RSR
Platinum Member
I'm curious how you come to these conclusions? I'm assuming you're referring to the peer reviewed article:1) there is no antiviral drug for coronavirus at this point.
2) the "evidence" for chloroquine is at this point non existent. The French doctor's article is no evidence at all.
3) the combination of chloroquine and azithromycin (an antibacterial) is just a "wildass guess" at an antiviral regimen
4) I'd rather just have a beer as there is just as much valid data that drinking your favorite brew is helpful as there is for chloroquine at this point
5) I'd happily sign up for a clinical trial where I might get either the experimental drug or a placebo as I do think that we should be doing good clinical trials
Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as a treatment of COVID-19: results of an open-label non-randomized clinical trial - ScienceDirect
I tend to put a reasonable amount of faith in peer reviewed journal articles in journals with an impact factor of 4.6.
It isn't a complete study (what study really is? - there are always improvements to be made) but it provides some pretty compelling evidence.
Trying to discredit someone based on appearance/social norms is quite myopic.
Einstein was pretty crazy looking.