Guest post by Leo Goldstein
- The use of Remdesivir for COVID-19 was authorized by the FDA based on a single RCT, conducted by NIAID with the participation of Gilead Sciences, the exclusive manufacturer of Remdesivir. A final report from this study was published on October 8, five months after the drug’s authorization.
- The final report shows that at least 35% of the patients were treated with Hydroxychloroquine, probably with Azithromycin. The data in the final report suggests that Hydroxychloroquine, not Remdesivir, was the main factor benefitting the patients in this study.
- Nothing in the study supports the hypothesis that Remdesivir is an effective antiviral for SARS-COV-2.
- The study’s own numbers show an association between RDV and increased mortality in the most severe patients. It is also possible to conclude that RDV is net harmful for most hospitalized patients.
- The trial was conducted and reported with multiple defects, including:
- The study was not double blind, but was reported as such
- The pre-registered protocol was changed multiple times over the course of the trial
- The primary outcome was changed in the middle of the trial, apparently because the researchers noticed a lack of effectiveness of their drug as tried
- The outcome measures were subjective and not reliable
- The study was marred with conflicts of interest, aggravated by the design giving NIAID and Gilead leverage over the hospitals and physicians treating patients
- At least three of the study researchers-authors failed to report grants and/or personal fees received from Gilead recently.
Introduction
This study, also known as Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial (ACTT-1), was registered as NCT04280705, and conducted by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), headed by Dr. Anthony Fauci. The study started as “A Multicenter, Adaptive, Randomized Blinded Controlled Trial of the Safety and Efficacy of Investigational Therapeutics for the Treatment of COVID-19 in Hospitalized Adults,” but quickly became a Phase 3 trial for Remdesivir. It was reported under the title “Remdesivir for the Treatment of Covid-19 — Preliminary Report,” (Beigel – Lane PR, 2020). The most important author is H. Clifford Lane, a Co-Chair of the NIH COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines Panel, and the deputy director of the NIAID.
This study was the only trial that supported the emergency authorization of Remdesivir (RDV) for COVID-19 treatment. Its updated version “Remdesivir for the Treatment of Covid-19 — Final Report” (Beigel – Lane FR, 2020) (also, “the paper”) was published on October 8, and is reviewed here.
The assumption that Remdesivir is effective against SARS-COV-2 is probably based on the similarity of its in-vitro effect with that of chloroquine, without taking into account that chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine accumulate in lungs, while RDV does not (Goldstein, 2020).
Unless stated otherwise, table and figure numbers refer to (Beigel – Lane FR, 2020) Supplementary Appendix, downloaded from https://www.nejm.org/doi/suppl/10.1056/NEJMoa2007764/suppl_file/nejmoa2007764_appendix.pdf on October 11, 2020.
Analysis
Fatal Methodological Defects
Each of the several study defects described below invalidate this study’s results.
Not Double Blind
The paper’s Abstract incorrectly claims that the study was double blind. In actuality, the study was not double blind. Doctors in the European site and “some” of the other sites were unblinded and knew what they were administering.
Too Many Sites
Contrary to common sense and best methodological practices (Kraemer, 2000), the trial was conducted in 60 sites, plus 13 sub-sites. Such a multi-site design is a potentially misleading “centralized multicenter collaborative RCT,” per (Kraemer & Robinson, 2005).
Notice that less than 600 courses of Remdesivir were distributed among 73 sites, with an average 9 RDV course per site – a small sample, sufficient to tease the appetite, but not sufficient for hospitals to draw their own conclusions about its efficiency.
Taking into account the intentional unblinding of the treating physicians and the limited drug supply, the sites could have been incentivized to compete against each other for the best results from RDV, and be rewarded with a prioritized supply of the drug in the future. RDV was believed to be a miracle cure, and the access to it was priceless.
Arbitrary Removal of Sites from Final Statistics
Two sites were removed from the Registry in the May 6 update:
Rocky Mountain Regional Veteran Affairs Medical Center – Department of Infectious Diseases, Aurora, Colorado, United States, 80045
University of Florida Health – Shands Hospital – Division of Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine, Gainesville, Florida, United States, 32610
These two sites started enrolling patients between April 2 and April 15, as indicated by the status Recruiting on April 16. Enrollment in all sites ended on April 19. Neither site was mentioned in the Beigel – Lane (both versions, including appendices), and their removal was not explained. This raises suspicions that these sites were removed because of undesirable results.
Concomitant use of other treatments
Administration of HCQ before and/or after RDV treatment was permitted. Co-administration of RDV with HCQ was also permitted in some sites (which had a written policy of HCQ use for COVID-19) but forbidden in other sites.
~35% of the patients in both Remdesivir and placebo groups also received Hydroxychloroquine (Table S3). ~80% of the patients received antibiotics, but the paper does not specify which patients. 93% of the patients were recruited on March 22 or later, after President Trump tweeted about HCQ & Azithromycin. In late March – early April, HCQ + AZ was the standard of care in some countries (Sermo, April 15). New York state required patients to be hospitalized in order to receive HCQ based treatment. Even before the President’s tweet, it was commonly known that Azithromycin has some effect against the coronavirus, and thus, its purchases had sharply increased at the expense of other antibiotics (Vaduganathan et al., 2020).
The paper gives no information regarding the use of Zinc and vitamin C, both of which were frequently used in COVID-19 treatments (Sermo 2020, April 9).
Substantial Changes of the Registered Protocol
The protocol was changed many times during the study. The primary outcome was changed on April 8 from “Percentage of subjects reporting each severity rating on an 8-point ordinal scale” to “Time to recovery”.
The relevant part of the ordinal scale is:
8 – death (appropriately removed from the scale and counted separately)
7 – hospitalized, receiving invasive mechanical ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)
6 – hospitalized, requiring noninvasive ventilation or use of high-flow oxygen devices
5 – hospitalized, requiring any supplemental oxygen
4 – hospitalized, not requiring supplemental oxygen but requiring ongoing medical care
“Recovery” is defined as getting a score below 4, usually discharged from the hospital.
Defective Outcome Measure
There is a problem with the outcome measurements on this scale. The scores reflect subjective decisions by the doctor, such as “receiving invasive mechanical ventilation,” “requiring noninvasive ventilation” (here, requiring is the equivalent of receiving) and similar. These scores are not objectively measurable, like blood oxygen level or heart rate. And the doctor is likely unblinded and incentivized to evaluate RDV as superior to a placebo. Most secondary outcomes were also defined by the scores on this scale.
Lack of Baseline Information
The paper did not report statistics of baseline conditions of patients. Instead, it reported subjective scores on the same ordinal scale. It also reported selected comorbidities.
Unexplained Data Mismatch between the Preliminary and Final Reports
Referring to the data supplement, the numbers in the Final Report are substantially different from the numbers in the Preliminary Report.
No Benefits of RDV were Shown
The average mortality in the RDV arm appeared much lower than in the placebo group only on the first measurement date – 15 days after the start of treatment. The mortality rates reversed after that. By the end of the study (day 29), the total reported mortality was 11% in the RDV group vs 15% in the placebo arm (per table S12). This difference can be attributed to the differences in the initial conditions and data manipulation by the authors. Tables S13 and S15 support this conclusion.
Table S13
Table S15 displays the differences in scores between the Remdesivir and placebo arms on pre-selected days. Here, a small difference in favor of RDV develops immediately after randomization and stays almost the same for some time. This suggests not patients’ improvement due to RDV, but initial selection or scoring of patients, manipulated favorably to RDV. After changing only 0.1 points over eight days of the treatment (RDV treatment is given up to 10 days), the difference jumps 0.3 points (from day 11 to day 15) within four days without treatment – just in time to measure the outcome on Day 15!
| Day | 1 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 11 | 15 | 22 | 29 |
| Difference | Baseline | 0.2 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.3 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 0.5 |
This table does not consider deaths, discharges, and withdrawals.
Table S15
Table 15 shows results according to the objective National Early Warning Score. According to it, at the beginning of the treatment, symptoms of the RDV arm are better than the placebo arm: 5.7 : 6.1 (the higher score, the worse the symptoms). Similarly to the previous table, the difference increases in the first few days, mostly due to worsening in the placebo arm, becoming 5.6 : 6.6. Then the difference starts to decrease, becoming 6.3 : 6.6 (worse for RDV than at Baseline) on day 11, then increases by day 15. This table does not consider deaths, discharges, and withdrawals.
It is possible that RDV does have measurable antiviral effect against SARS-COV-2 in humans when administered early, but that was not demonstrated in this trial.
RDV Increased Deaths among the Sickest Patients
Even the manipulated data cannot conceal the harm that RDV has inflicted on the sickest patients. Unfortunately, Remdesivir was authorized and recommended for treatment of the sickest patients before the completion of the trial.
The following is the reported mortality by the Day 29 (from Table S5):
RDV Placebo
Score 7 21% 19%
Score 6 20% 20%
The actual odds are even worse for RDV. The following picture is Graph E from Figure S5. It is a Kaplan–Meier Estimate of Survival in the Score 7 group (the most severe group), by day.

The trick is easy to see. RDV patients appear to have slightly better chances of survival by Day 15, the first reporting measurement day. After day 15, their chances drop sharply and become much worse than the placebo arm. The difference narrows again on Day 26, just before the second measurement day.
Of even greater concern is that this graph is very different from the graph published in the preliminary report, (on May 22 and corrected on May 26), which depicted the RDV arm performing even worse.

This graph shows not only the sharp reversal of mortality odds after Day 15, favoring the placebo arm, but also a sudden narrowing of the gap on Day 26, three days before the final reporting Day 29. No explanation to this post-study data changes was given.
Hydroxychloroquine + Azithromycin
Table S8
Table S8 purports to analyze the patients that did not take Hydroxychloroquine. Only 46% (486 out of 1062, both arms) of the patients recovered by Day 29 without the use of Hydroxychloroquine. This percentage is much more significant than any Remdesivir percentages.
Table S6

This table shows median “time to recovery” (MTTR) organized by how soon RDV or placebo was administered after symptom onset. The First Quartile (“Q-I”) of patients were randomized and treated 6 days or less after the onset of symptoms, the Fourth Quartile (“Q-IV”) were randomized and treated 13 days or later. Only patients, who recovered by Day 29 are included. The rest (~30%) are those who died, quit, or not recovered by Day 29.
The Q-III (10 to ≤ 12 Days) had the shortest recovery time – 7 days. If RDV were an effective antiviral for SARS-COV-2, the Q-I would have the quickest recovery because they got it early. The recovery would be significantly longer in the Q-III, when the viral stage is over in most patients. However, the Q-III has the shortest MTTR for RDV. This contradiction alone refutes the hypothesis that RDV is an effective antiviral.
Another remarkable thing is that the MTTR for the placebo group in the Q-I is 24 days, which is 1.5-2x longer than for other quartiles. For placebo, one would expect similar times to recovery, or a monotonous change.
Both contradictions are resolved by accepting that many patients received effective anti-viral treatment, other than RDV.
- Most patients who were randomized in Q-I did not receive this other antiviral treatment and thus, had the longest average recovery time.
- Patients who were randomized in Q-II and Q-III were more likely to receive the other antiviral treatment early, upon symptom onset, and before receiving Remdesivir. Therefore, both RDV and placebo arms in Q-II and Q-III recovered the quickest.
- The RDV arm of Q-III had the shortest MTTR of only 7 days, this means that most of this group’s patients did not receive the full 10-day course of toxic RDV. This effect, stemming from receiving less Remdesivir, created the gap between it and the other groups.
- Q-IV was less likely to receive the other antiviral treatment, or received it too late, and had longer MTTR
- In each quartile, RDV arm reported results than “placebo” arm because of patients’ selection or another manipulation
Notice that somebody, convinced that HCQ has no effect, might misinterpret this statistic as evidence that HCQ interferes with the action of RDV.
Remarks
HCQ and RDV
Gilead claimed incorrectly and dishonestly that HCQ interferes with RDV antiviral effect, and the FDA slavishly repeated those claims. It is explained above how the statistics of trials using both HCQ and RDV might be misinterpreted this way.
In addition, Gilead presented results of a lab trial in a cell culture, in which chloroquine phosphate interfered with conversion of RDV into what Gilead called “Remdesivir triphosphate” (GS-441524 triphosphate, or GS-443902). This result is not related to HCQ, which is taken as hydroxychloroquine sulfate.
WHO Solidarity Trial
WHO has just published a preprint of the preliminary report (WHO, 2020) from the Solidarity trial of four antiviral drugs for COVID-19. It confirmed the lack of efficacy of RDV, which was administered as recommended by Gilead. This is, even though Gilead is well connected with WHO and makes substantial contributions to it.
The Solidarity report has also alleged a lack of efficacy of HCQ, but HCQ was administered in toxic doses, using the same regimen as in the RECOVERY trial – 2,400 mg in the first 24 hours (6x recommended dose), 800 mg for the next 9 days (2x recommended dose). These doses are 4-5x higher than the recommended doses for COVID-19 (and even for malaria).
Disclosed and Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest, related to Gilead
Undisclosed
- Thomas F. Patterson, M.D. – Consultant to Gilead (Personal Fees) in 2019
- William R. Short, M.D., M.P.H., – Consultant to Gilead (Personal Fees) (reported in 2019 and 2018)
- Norio Ohmagari, M.D., Ph.D., – One of the researchers in another Gilead-sponsored study of RDV for COVID-19 (Grein et al.), which completed in early March. This counts as a research Grant.
Disclosed
The following grants and personal fees, received from Gilead over the prior 36 months, have been disclosed by the following report authors:
- Anu Osinusi – Employee of Gilead Sciences, Inc.
- Thomas Benfield – Grants and Personal Fees
- Gerd Fätkenheuer – Grants and Personal Fees
- Roger Paredes – Grants and Personal Fees
- Anne Luetkemeyer – Grant(s)
- Sarah Pett – Grant
- Giota Touloumi – Grant
Unexplained Late Start of Treatment
It is surprising that a drug that is meant to act as an antiviral was given much too late. Only 25% of patients started the RDV treatment within 6 days from the onset of symptoms. 75% of patients started it between 7 and 34 days from the onset of symptoms, too late for antiviral.
With a couple exceptions, the named NIAID/Gilead researchers who conducted this study appear to have most of their experience in HIV, and in attempts of using RDV for Hepatitis C or Ebola, rather than acute respiratory tract infections. Thus, some of the decision makers could be not fully aware of the two-stage dynamics of COVID-19. The viral phase is followed by the immune response phase, and the immune response overreaction is more dangerous than the virus. Immune response decreases the viral load and impact, so these phases overlap. Their overlap is frequently classified as its own phase (Siddiqi – Mehra, 2020, Fig. 1).
It should be noted that early administration of RDV cannot be done routinely because RDV is administered by an infusion (not an injection), thus requiring a hospitalization. RDV is not safe, and its dangers are unknown, thus justifying its use only when the diagnosis is certain, and the patient is sick enough. Finally, one cannot charge $3,000 for treating cough and fever.
RDV & COVID-19 Severity
In COVID-19, the phase and severity of the disease are routinely confused. Patients in the early (viral) phase are routinely classified as mild. Patients with a strong immune overreaction in the late (immune response) phase are routinely classified as severe.
Antivirals are useless after the viral phase. Hydroxychloroquine is useful in all phases of COVID-19 because it is both antiviral against SARS-COV-2 and immunomodulator.
Even if RDV were an efficient antiviral, its only effect in the immune response phase is toxicity (Zampino et al., 2020). It is expected to be especially dangerous to severe patients. Even the manipulated data shows higher mortality rates in the RDV arm of the most severe subgroup.
Suspicion of Differential Care
The placebo arm was reported slightly worse than the RDV arm at the baseline: 30% vs 24% patients on invasive mechanical ventilation (IVM, also called intubation) or ECMO, per Table S1.
Table S3 shows that the percentage of placebo vs RDV patients that received ECMO or intubation in the process of treatment was 45.5% : 34.6% (as-treated vs intent-to-treat population; slightly smaller). This is an increase of 52% in the placebo vs 44% in the RDV group, which cannot be explained by properties of RDV in this trial.
Most of the increase of ECMO patients was due to intubation. Intubation is a controversial procedure in the COVID-19 treatment. It is believed to have been used excessively in the pandemic and has sometimes caused avoidable deaths. The percentage of intubated patients (“need for invasive mechanical ventilation”) is part of the measured outcomes. Given lack of positive effect from RDV and the incentives of the sites, disproportional intubation of placebo patients raises the suspicion that some of them were intubated unnecessarily to improve results for Remdesivir and Gilead. Some of the patients might have died as a result.
More
- Many hospitals have concluded that RDV is not what was promised, according to Reuters.
- This study was published in NEJM on October 8, the same day as another paper reporting old news on the tragicomic RECOVERY trial, and a shrieking anti-Trump editorial “Dying in a Leadership Vacuum”. This is not an accident, but a pattern. The PR version of this paper was published on May 22 – the same day as the infamous (Mehra et al., 2020) was published in The Lancet. Of note, Mehra was affiliated with Brigham and Women’s Hospital, which was contracted by Gilead for an RDV for COVID-19 clinical trial, possibly another one.
- It is strange that the research of a potential treatment for pandemic disease started at Phase 3, which is needed for FDA approval of a novel drug. Phase 3 trials do not allow flexibility necessary for research, especially in time of emergency. It seems like the pandemic was used as an opportunity to shortcut the drug’s approval, which could not pass scrutiny under normal circumstances.
- Contrary to the principles of scientific archiving, the Final Report re-uses the DOI number and the URL (doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2007764, https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2007764) of the Preliminary Report, despite massive changes in the text and appendices.
- The Preliminary Report claimed that the study outcome measure was changed on April 2, 2020 “without any knowledge of outcome data from the trial and before any interim data were available.“ This subsentence is removed in the Final Report, essentially admitting that it was changed with the knowledge of the outcome data.
- The unusually large number of sites and their selection by Gilead might indicate an attempt to co-opt influential institutions. (Roussel & Raoult, 2020) found a nearly perfect correlation between the amounts received from Gilead and public opposition to hydroxychloroquine in France.
- If anybody wants to test the hypothesis that HCQ and HCQ + AZ are effective for COVID-19 treatment, re-analysis of the raw data from this study would work.
- This analysis does not cover reporting of adverse events from the study
No Competing Interest
The author declares no competing interest.
No funding was provided for this work.
All relevant ethical guidelines have been followed.
References
John H. Beigel, M.D., Kay M. Tomashek, M.D., M.P.H., Lori E. Dodd, Ph.D., Aneesh K. Mehta, M.D., Barry S. Zingman, M.D., Andre C. Kalil, M.D., M.P.H., Elizabeth Hohmann, M.D., Helen Y. Chu, M.D., M.P.H., Annie Luetkemeyer, M.D., Susan Kline, M.D., M.P.H., Diego Lopez de Castilla, M.D., M.P.H., Robert W. Finberg, M.D., Kerry Dierberg, M.D., M.P.H., Victor Tapson, M.D., Lanny Hsieh, M.D., Thomas F. Patterson, M.D., Roger Paredes, M.D., Ph.D., Daniel A. Sweeney, M.D., William R. Short, M.D., M.P.H., Giota Touloumi, Ph.D., David Chien Lye, M.B., B.S., Norio Ohmagari, M.D., Ph.D., Myoung-don Oh, M.D., Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios, M.D., Thomas Benfield, M.D., Gerd Fätkenheuer, M.D., Mark G. Kortepeter, M.D., Robert L. Atmar, M.D., C. Buddy Creech, M.D., M.P.H., Jens Lundgren, M.D., Abdel G. Babiker, Ph.D., Sarah Pett, Ph.D., James D. Neaton, Ph.D., Timothy H. Burgess, M.D., M.P.H., Tyler Bonnett, M.S., Michelle Green, M.P.H., M.B.A., Mat Makowski, Ph.D., Anu Osinusi, M.D., M.P.H., Seema Nayak, M.D., and H. Clifford Lane, M.D. for the ACTT-1 Study Group Members, Remdesivir for the Treatment of Covid-19 — Final Report, NEJM, 2020, https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2007764
Beigel, …, Lane for the ACTT-1 Study Group Members, Remdesivir for the Treatment of Covid-19 — Preliminary Report, NEJM, 2020, available from https://www.nejm.org/doi/suppl/10.1056/NEJMoa2007764/suppl_file/nejmoa2007764_preliminary-report.pdf (without appendices)
Goldstein, Leo; Remdesivir has only insignificant antiviral effect against SARS-COV-2 but dangerous adverse events, defyccc.com, 2020, https://defyccc.com/wp-content/uploads/RDV-ineffective-in-COVID-19-Final-Draft.pdf
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Mandeep R Mehra, Sapan S Desai, Frank Ruschitzka, Amit N Patel, RETRACTED: Hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine with or without a macrolide for treatment of COVID-19: a multinational registry analysis, The Lancet, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31180-6
Y. Roussel, Y.; Raoult, D.; Influence of conflicts of interest on public positions in the COVID-19 era, the case of Gilead Sciences, New Microbes and New Infections, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nmni.2020.100710
Sermo, Zinc and Vitamins C and D recommended by global physicians to treat and build resistance to COVID-19, April 8, 2020, https://www.sermo.com/press-releases/sermo-reports-zinc-and-vitamins-c-and-d-recommended-by-global-physicians-to-treat-and-build-resistance-to-covid-19/
Sermo, Week 3 Results: Globally 17% Point Increase in COVID Treaters Who Have Used Hydroxychloroquine (33%-50%) and Azithromycin (41%-58%), April 15, 2020, https://www.sermo.com/press-releases/sermo-reports-week-3-results-globally-17-point-increase-in-covid-treaters-who-have-used-hydroxychloroquine-33-50-and-azithromycin-41-58/
Siddiqi, Hasan K.; Mehra, Mandeep R.; COVID-19 illness in native and immunosuppressed states: A clinical–therapeutic staging proposal, The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation, March 20, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healun.2020.03.012
Vaduganathan M, van Meijgaard J, Mehra MR, Joseph J, O’Donnell CJ, Warraich HJ. Prescription Fill Patterns for Commonly Used Drugs During the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States. JAMA. 2020. doi:10.1001/jama.2020.9184
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The US health care system is a bone-fide, unadulterated mess and I have a hard time finding a way out.
Everything has consolidated into corporate entities. Hospitals and doctor practices are all giant corporations. Small practices just can’t operate anymore due to the massive overhead requirements forced by the governments (state and local). If your doctor belongs to a “practice” that doesn’t have an agreement with the hospital down the street, you are out of luck going to that hospital. We used to have 4 independent hospitals in our area and my doctor (then in a 2 doc practice) used to have privileges in all 4. Today he has but one.
Every patient is treated with the same protocols within a hospital or clinic. The doctor has very limited say. If you are a small company and have a new drug or medical device that will reduce costs and save lives, unless you have the money to pay off a clinic or hospital, it is next to impossible to get a clinical trial going because big pharma basically has all the patients bought and paid for. Hospitals (corporations) generally won’t accept your trial and even if they somehow do, qualifying patients that may benefit may not have the option to participate because a big pharma has paid the hospital to recruit the patients into their trials. The patients are the biggest losers.. a lot of times with their death. And quite frankly no one cares.
This remdesivir trial is so typical. It was showing no value before the trial but that doesn’t matter. Do the trial, come up with fudged numbers and get the FDA to approve its use anyway.
Case in point on the ‘Protocol’ thing.
I have type 2 diabetes and I get lab work done on a quarterly basis along with a doctor visit.
H1C is, generally, 6.1 – 6.3 on NO medication. Generally, considered pretty good numbers even on Meds.
BP is, generally, 132/70. A little high, but nothing to worry about.
Cholesterol HDL 88 Triglycerides 119 LDL 63 or there about.
Every visit I get the same recommendations for a blood sugar med, a BP med and a Statin. They’re recommended because those meds are PROTOCOL for Type 2 diabetes regardless of what the individual needs of the patient are. The doctor tells me I don’t need them and then recommends them so that he is following protocol. More than a little insane.
The quarterly lab work and visits are required as part of my insurance coverage and, while the doctor tells me I could get by with an annual physical, my employer is self insuring, administered through one of the big health networks, and quarterly visits for a chronic condition is their requirement for being covered.
On a side note. I paid for a Covid19 antibody test and came up positive. I’ve been told that I’m either, immune, or not immune. Seems there’s some question about that point along with whether I can be vaccinated safely, or not.
I was very ill the first week of January of this year and haven’t had so much as a sniffle since. I’m figuring I was an early adopter of Covid19. Thought I had the flu, did the usual C and Zinc thing, and had a miserable 5 days or so. Not the worst ‘flu’ bug I’ve ever had. The one in 79′-80′ kicked my ass as a teen. I was out of school for two weeks and didn’t have any sense of taste or smell for half a year afterward.
Cheers
Max P
That’s called the clinical pathway model, in which patients are channeled into slots and treated alike regardless of their individual pathophysiologies that might deviate from the norm for that slot. It turned doctors into cogs in a machine who really can’t think outside the box.
COVID-19: All the wrong moves in all the wrong places
https://stke.sciencemag.org/content/13/649/eabe4242
Clinical treatment protocols have been developed largely because of the extensive evidence that physicians fail to detect many treatable conditions, and when detected fail to treat sufficiently, including per current evidence.
An example is blood pressure. There is vast evidence that docs will medicate patients to a certain degree, but not further, to evidence-based clinical goals. Docs fail to go further either because they are afraid to cause the level of side effects that would occur, or because they do cause side effect complaints, and back off.
There is a Wikipedia entry for “therapeutic inertia” to get you started.
Clinical pathways can improve this.
Also, there are a fair number of situations where docs under-treat minorities relative to white patients. Clinical treatment pathways in some cases reduce this disparity since they reduce individual discretion in treatment decision-making, which is where these racial biases enter.
A lot of what physicians do is very routine and formulaic. So, why not follow a formula or a routine? Why pretend each patient is a blank canvas demanding an original work of art?
What was the role of Obamacare in this mess?
The article is well written. But I think it’s fair to ask who is Leo Goldstein? A Google search turns up a few hits but none of them is an expert in disease or drugs.
You inability to address any of the points in the article, or add anything of value to the discussion, as well as your use of the appeal to authority logical fallacy is noted.
1) The article is well written.
2) The author is not noted as an expert in disease or drugs.
3) What is your point?
From all I’ve read and listened to about this virus and the many medications that there are in helping to get over this illness — this is the way I see it, I may well be quite wrong.
At its basics this virus less to do with having a lung infection and more to do with the virus’s attack on red blood cells. This virus attack is two fold on the red blood cells, increasing the clotting, and lowering red blood cell’s ability to carry oxygen to the rest of the body. This virus changes the shape of the red blood cells (https://www.msn.com/en-in/health/medical/red-blood-cell-changes-could-help-identify-covid-patients-with-higher-death-risk-study-finds/ar-BB19nBmy ) — could this not be used for better diagnostic tests than the error prone PCR test? This virus binds to the ACE2 part of the cells.
So should it be that surprising to medical researchers that such medications as hydroxychloroquine should work in blocking this virus? Hydroxychloroquine also binds to the ACE2 part of the cells. Hydroxychloroquine as an anti-malarial drug interferes with the way the malarial parasite attacks/attaches to red blood cells while improving its oxygen carrying capacity.
Note — The three major co-morbidities are not lung problems – diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and kidney disease but these would be made worse by low blood/oxygen levels.
Maybe the success of HCQ treatment depends on where you live? /s
From hcqmeta.com “Significantly more studies in North America report negative results compared to the rest of the world” based on their study of 121 HCQ trials around the world.
Overall they report “HCQ is effective for COVID-19. The probability that an ineffective treatment generated results as positive as the 121 studies to date is estimated to be 1 in 27 million (p = 0.000000037).”
I haven’t seen hcqmeta.com praised or panned on WUWT yet, but I’m sure it will be shortly….
Dr John Campbell, who has a daily blog update on Covid-19, cites a new (8/24) pro-HCQ study:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uzXHnUViro&feature=share
Belgium Low-dose Hydroxychloroquine Therapy and Mortality in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19: A Nationwide Observational Study of 8075 Participants (International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, 24 August)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924857920303423
Campbell claims no-effect studies used too high a dose.
The Belgian study didn’t employ zinc. If it had, maybe its results would have been better.
Results
8075 patients with complete discharge data
HCQ group, n = 4,542
Deaths, 804, (17.7%)
no-HCQ group, n = 3,533
Deaths, 957 (27.1%)
Multivariable analysis:
Mortality was lower in the HCQ group compared to the no-HCQ group
Hazard ratio = 0.684
Estimated direct-adjusted mortality at 40 days
19.1% with HCQ alone
26.5% with supportive care only
Mortality in the HCQ group was reduced
Both in patients diagnosed in less than 5 days and more than 5 days
Conclusions
Compared to supportive care only, low-dose HCQ monotherapy was independently associated with lower mortality in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 diagnosed and treated early or later after symptom onset.
I am no expert on these trials, but if you are interested in looking at results of different studies, this page could be helpful. https://c19study.com/
SCANDAL:
The French Ministry of Health may be organizing the shortage of hydroxychloroquine putting pressure on Sanofi to stop delivering stocks of hydroxychloroquine to the central pharmacy of the University Hospital Institute in Marseille that so far as treated all patients to great results.
Professor Raoult explains in French:
https://www.mediterranee-infection.com/decision-de-lansm-sur-lhydroxychloroquine-ce-que-nous-en-pensons-ce-que-nous-allons-faire/
If this is confirmed, then it is utterly stupid from authorities:
1) without treatment, ICU and deaths, that were among the lowest in the world in Marseille, will rise demonstrating in spite of themselves the benefit of hydroxychloroquine associated with azithromycin
2) since the organization of this shortage is known, described and publicized, the double speak of French health authorities will be exposed and thus they would discrediting themselves.
It is very interesting that there is a cluster of communicable disease experts in French Marseille and that that cluster of communicable disease experts highly recommend HCQ plus AZ, based on months of clinical use treating covid patients.
Stupid is when people make a mistake due to a lack of care. What is happening is not ‘Stupid’, it is mass murder.
Stopping delivery of a drug (that was been used for more than two decades) that is highly effective to stop a pandemic is a criminal act.
When crimes are committed and there are no charges…. There is a reason why there are no charges.
Deep state corruption. Our government does not work (the government is not on the side of the people and our legal system is corrupt to the core) because of deep state corruption.
Deep state corruption ends when hundreds of people go to jail and lose all of their money.
Those people in our system FDA, CDC, who are implicated in the conspiracy. and the politicians need to be charged with conspiracy to commit mass murder. People died because of their actions.
There is an effective treatment even cheaper than HCQ – Vitamin D.
Trump was given that as part of his treatment.
This study from Spain is quite astonishing in its results:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960076020302764
Note also that their standard treatment id HCQ + Zinc. it’s only countries with rampant TDS that are willing to kill hundreds, if not thousands of people to satisfy their blind hatred.
Targeting the endolysosomal host-SARS-CoV-2 interface by clinically licensed functional inhibitors of acid sphingomyelinase (FIASMA) including the antidepressant fluoxetine
An anti-depressivum as “new” drug against Cov-19
When taken early enough garlic is at least as effective as any other “antiviral.
When enough is taken ‘social distancing’ is not a problem.
There is SO MUCH potentially interesting data missing in these studies that it defies explanation. For example, it would be interesting to know the blood type, race, and sex of patients. It would be interesting to have some kind of record of the use of Zinc, various vitamins, quinine, and other drugs and supplements. This allows data mining to look for patterns – one cannot assume that all blood types, races, and sexes have equal outcomes.
It does not surprise me that anti-virals are not given until after 6 days…it generally takes time for symptoms to become pronounced enough to seek a hospital.
The biggest problem uncovered so far with all these medical studies seems to be twofold – medical professionals seem unable to organize good studies that still help patients, and their biases seem to overwhelm their rational thinking. Add into this the outright fraud of liberal leaning organizations that just want to embarrass Trump and you have BAD SCIENCE.
It makes me wonder if any of this will ever be addressed once the crisis passes?
Chlorine Dioxide is all you need to overcome COVID-19 as well as a huge number of other illnesses. Thirty dollars will produce enough Chlorine Dioxide to treat hundreds of people, I know because I have produced it and used it to treat myself and was shocked by the results.
https://www.collective-evolution.com/2020/05/20/was-trump-right-new-study-shows-success-with-use-of-chlorine-dioxide/
Authorities in Guayaquil, Ecuador, which was particularly hard hit early in the pandemic, developed a treatment regimen of HCQ and azithromycin in the early stage of infection and nitazoxanide in the advanced stage of the disease. Their mortality rates fell sharply after implementing this treatment regimen.
The Oxford Recovery Trial exhibits a noticeable “design to fail”about it. Why such HUGE overdoses?
Hospitalised patients,already in serious condition.
See Prof Landray interview on France Soir. See him struggle when questioned about the doses received by patients.The french medical expert was dumbfounded by the Profs reply.
Right on!
Here is the interview of Landray link: http://www.francesoir.fr/politique-monde/interview-exclusive-martin-landray-recovery-hydroxychloroquine-game-over-uk
Here are other links from France-Soir
http://www.francesoir.fr/societe-sante/oxford-authors-british-clinical-trial-recovery-attempt-hide-deaths-overdose?
http://www.francesoir.fr/aglais-remdesivir-une-molecule-dinteret-therapeutique-tres-discutable-sur-le-covid-19?
One of the study’s flaws was: “Arbitrary Removal of Sites from Final Statistics.”
Reminds me of the what happened with the Surface Stations network and how NASA/GISS data have been (using unproven & inconsistent methods) adjusted to account for the retirement, miss-management, and relocation of Stations, as well as cherry-picking of data and other distortions of climate models and studies funded by federal grants (e.g., no clouds).
One common element is the involvement of government bureaucrats.
Ok.
Just trying a further contribute with my rumblings.
In consideration of all considered medications there, of any kind, the possibilities of the best application(s) and/or combos possible there, it is huge… and even mesmerizing.
When in some cases, some applications and combos look and seem and also really considered rightfully so as miracles…rightly so,
but, but but, this so till one comes to consider the danger and fatality of IDS.
The list of available medications that work or could work in the case of IDS, is far far too short.
Not only remdesivir will not work, but even the antibody plasma treatment will not be good enough… and will consist with a high potential of making things worse before it helping it.
HCQ, and the class that it belongs, a very very short and little class, does first no harm in consideration of IDS, makes not things worse and still assist possitively, even when in comparing with other medications not found to be so potential, still if applied properly and in time can be the only among very very few medications that makes a difference in consideration of an IDS condition… when and where a proper IDS condition happens to be a very or considerably a very very high risk health condition in severity or/and fatality.
In the modern times, we living in, with this whole evolution in technology and medications available there, we still fail to realize and acknowledge openly, that when it comes to a proper IDS condition the medical arsenal we posses for treatment is far too limited… far too short and far too little.
And the worse, we still keep ignoring it, even when so little there, and many times over and over keep failing to even apply it properly and correctly, that little there is.
Neither remdesivir or antibody treatment of any kind belongs in that very short least of medications that works in the case of IDS.
Neither vaccines or antibiotics work or help there at all, no any such treatments part of that very short list of medications that do work and could make a difference in the case of an IDS condition.
So, when it comes to COVID-19;
In one case, the soft normal one, the list of medications and treatments to help and assist, in combos also,
it is huge.
But in the other case, the very lethal “COVID-19” of hospitals, as it happened when it did, the list of medications that could help, if applied in time and correctly, it is still very very very short one indeed.
cheers
It appears there are other anti-viral cures for covid in addition to HCQ.
Invermectin and Annita… two broad spectrum anti-parasite drugs also ‘cure’/stop covid from replicating if give as soon as covid symptoms appear according to Brazil’s President Bolsonaro.
The standard approach for covid should be anyone that has symptoms receives early anti viral treatment with of probably a half dozen effective treatments.
The Covid mass murder scandal is only the tip of the iceberg.
Logically we should be using the cheapest, safest, medical treatments should be the first line of defense against covid. That would be correcting the population’s Vit. D deficiency. That would also reduce all medical costs by roughly 70%. It is 100% all about the money.
It appears the French have used anti virals to reduce the covid death rate by a factor of five.
France had 52,000 new covid cases, the highest ever recorded. The French covid death rate has dropped which explains why the French are no longer isolating at home.
The French response to high covid new cases, is to close bars and restaurants from 10 pm to 6 am.
Those responsible for fake medical ‘research’ papers to hide HCQ…
Senior FDA officials and senior CDC official who it appears are hiding other cures for covid…
… need to be charged with mass criminal negligence resulting in death, lose all of their money, and no longer be allowed to work in the medical industry.
Cure not vaccine says Bolsonaro Brazil President
Invermectin and Annita… two broad spectrum anti-parasite drugs.
https://news.yahoo.com/brazils-bolsonaro-says-cure-not-162937636.html
Brazil’s Bolsonaro says cure, not vaccine, way out of coronavirus crisis
“I’m an example, I took chloroquine, others took invermectin, others took Annita,” Bolsonaro said also referring to two broad-spectrum anti-parasite drugs.
“Everything indicates that everyone that took one of these three alternatives early on was cured,” he added without providing any scientific evidence to support his statement.
None of the drugs mentioned by Bolsonaro have been proven to work and none are authorized for the treatment of COVID-19 in Europe, for example.
Trump was berated for saying the drug worked and then was actively restricted from use.
Trump might have been a bit overly optimistic: “HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE & AZITHROMYCIN, taken together, have a real chance to be one of the biggest game changers in the history of medicine. ”
Regardless of the final outcome, the hype was irresponsible
What was hyped?
The hype by who?
Interesting.
Unfortunately it’s all about politics and feelings (Trump said it’s good so its bad). Facts don’t matter anymore.
Leo Goldstein, thank you for the essay.
Hydroxychloroquine is useful in all phases of COVID-19 because it is both antiviral against SARS-COV-2 and immunomodulator.
Has that been shown? The supporters of HCQ that I have read have claimed that it only works when administered early.
It complements the body’s defenses. HCQ acts as a border guard. It’s most effective when administered early, and with smaller doses to reduce side-effects. It’s most effective when combined with Zn to inhibit reproduction and Az to reduce infections and inflammation.
The claim “only works when administered early” was Didier Raoult’s very first position; he admitted quite some time ago that HCQ is more useful that just in that case.
OTOH waiting as much time as possible and testing the drug too late to be useful is an old and tired strategy that has only impressed haters. But it really did impress haters!
Note that even in the criminal m u r d e r plot called RECOVERY – which is officially the best the UK medical institutions have to offer (which means the UK is just a thug failed state) – HCQ seems to have done some good. (Of course the protocol was designed to avoid being a scientifically useful experiment – it was a socially useful experiment, the same way a terror attack in France is.)
Here’s more:
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/study-shows-hydroxychloroquine-may-be-effective-for-outpatients-with-covid-19
Early treatment study Source Study Page
Derwand et al., International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents, doi:10.1016/j.ijantimicag.2020.106214 (preprint 7/3) (Peer Reviewed)
COVID-19 Outpatients – Early Risk-Stratified Treatment with Zinc Plus Low Dose Hydroxychloroquine and Azithromycin: A Retrospective Case Series Study
79% lower mortality and 82% lower hospitalization with early HCQ+AZ+Z (~
No cardiac side effects. Retrospective 518 patients (141 treated, 377 control).
“The study was not double blind, but was reported as such”
->
Raoult was accused of not following the intended protocol in his trial of HQC
“The pre-registered protocol was changed multiple times over the course of the trial”
->
Raoult was accused for changing the measured value (once) during trial
“The primary outcome was changed in the middle of the trial, apparently because the researchers noticed a lack of effectiveness of their drug as tried
The outcome measures were subjective and not reliable”
->
The trial of HQC measured viral load at a given day (criticized as arbitrary) by RT-qPCR, a method widely criticized as not reliable and not reproducible… but not subjective.
“The study was marred with conflicts of interest, aggravated by the design giving NIAID and Gilead leverage over the hospitals and physicians treating patients”
Raoult was accused of having a conflict because of (past?) financing by maker of HQC – a lab that doesn’t want to be associated with any of that, that seems to hate that controversy, and that discouraged HQC use for COVID.
Among all accusation against Didier Raoult, that accusation of conflict of interest is one of the most stupid. These Raoult haters are usually extremely stupid, and are hated in France.
Nothing I wrote comes close to a defense of Didier Raoult. It’s just that his adversaries are too lame.