Trebuchet
Penultimate Amazing
Someone studying the virus said yesterday that the virus's favourite conditions are low humidity under 10 degrees Celsius.
Which is exactly the opposite of conditions in Houston, one of the USA's worst hotspots.
Someone studying the virus said yesterday that the virus's favourite conditions are low humidity under 10 degrees Celsius.
But they didn't "assign" them. They looked back at patients already given the meds.
Unless you read something I didn't.
A new observational study in conflict with most previous ones on Hydroxychloroquine showing significant (50%) mortality reduction.
Treatment with Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, and Combination in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19
https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(20)30534-8/fulltext
The combination of hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin was reserved for selected patients with severe COVID-19
Finally, concomitant steroid use in patients receiving hydroxychloroquine was more than double the non-treated group.
Oh, there was more difference in the treatment than just hydroxychloroquine.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/02/health/hydroxychloroquine-coronavirus-detroit-study/index.html
Which is exactly the opposite of conditions in Houston, one of the USA's worst hotspots.
They didn't give HQ to patients with certain heart issues.
Look at the mortality chart. After 7 days 5% of the HQ patients died while 17% of the standard treatment patients died. Difference is even stronger at 4 days.
Also, the mean age of the HQ patients was 63 v 68. But supposedly the overall risk score was matched. Hmm.
That's just weird. Something doesn't make sense.
A new observational study in conflict with most previous ones on Hydroxychloroquine showing significant (50%) mortality reduction.
Treatment with Hydroxychloroquine, Azithromycin, and Combination in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19
https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(20)30534-8/fulltext
But they didn't "assign" them. They looked back at patients already given the meds.
Unless you read something I didn't.
Does it seem a little curious that the mortality rate with hydroxychloroquine alone was lower than with hydroxychloroquine plus an antibiotic? Then I read the CNN report:
Oh, the treatments weren't selected at random.
Further down in the CNN report, there's this gem:
Oh, there was more difference in the treatment than just hydroxychloroquine. https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/02/health/hydroxychloroquine-coronavirus-detroit-study/index.html
I think he means that patients who had been given HCQ were not selected randomly. It isn't double blind unless neither patient nor doctor know if it is placebo or remedy.
If the doctor knows that he is administering HCQ there can be bias.
Randomly assigning patients to treatment groups is the issue. They were not randomly assigned.
Anecdotal only:
Here on the campus for the elderly where I live with my mom, virus was kept almost completely at bay for 2 months or so. Now, with ramped-up testing, there's a cluster of cases in the nursing home and assisted living parts of campus. Meanwhile "independent living" has just one case. The spread seems to be from people in close contact for an hour or more and it seems to have crept in from the staff (generally young folks).
Independent living - separate apartments - is not struck nearly so hard, leading me to believe that truly casual contact is not a big factor in the spread. Hours in close proximity seems to be required. On the other hand there has been little testing of people in Independent Living, so it may be down to that.
With relatively small numbers and points of restricted access, contact tracing is feasible here and I expect it will be pursued vigorously.
ETA: Air conditioning is continuous use. Not enough evidence to conclude that AC is the culprit but it is does seem to be much worse with shared air. Not quite sure how that works in the apartments.
It seems that locking down the nursing home/assisted living part from the start might have been the only way to avoid it, with the staff inside and all material/food etc fully cleaned/sanitised etc on delivery. Not sure many nursing homes are set up for that sort of lockdown, nor that the staff would be prepared to remain on site for however long it takes....
I was talking about locking down the entire nursing home before the virus got in, not quarantening infected patients, and I have heard of it happening in the UK, reasonably local to me.I am a nurse in a senior citizen residence. Early on during Germany's epidemic, there was an option of last resort to quarantine some staff with infected residents in a separate wing. The most difficult practical problem would obviously be that there is no room, and hardly a free bed, to house the staff on site.
Luckily, we were spared the virus, and I have not heard of a house where this has been done.
But this is also proof that you CAN "avoid it" - it takes good governance and a compliant public, which we mostly had.
Aaaand... the USA reclaims the one-day record for new cases, 57,209 on July 3rd, from those upstart Brazilians who tallied 54,771 on June 19th.
To achieve this in a mere two weeks, the U.S. had to reverse its (admittedly meager) earlier declines, and recruit whole additional regions and demographic groups into the effort (since New York and the Northeast didn't want to play any more). An amazing accomplishment.