Fenrir said:
Infection_Ag11 said:
Fenrir said:
BallerStaf2003 said:
Now would you please post this on the politics board?
They think it's all a conspiracy to keep trump from being re-elected.
Would you say anyone that believes HCQ/Zinc is effective at any point is a liar or playing politics?
No, apart from a select few almost none of them are lying (which requires they know what they are claiming to be false). The vast majority are simply ignorant on the topic (either willingly or unwillingly).
Now one could argue the majority of those touting the drug in this country have a bias towards desiring it to work on the basis of their politics, and that's probably true, but bias in and of itself doesn't man they are "playing politics". We're all biased to some degree about a great many things and often don't even realize it.
I'll also say anyone who hopes it doesn't work is far more likely to be doing so simply on political grounds, especially since it would be great if it did work. To hope such a simple thing isn't effective is to put ideology over people. Such people just happen to appear to be on the "right" side of the debate, but for the wrong reasons.
The question was not directed at you.
I do not disagree with much of what you said although I am not sure I could bring myself to call Reveille ignorant (since lying or ignorant seem to be the only two options you presented).
Ignorant carries a negative connotation but the reality is we are all ignorant on most topics. It's impossible to know a lot about most things.
Among physicians, especially those who have spent a great deal of time outside academic medicine and the research setting, there is very often a relative degree of ignorance when it comes to interpretation of medical research and what constitutes good evidence. What constitutes good evidence also varies amongst specialties. Quality evidence for the efficacy of antibiotics is very different than quality evidence for the efficacy of appendectomies, to give an obvious dichotomy. And outpatient medicine is very different from inpatient medicine, something I can confidently claim as I do both and in ID we often double as the patients PCP (especially in the case of HIV and some chronically immunosuppressed patients).
Someone I think that is escaping those who do largely outpatient medicine is that many of our inpatients are no more I'll than the patients they are sending home with HCQ. Many people with COVID are admitted without hypoxia early in the disease due to either being high risk for worsening disease or social factors (homeless, from a facility, etc.) The argument "those treated in the hospital are all sicker than those coming into the clinic" isn't necessarily true. Moreover, those who do have truly milder presentations are almost all going to be fine no matter what you do.
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