RE: Coronavirus: Outcry after Trump suggests injecting disinfectant as treatment
April 24, 2020 at 6:35 am
(This post was last modified: April 24, 2020 at 6:39 am by arewethereyet.)
Here's another article. At least the medical community is more vocal than they were regarding the unknown results of using malaria treatments for COVID19.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/...spartanntp
The difference with this is that most people have bleach at home. This is easy to get your hands on.
The doctors likened Trump’s comments on disinfectants to his past remarks about chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, anti-viral drugs that are used to treat malaria and are being tested to determine whether they might assist in treating covid-19. One recent study found the drugs were linked to higher death rates in coronavirus patients, The Post reported, and other clinical trials are still underway. But Trump had touted the drugs as a “game changer” before evidence from early trials had come back, encouraging people to get prescriptions and try the medicines.
But Trump’s Thursday comments have the potential to cause even greater harm, Kass said to The Post.
“The difference between this and the chloroquine is that somebody could go right away to their pantry and start swallowing bleach. They could go to their medicine cabinet and swallow isopropyl alcohol,” Kass said. “A lot of people have that in their homes. There’s an immediate opportunity to react.”
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/...spartanntp
The difference with this is that most people have bleach at home. This is easy to get your hands on.
The doctors likened Trump’s comments on disinfectants to his past remarks about chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, anti-viral drugs that are used to treat malaria and are being tested to determine whether they might assist in treating covid-19. One recent study found the drugs were linked to higher death rates in coronavirus patients, The Post reported, and other clinical trials are still underway. But Trump had touted the drugs as a “game changer” before evidence from early trials had come back, encouraging people to get prescriptions and try the medicines.
But Trump’s Thursday comments have the potential to cause even greater harm, Kass said to The Post.
“The difference between this and the chloroquine is that somebody could go right away to their pantry and start swallowing bleach. They could go to their medicine cabinet and swallow isopropyl alcohol,” Kass said. “A lot of people have that in their homes. There’s an immediate opportunity to react.”