Are there those who were taking it previously among the dead? Seems to me we might want to know that before we throw a ton of it at this disease.
Was wondering the same.
Please clarify.
I took this when I was in the Pacific.
Some people have a reaction to it, others do not.
It never adversely affected me.
There are no demonstrated cases of this prescription killing people.
There are many cases of medically supervised and administered help to people and even full resolution of symptoms and viral presence.
The fact that the Nevada governor pathologically banned this drug treatment tells you that it works.
If you know a Vietnam vet then you know a 'survivor' of this terrible (sarc) drug that was given to millions of military serving in that 10 year skirmish during their typical 1 year deployment there.
Are there those who were taking it previously among the dead? Seems to me we might want to know that before we throw a ton of it at this disease.
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DATA is important. Equally important would be are those who were taking it previously among the RECOVERED. The relative outcomes on both sides are relevant. If you or yours come down with the virus and test positive, I assume youll avoid the medications?
I spent about 30 minutes yesterday looking for an answer to that question. Best I can come up with is rates of infection are lower in known malaria zones. Presumable because many people are on CQ.
There was that one guy who took a different form of it and died. He ingested fish tank cleaner.
Hydroxychloroquine can cause irregular heartbeat if the patient is on certain other drugs, with which it may interact. See Drugs.com for a list of interactions. An irregular heartbeat in and of itself, may or may not be dangerous; depends upon your heart’s health. It happens to interact with several of my medications, but I would take it anyway, if I were hospitalized, so my heart could be monitored, if it would save my life.