s and say "Sure what harm giving this to everyone for covid" then that is arbitrary unless a valid and coherent reason is given for doing so. Saying "It was given billions of times for something else" is not such a good reason.
    2. "Go read more studies" is such a cop out from you here. If you feel there is a study I have not read and replied to by all means cite it directly and I will read it and consider it. The problem is I have done that multiple times with many studies already on this thread and you simply ignored it all. As for "In Vitro" my claims there are already made on this thread multiple times. Again yo u ignored my posts, even when they were direct replies to you. It is actually quite rare that "In Vitro" observations map onto the real world of complex human biology. "In Vitro" results give us clues as to what might be worth further study but little more. When you need absolutely massive quantities of a drug to observe even tiny effects - then you need some pretty damn good studies to back up the idea such a drug will be useful in actual situations.
    3. What is rubbish? You can not just shout "Rubbish" at something as if that is a rebuttal. If something I said is "rubbish" by all means rebut it and explain the problem with my thinking. Just shouting rubbish at something and nothing else is cowardly and intellectually bankrupt. Please try harder.
    4. Same as above. Shouting "Nonsense" does not make it so. You seem to want to rely on citing how many doses of this drug has been used in our world. Why do you think that is at all relevant here? Absolutely billions of doses of cough medicine have been used in our world too. It would be seriously weird for me to say "Lets start using cough medicine to treat anal hemorrhoids. Why? Well it's safe and billions of doses have been given!". That is pure bloody insanity thinking and you need to get hip to that. That billions of doses of Ivermectin have been given to treat thinks like a parasite causing river blindness - is absolutely zero evidence of any kind whatsoever that using it for covid will do any blood think at all. Not shure how often ya need that 'splained to ya.
    5. Ah the old "I am psychic and know what you are thinking and why" move that the dishonest people use around here. No - if I reject a study I can explain exactly why I have rejected it. If I accept it I can explain exactly why I accepted it. But because you are not actually offering any studies that leaves you in a position to simply make up and pretend to know how and why I would reject them. This is an intensely dishonest rhetorical move by you. I repeat what I said above - in multiple posts to you - now. If you want me to look at a study then simply link me directly to it or name it and I will do so. If you want to use the old cop out move of "There is loads you just need to find them yourself" then you are on your own and no one here seems to be buying that dishonesty. Generally around boards forums no one buys that move. The "There is loads of evidence for my nonsense claims but you have go and find it because I can't be bothered" move is a well known one around here. You're insulting your own intellgience, not ours, by trying to pull it.
    6. Which countries? And what are they claiming efficacy for? And on what basis? You do not want to be clear on those three very important questions when asked. You usually simply entirely ignore the people who ask in fact. You have ignored me when I asked before. You ignore Odyssey when he asked just above for example too. I know many countries claim efficacy for Ivermectin. They claim it is effacious in treating river blindness for example. But as I keep sxplaining to you thats irrelevant. What is relevant on this thread is only A) Which countries are using it for covid B) Which of those countries are claiming it is effacious against covid C) On what basis specifically are they making that claim? Can you answer those three questions at all? So far it seems this is a blatant and powerful "no" you can't. But I await in hope all the same.

    Your "easy decision" is not a decision I would make. Its just another "argumentum ad populum". You should not believe me. You should not believe the professionals. You should evaluate the actual evidence.

    Evidence you refuse to present when asked.

    An easy decision indeed.



  • Registered Users Posts: 853 ✭✭✭MilkyToast


    Can you explain to me the thought process that lead you to ask this question?

    “Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience." ~C.S. Lewis



  • Registered Users Posts: 757 ✭✭✭generic_throwaway


    Here's the process:

    1. Clowns claiming that Ivermectin cures COVID
    2. Medics crying out for effective treatments
    3. Medics, based on the evidence, reject Ivermectin as an effective treatment.

    Does that simplify the process sufficiently?



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    The only important line in that link is:

    "The company did not provide further details."

    Until they do - they have just offered an opinion and nothing else.

    If they have actual evidence to back up that opinion great! As we keep saying - a cheap drug that can be used as a treatment would be a wonderful thing. I suspect there is not a single doubter on the thread who would not like to be proven wrong on this! Me included!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,533 ✭✭✭Former Former Former


    That article says it shows antiviral activity in non clinical studies. We already knew that.



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    It says that no where in the article though. That's information hidden in the URL which is itself quite a weird thing to do.

    But as "former" says above - it is possibly not saying anything we do not know already!

    So as I said: If they will not release details - then nothing to see here. Yet!



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,218 ✭✭✭snowcat




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    They do? Where? Am I reading a different article maybe?

    Which quote do you refer to?



  • Registered Users Posts: 757 ✭✭✭generic_throwaway


    If the weight of scientific evidence supports Ivermectin, that would be great. It does not, and it did not. Maybe it will in future?

    But without scientific evidence of its clinical effectiveness, it would be grossly irresponsible to prescribe it. That is the situation with Ivermectin and every other medicine for every other disease. It's not clear why Trumpians have decided to politicise this one.

    Japanese trading and pharmaceutical company Kowa Co Ltd (7807.T) said on Monday anti-parasite drug ivermectin showed an "antiviral effect" against Omicron and other variants of coronavirus in joint non-clinical research.

    The company did not provide further details.

    Unfortunate that this was non-clinical research. Also, I thought the whole point of the Ivermectin thing was that you can't trust big Pharma?



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,218 ✭✭✭snowcat




  • Registered Users Posts: 59 ✭✭ligind


    It appears that Reuters corrected the headline .



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Ah so a different link / article entirely then? No wonder I was not seeing the quote you were referring to :) You provided one link and when I commented on it you referred to the content of an entirely different study in an entirely different link you had not provided.

    Difficult to follow what you are talking about if you do that.

    So they enrolled people in a double blind clinical study. That's good. We need more of those. Until completion and publication though it still a case of "nothing to see here".



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,218 ✭✭✭snowcat


    Just read the article on a computer not your phone. If you cannot follow the links in an article that's your problem. The second link I added after a quick Google. Your opinion of nothing to see here is tiresome and condescending. Let Reuters and other readers make up their own minds. There maybe nothing to see here and there might be. Again more information is needed but it is not up to you to dismiss an article as you don't have any information either.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I am on my computer. I don't use a phone for boards or articles.

    Perhaps my last post sounded more critical than it was meant to. I was just pointing out why I was confused.

    I just meant you provided one link yesterday. Reuters. Then you started talking about quotes and details that were not in that link. I was confused as to why I was not seeing it.

    You then provided entirely new links - so it just became clear the point of confusion was simply that you were talking about the content of links you had not actually provided yet. Which is fine - but you can understand why this makes a conversation hard to follow, no?

    It also did not help (not your fault) that it seems Reuters corrected their article title to be more accurate - but did not correct the URL to match.

    There is nothing "condescending" about pointing out that a study that is not yet completed means there is nothing to see here yet. It is great a study is being done! But until it is done - there is not much else we can say about it, is there?



  • Registered Users Posts: 1,218 ✭✭✭snowcat


    For the last time the other link is in the quoted Reuter article. I posted it separately for anyone who could not find it in the article. It was and is still there. Im out.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Which is great - and I thank you for that :)

    But think about it - when you link to an article and it contains many sub links - you refer to something in the article - you can not expect anyone to follow every single sub link - and sub sub links - to find out what you might be referring to. It's simply polite when citing the content of an article to be clear exactly what link you are referring to.

    There is no fight here - apologies if I came across as more critical than I intended. It was just a momentary break down in communication / confusion and you have clarified now. All good! Conversation wins again!

    But anyway - studies are good. I like reading them. I look forward to the publication of this one - thanks for informing us about it. And lets talk again when the details come out! And as ever - here is hoping we find evidence (for the first time) that a cheap and widely available drug can become part of our arsenal in the future! Everyone wins if it can.



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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,218 ✭✭✭snowcat


    Actually yes i would expect someone to read the full article and links before making a written rebuke of it. Otherwise I agree with you.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I did not make a written rebuke :) I simply could not find your link saying what you said it did. You clarified. What's the issue? You're making more of this than needs be.

    As I said - lets talk again when (if) the results are released.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    "But without scientific evidence of its clinical effectiveness, it would be grossly irresponsible to prescribe it. That is the situation with Ivermectin and every other medicine for every other disease."

    That is not the situation in all cases.

    Medicines are prescribed off label every day by doctors who believe those medicines will help their patients, without that medicine going through clinical trials for the specific application that doctor is using it.

    That is why we go to trained medical persons - so they can use their judgement from training and experience to prescribe medication that they (the doctor) believes will be beneficial.

    This applies even more so in a pandemic situation. In previous pandemics doctors were encouraged to use medicines off label that were thought to help their patients. Even the good Dr. Fauci is quoted on this.

    Yet the the use of the likes of Ivermectin, Hydroxychloroquie etc were not only discouraged but severely deliberately hampered and banned in some locations during this pandemic.

    It is also true that other advices such as mask wearing and lockdowns are the complete opposite to the advice provided in previous pandemics.

    I have not read a satisfactory explanation for these massive changes in advice this time around.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    Yet the the use of the likes of Ivermectin, Hydroxychloroquie etc were not only discouraged but severely deliberately hampered and banned in some locations during this pandemic.


    That would be because they have not been shown to work and we do now have other options which have been shown to work - molnupiravir, remdesivir, anti-inflammatories such as dexamethasone, and antibody therapies.


    "This time around" as compared to what?

    Post edited by is_that_so on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,533 ✭✭✭Former Former Former


    This argument is utterly refuted by the fact that dexamethsone has been recommended by WHO for Covid for ages now. It's cheap, effective, and has been off patent for decades. That gets quietly ignored by your faction.

    Hydroxychloroquine, seriously? Surely not even the looniest of conspiracy theorists are still talking about that?

    Seriously, it is time to unplug from social media. You are going down a bad rabbit hole.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    "This time around" as compared to what?

    That question is answered in what I wrote - previous pandemic/s.

    Yes there are now other substances available, but not back when they were needed most - before vaccines.

    On the other hand I doubt any efficacy from remdesivir which you list.

    The data on that is even less encouraging than either HCQ or IVM.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    The last one like this was in 1918, so comparisons are a bit academic and the only other one worth noting is the 1968 flu outbreak, over 50 years ago. Remdesivir is not the brilliant solution originally imagined but it is part of a suite of approved treatments playing their part.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    A nice synopsis of events surrounding Ivermectin April 2020 to March 2021


    and to round it all off here is yet another peer reviewed observational study on Ivermectin

    https://www.cureus.com/articles/82162-ivermectin-prophylaxis-used-for-covid-19-a-citywide-prospective-observational-study-of-223128-subjects-using-propensity-score-matching



    Preventive Use of Ivermectin Reduced COVID Mortality by 90%, Study Found

    Yet here and elsewhere we have people denying Ivermectin should have had a place in the treatment and prevention of Covid. 🙄



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    There's more than an an act of desperation on seeking out more reviews of old information and that 2 week old Digger site is just rehashing all of it, with enough links to get you to 1,000 open tabs. Somehow in all of this you continually ignore that other posters would be on the side of Invermectin if it produced enough data to be approved for COVID. Dexamethasone got through with no problem because it was shown to work well, in proper trials.

    As I've said many times new trials and data that support that will make the case far more than some random internet person writing a blog purporting to reveal something nobody else has spotted. That time is running out BTW as we now have about a dozen actual COVID treatments, including a fairly poorly performing antiviral with more on the way.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    .... and what you refuse to do is see the data that has been building for many years ..... including pre-Sars2 ..... as well as the actual results from those locations that have used it.

    Apparently you failed to understand what a "synopsis of events surrounding Ivermectin April 2020 to March 2021" means. That does show that a rehash of events is warranted for some.

    Of course you also ignored the peer reviewed observational study of how effective it has been.

    You know, and apparently rely on the fact, that no pharma company is going to spend the millions of euros necessary on a trial that would satisfy your requirements for acceptance, for a substance that it would be impossible to recoup the expenditure on sales of that substance, due to its being out of patent protection.

    In any case, the information posted is not to try to persuade you or anyone else, but to inform readers that there is more than one opinion, and data to back it up.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    @is_that_so Maybe you could point me to the double blind, randomised controlled trials, using Dexamethasone for those who get Covid and are not hospitalise with Acute Respiratory Distress?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,045 ✭✭✭✭astrofool


    Srsly? There are lots of blind studies involving dexamethasone and corticosteroids, here's one, but you can look up others examining dosage or using inhalers, for the amount you go digging on Ivermectin, that's a pretty shocking question to have to ask:

    Efficacy and safety of systematic corticosteroids among severe COVID-19 patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials | Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (nature.com)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    You neither have to inform nor convince me. Data that persuades regulatory bodies that it should be approved for COVID will do that. I've been aware of the potential of this for two years, largely through some very aggressive promotion of it from people in my circle, often coupled with the ineffective hydroxychloroquinine and of course the attendant Big Pharma/FDA conspiracy. It's still a mystery to me that a bunch of US cardiologists are to the fore on this, even if the context of a divisive Trumpian presidency partly explains how that might be. As has been observed more than once it would not be medically responsible to approve a drug that has not been convincingly shown to work.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    Really?

    Maybe you should read the question before jumping in blindly with a study that is not relevant to the question.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.06.22.20137273v1.full-text

    That's the one, under the Recovery umbrella, that got it recommended. I will say that it's puzzling that you've never heard of this, it's been around for almost 2 years.

    Here's the EMA commentary from September 2020.




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    As has been observed more than once it would not be medically responsible to approve a drug that has not been convincingly shown to work.

    No one is seeking 'approval' for these substances for the treatment of Covid, as far as I am aware. All is being sought, is non-interference with practising doctors thus allowing them to use whatever medications they deem most appropriate for their patients' needs.

    It has long been the practice in medicine for qualified medics to use drugs approved for one illness, in the treatment of others. In fact it has been encouraged.

    Both Hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin are approved drugs.

    Why would they be essentially banned for use in the treatment of Covid by qualified medical personnel?

    Both of those have proven to be extremely safe when prescribed. So there is no known safety concern.

    It has, until 'Covid times', been up to the individual doctors what they prescribe, based on their experience and training.

    There must be some very very good reason for officials to interfere with a doctors practice.

    Up to now no good reason (such as safety concerns) has been shown.

    So, yes, I would take the word of highly qualified doctors (lots of doctors from all parts of the world not just 'Trumpian') who treat patients, over some bureaucrat.

    As you mentioned pharma companies, it should be borne in mind that those producing these vaccines have very dirty histories and are not, based on past practices, to be trusted. They are currently making billions of dollars from the vaccines, in no small part due to the absence of 'allowed' (not necessarily 'approved') treatments.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,136 ✭✭✭✭is_that_so


    Both of those have proven to be extremely safe when prescribed. So there is no known safety concern.

    By doctor treating their own patients. The regulatory authorities are not satisfied with the data so it has not been approved or recommended for COVID. It's not the first nor the last drug that will not be recommended. Anyway moving on here. You're welcome to continue to find more reasons why it's been apparently badly treated.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,045 ✭✭✭✭astrofool


    Elaborate, Dexamethasone has been through multiple successful trials using established methods including double blind trials.

    Do you really want to set the bar at Dexamethasone trial levels for Ivermectin? Have you thought this through fully?

    My feeling is that you're trying to separate a symptom of COVID (acute respiratory distress) away from treatment of COVID itself to try and claim something.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    I asked a question and you responded with a link that was not relevant to the question.

    Simple. Read the question. Answer it or not, I don't really care, but providing links that do not answer the question is pointless.

    Maybe you could point me to the double blind, randomised controlled trials, using Dexamethasone for those who get Covid and are not hospitalised with Acute Respiratory Distress?




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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 172 ✭✭PureIsle


    Again ..... this is not about approval or recommendation. It is about the effective banning from use of those drugs.

    Without that 'effective banning' the drugs would be available for prescribing by doctors according to their own training and experience, just as other drugs are.

    I have found no medical reason for this effective ban.

    I would like to hear one, if available. Without a medical reason then people will look for other reasons why this might have occurred ...... but of course they will be labelled 'conspiracy theorists' for seeking reasons.



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