Small study, but massive results.
It's becoming clear that there are amost certainly two different early outpatient therapies that will keep almost everyone out of the hospital.
HCQ early combination therapy would likewise eliminate the risk of hospital overcrowding, though with likely lower average effectiveness.
The difference being, it's going to be hard to ignore this now that JAMA has published this paper.
You may know it by its brand name, Luvox. Of course, with flu at the start of the name, even I could have predicted this :)
Crikey, just give them IV vitamin C already (MATH+ therapy), and stop the rope-a-dope play doctor routine. So sick of us being told that this virus needs all sorts of crazy off-label interventions.
Listening to this medical crap is about as uplifting as the magic bullet theory.
The whole repurposing of drugs selected by computer models is really an amazing phenomenon. And SARS-CoV2 seems to be one of the most vulnerable viruses out there.
Add Indomethacin to the “random drug kills COVID” list. And I have this one in my medicine cabinet.
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.12.14.20245266v1.full.pdf
Ivermectin appears better than HCQ.
https://covid19criticalcare.com/i-mask-prophylaxis-treatment-protocol/
https://www.evms.edu/covid-19/covid_care_for_clinicians/
How could something named “fluvoxamine” not work?
Sorry. I’m not taking Prozac for a virus, regardless. I took it once for three days 20 years ago and had a bad reaction to it.
That is Prozac they are talking about which has been around a very long time. I take 30mgs a day for Anxiety, plus Vitamin D, C, & B1.. Although I don’t consider myself Bullet Proof for Covid, good know I have added protection.