I just got off a 16 hour shift in the ICU despite it being 12 hours, and was surprised to see this thread ballooned to over 60 posts since I last saw it. The majority of my personal census today were COVID patients on ventilators with very high requirements. I'd estimate that maybe half of my patients had been on hydroxychloroquine prior to presenting to me and in early on I their course, the other half not. All of them were in critical condition with persistent hypoxic respiratory failure despite aggressive interventions. Am I going around saying HCL doesn't work? No, because I'm not an a**hole. All myself and other providers have said in this thread is simply that there is no evidence that hydroxychloroquine is effective. Could I be wrong? Absolutely. But in my experience, the evidence simply isn't there and at present there is no concrete evidence that it is effective. I am not telling others not to use it, go ahead, I'm just saying stop going around saying this is a miracle cure and it has a definitive effect when there is NO evidence to support that claim at present.
The thought that clinical providers, like myself, don't have time to review the latest research is absurd. I seek out the latest evidence and guidelines to help guide my care because I actually don't want these people to die. I don't give a flying f*** if Trump or Fauci endorses something or not, because honestly their opinions don't matter to how I practice (although one of those opinions I put much less stock in given their lack of medical training). I get daily updates from the New England Journal of Medicine, American College of Physicians, CHEST, the Society of Critical Care Medicine, Elsevier, and UpToDate on studies revolving around COVID and the multitude of therapeutics that are being evaluated. Each of those entities do their best to relay the latest updates on COVID management and clinical trials. The insinuation that myself and other clinical providers are misinformed is just ignorant, and on par with the F16 poster who blatantly stated that providers who don't use hydroxychloroquine want patients to die.
This will be my last post on this thread, people have made up their minds and drawn their lines in the sand. This topic no longer is a debate over clinical efficacy based on tangible evidence, but one injected with emotion and politics. God speed to the other docs on this thread who continue to fight this futile battle.
ETA: it honestly seems like the pro-HCL crowd are throwing s*** on the wall and hoping it sticks in order to discredit anyone who disagrees with them. In the words of Jacobim Mugatu, "I feel like I'm taking crazy pills".
The thought that clinical providers, like myself, don't have time to review the latest research is absurd. I seek out the latest evidence and guidelines to help guide my care because I actually don't want these people to die. I don't give a flying f*** if Trump or Fauci endorses something or not, because honestly their opinions don't matter to how I practice (although one of those opinions I put much less stock in given their lack of medical training). I get daily updates from the New England Journal of Medicine, American College of Physicians, CHEST, the Society of Critical Care Medicine, Elsevier, and UpToDate on studies revolving around COVID and the multitude of therapeutics that are being evaluated. Each of those entities do their best to relay the latest updates on COVID management and clinical trials. The insinuation that myself and other clinical providers are misinformed is just ignorant, and on par with the F16 poster who blatantly stated that providers who don't use hydroxychloroquine want patients to die.
This will be my last post on this thread, people have made up their minds and drawn their lines in the sand. This topic no longer is a debate over clinical efficacy based on tangible evidence, but one injected with emotion and politics. God speed to the other docs on this thread who continue to fight this futile battle.
ETA: it honestly seems like the pro-HCL crowd are throwing s*** on the wall and hoping it sticks in order to discredit anyone who disagrees with them. In the words of Jacobim Mugatu, "I feel like I'm taking crazy pills".
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.