Parasite wrote:So when is China going to be held accountable for this?
Have they ever been accountable in there history?
They beheaded that dude that sold bunk dog food so maybe the behead a dr.
Moderators: bisme37, Parliament10, canman1971, shackles10, snowman, Froob, Darthlukey, Shak_Celts
Parasite wrote:So when is China going to be held accountable for this?
threrf23 wrote:Bleeding Green wrote:Were they protesting in the Hubei? All those protestors eating bat soup and gorilla meat, 700 miles from where the protests were, making 15% the income of the average Hong Kong resident.
I mean, the Chinese government could have intended a small scale trial run.
Manocad wrote:I have an engineering degree, an exceptionally high IQ, and can point to the exact location/area of any country on an unlabeled globe.
Curmudgeon wrote:You can't blame China for having 1.4 billion people and being the perfect incubator for this kind of thing. Viruses mutate, that's just what they do.
What we need is a very well-funded group of medical researchers at the CDC (or elsewhere) that anticipates these mutations and learns how to create vaccines quickly. The trick is to stay one step ahead. We haven't.
President says coronavirus will 'go away' as pressure grows for economic relief | “It will go away. Just stay calm. It will go away,” “We want to protect our shipping industry, our cruise industry, cruise ships. We want to protect our airlines industry.”
watsonthedragon wrote:Curmudgeon wrote:You can't blame China for having 1.4 billion people and being the perfect incubator for this kind of thing. Viruses mutate, that's just what they do.
What we need is a very well-funded group of medical researchers at the CDC (or elsewhere) that anticipates these mutations and learns how to create vaccines quickly. The trick is to stay one step ahead. We haven't.
Correct. We need to be proactive, not reactive. Hell, the US has barely even been reactive up to this point.
KGboss wrote:Brown doesnt need you to clean his jock strap for him
Captain_Caveman wrote:You are perfectly welcome to never read or respond to my posts ever again. I don't find you particularly knowledgeable or insightful from anything I have read to date.
Bleeding Green wrote:Seems about as likely as Jamal Crawford being signed by the Celtics.
threrf23 wrote:Bleeding Green wrote:Seems about as likely as Jamal Crawford being signed by the Celtics.
Celtics’ Jaylen Brown: “I think Jamal Crawford can still play, I say let him go”
Manocad wrote:I have an engineering degree, an exceptionally high IQ, and can point to the exact location/area of any country on an unlabeled globe.
GoCeltics123 wrote:
Lacob really once was a minority owner of the Celtics and is from Framingham. What a dick
The CDC recommends the antiviral drugs baloxavir marboxil (Xofluza), oseltamivir (Tamiflu), and zanamivir (Relenza) for both flu prevention and treatment
Parliament10 wrote:I was over at Harvard yesterday, playing Chess.
Fencer reregistered wrote:Parliament10 wrote:I was over at Harvard yesterday, playing Chess.
Where does one play chess at Harvard these days?
Back in the day, it was the main floor of the Science Center. We also used to play in my department. Indeed, one of the two highest-rated players I got clobbered by was Ken Regan when he was visiting graduate schools. (The other was Kim Commons, who I went to undergrad with. But I beat him once at Double Bughouse w/ Diane Saeveride as my partner.)
threrf23 wrote:from WebMD:The CDC recommends the antiviral drugs baloxavir marboxil (Xofluza), oseltamivir (Tamiflu), and zanamivir (Relenza) for both flu prevention and treatment
I imagine the same would apply to the Coronavirus.
And I tend to suspect that easy, prescription free, and ideally affordable access to these drugs might do more good than quarantines.
Am I ignorant?
threrf23 wrote:from WebMD:The CDC recommends the antiviral drugs baloxavir marboxil (Xofluza), oseltamivir (Tamiflu), and zanamivir (Relenza) for both flu prevention and treatment
I imagine the same would apply to the Coronavirus. NOT AT ALL.
And I tend to suspect that easy, prescription free, and ideally affordable access to these drugs might do more good than quarantines.
Am I ignorant?
exculpatory wrote:
There is NO data I am aware of ATM clearly demonstrating that COVID 19 responds to any of the THREE anti-influenza antivirals in your post. I would be VERY interested in seeing any data whatsoever on this. (This is NOT a matter of 1 size fits all - just because Tamiflu, Xofluza, & Relenza are efficacious VS influenza does NOT AT ALL mean they are efficacious VS COVID 19.)
I AM aware of impending & ongoing studies involving REMDESIVIR. See below.
Gilead Sciences
Approach: Treatment
Stage: Phase 3
“Gilead’s remdesivir, an intravenous treatment, has already been used to treat one infected patient in the U.S. and will soon be deployed in a pair of large, late-stage studies in Asia. Later this month, Gilead will recruit about 1,000 patients diagnosed with the coronavirus to determine whether multiple doses of remdesivir can reverse the infection. The primary goals are reducing fever and helping patients get out of the hospital within two weeks. The drug, which previously failed in a study on Ebola virus, is also being studied in smaller trials in China and the U.S.”
threrf23 wrote:exculpatory wrote:
There is NO data I am aware of ATM clearly demonstrating that COVID 19 responds to any of the THREE anti-influenza antivirals in your post. I would be VERY interested in seeing any data whatsoever on this. (This is NOT a matter of 1 size fits all - just because Tamiflu, Xofluza, & Relenza are efficacious VS influenza does NOT AT ALL mean they are efficacious VS COVID 19.)
I AM aware of impending & ongoing studies involving REMDESIVIR. See below.
Gilead Sciences
Approach: Treatment
Stage: Phase 3
“Gilead’s remdesivir, an intravenous treatment, has already been used to treat one infected patient in the U.S. and will soon be deployed in a pair of large, late-stage studies in Asia. Later this month, Gilead will recruit about 1,000 patients diagnosed with the coronavirus to determine whether multiple doses of remdesivir can reverse the infection. The primary goals are reducing fever and helping patients get out of the hospital within two weeks. The drug, which previously failed in a study on Ebola virus, is also being studied in smaller trials in China and the U.S.”
But doctors have been treating patients for more than a month, with medication, and there must be some indication of what will and will not work. SEE BELOW.
And I mean, even if they won't necessarily help, are the side effects of common anti-virals too severe to risk use? NO
threrf23 wrote:exculpatory wrote:
There is NO data I am aware of ATM clearly demonstrating that COVID 19 responds to any of the THREE anti-influenza antivirals in your post. I would be VERY interested in seeing any data whatsoever on this. (This is NOT a matter of 1 size fits all - just because Tamiflu, Xofluza, & Relenza are efficacious VS influenza does NOT AT ALL mean they are efficacious VS COVID 19.)
I AM aware of impending & ongoing studies involving REMDESIVIR. See below.
Gilead Sciences
Approach: Treatment
Stage: Phase 3
“Gilead’s remdesivir, an intravenous treatment, has already been used to treat one infected patient in the U.S. and will soon be deployed in a pair of large, late-stage studies in Asia. Later this month, Gilead will recruit about 1,000 patients diagnosed with the coronavirus to determine whether multiple doses of remdesivir can reverse the infection. The primary goals are reducing fever and helping patients get out of the hospital within two weeks. The drug, which previously failed in a study on Ebola virus, is also being studied in smaller trials in China and the U.S.”
But doctors have been treating patients for more than a month, with medication, and there must be some indication of what will and will not work.
And I mean, even if they won't necessarily help, are the side effects of common anti-virals too severe to risk use?