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Caly et al.1 reported that ivermectin inhibited severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in vitro for up to 48 hours using ivermectin at 5 μM. The concentration resulting in 50% inhibition (IC50 ; 2 µM) was > 35× higher than the maximum plasma concentration (Cmax ) after oral administration of the approved dose of ivermectin when given fasted. ... Repurposing drugs for use in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) treatment is an ideal strategy but is only feasible when product safety has been established and experiments of repurposed drugs are conducted at clinically relevant concentrations.
Ivermectin therefore warrants further investigation for possible benefits in humans.
Peer Review, a Safeguard Against Fraud?
Editors of science journals often—but not always—submit papers to other scientists for review before publishing them. This practice, called peer review, theoretically weeds out erroneous and fraudulent articles. “Science is self-correcting in a way that no other field of intellectual endeavor can match,” Isaac Asimov says. “Science is self-policing in a way that no other field is.” He marveled that “scandal is so infrequent.”
But many others do not share this view. Peer review is “a lousy way to detect fraud,” said previously quoted Dr. Drummond Rennie. The American Medical News said: “Peer-reviewed journals, once regarded as almost infallible, have had to admit that they are incapable of eradicating fraud.” “Peer review has been oversold,” said a medical writer and columnist for The New York Times.
...
“For high-octane gall in proclaiming its ethical purity, the scientific community has long been the runaway winner,” said New Scientist magazine. The highly vaunted peer-review system that theoretically screens out all the cheats is felt by many to be a farce. “The reality,” New Scientist said, “is that few scientific scoundrels are caught, but, when they are, they frequently turn out to have been running wild for years, publishing faked data in respectable journals, with no questions asked.” [whereislogic: and not just faked data, cause my example, does not actually use faked data, but the deception in presenting a misleading picture, is in how they talk about that data. That is how they avoid being accused of fraud or lying. Being vague about something you are well aware of, is a useful trick.]
Previously, an official of the NIH said, as reported in The New York Times: “I think an age of innocence has ended. In the past people assumed that scientists didn’t do this kind of thing. But people are beginning to realize that scientists are not morally superior to anybody else.” The Times report added: “Although a few years ago it was rare for the National Institutes of Health to receive one complaint a year of alleged fraud, she said, there are now at least two serious allegations a month.” Science magazine observed: “Scientists have repeatedly assured the public that fraud and misconduct in research are rare . . . And yet, significant cases seem to keep cropping up.”
...
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
a reply to: putnam6
Regardless of the questions, the fact is the vaccine is approved, not EUA. The questions you pose are valid and could easily lend itself to an argument in a post admitting the vaccine is approved while questioning if it should be. When a post contains factual errors it casts everything else in the post in a bad light, and makes any actual arguments easily dismissed. That is why we need to always be mindful to make sure our statements are correct, and when shown incorrect, admit it, apologize, and re-emphasize the rest of the argument that was true.
Unfortunately what I see on ATS is doubling down on factually incorrect statements rendering valid points moot and worthless.
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
a reply to: putnam6
You can do whatever you want as people look at your post and dismiss it. If you are only posting to the people who agree with you what's the point?
...
Results
... Except for hydroxychloroquine and prednisone, patients that were treated with any of the medications were more likely to go through an outcome of death or intubation at baseline. ...
originally posted by: putnam6
originally posted by: lordcomac
I hope you're being sarcastic-
Yes, I apologize, I thought the post was dripping with sarcasm, with an extra side of sarcasm thrown in.
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
a reply to: putnam6
Correction, vaccines are now approved, they are not EUA. Otherwise I agree.
originally posted by: elementalgrove
a reply to: putnam6
This is fantastic!
Every single "expert", scientist, doctor, pharmacist, politician, that suppressed this therapeutic needs to be arrested for crimes against humanity.
Every organization FDA, WHO, NIH, CDC, that suppressed this therapeuticshould be destroyed like IG Farben was, really we need to do a better job as somehow Bayer is still in existence.