Study: Without Hydroxychloroquine, COVID-19 Mortality Goes up
A new study published this month says that if you were treated with hydroxychloroquine when you got COVID-19, you would have a better chance of surviving.
Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), which is a widely used drug against malaria and arthritis, was given to hundreds of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in Belgium.
It’s not like Belgium has more medical freedom. Just like in the United States, HCQ lost its authorization to treat COVID-19 in Belgium as well. That happened in June 2020.
But right before that, there was a hospital in Belgium that was treating patients with HCQ, and they were getting good results. Not perfect, but better than the standard of care implemented in other hospitals.
So why is this study important? Because these scientists not only looked at those 352 people who were treated with HCQ. They also found the data for patients who were treated during the same time of the pandemic with a standard treatment—meaning they could make a solid comparison between patients who got HCQ and the ones that did not.
And the results? Well, they are clear as day.
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