Was doxycycline rolled out?I have no idea whether it was ivermectin, the doxycycline (another cheap drug, but one widely available in this country), or something completely different.
Again, there's no conviction here, what's the point of running 'proper' trials, when it's unequivocally been denounced as having NO EFFECT on covid?However, if it was ivermectin then it should be possible to show some unequivocal effect in a proper trial - so we should see whether someone can come up with such evidence
Well done Jason, you absolutely destroyed the self declared ivermectin "experts" who thought their vast experience in strawman arguments would see you give up the chase.
The truth will always prevail when good men like you are willing to stand their
This comment seems to wilfully miss the point that is made by the article. To quote directly from the article this point can be summarised as follows:
Assoc Prof Wendy Lipworth, from the University of Sydney’s Health Ethics centre, said: “There’s nothing wrong with applying for a patent.
“But declaring that patent, when you are becoming a public figure for promoting a treatment, is the bare minimum of your ethical obligations …
“As a medical professional, there is an obligation to appraise the evidence subjectively and give advice without bias. I think that’s where the tension is.
“There’s nothing wrong even with having a conflict of interest. What really is the issue is how it is managed, and the most important issue is not declaring it.”
She added: “Part of due diligence at the very least should be to have a declaration at the bottom about conflicts of interests to do with that treatment. To not do that is blatantly unethical.”
Mchughcb: your post fails to address the issue actually put to you. You are missing the point, not arguing against it.
Plonker: you urge me to listen respectfully to the points put by other people. That is very much what I have been trying to do. And I have been trying to do this without the sort of preconceptions and prejudice that your own fears about Big Pharma suggest you hold as you approach this issue.
The article quoted also offers a convenient summary of the issue at the heart of this thread as I see it. Again to quote directly:
There are serious concerns about many studies by other researcherspublished to date that claim to show ivermectin is an effective Covid-19 treatment either alone or in combination with other drugs. Many of the studies have been criticised for serious flaws in their design and recruitment of patients, and have been shown to be unreliable. There are no strong studies with large numbers of patients published in peer-reviewed medical journals that show ivermectin alone or in combination with other drugs is an effective preventative against or treatment for Covid-19, though these trials are under way. Most studies to date have been too small to be clinically significant, or poorly designed.
This position is in line with the stated position of the BMJ, FDA, EMA, NICE, WHO and, as far as I can see, every other widely recognised medical authority... including, as it happens, the official position of the Indian Gvt. This is the issue I am asking others to address. And I am asking people to address it in terms that reference authoritative medical sources that are generally recognised as such - rather than widely discredited Observational Studies and people posting from their bedrooms who are only recognised as experts by those who already agree with them.
That’s quite a stretch, of course, but it’s rather obviously wrong, for the simple reason that in the states in India where people are denied ivermectin, they still eat rice, but have seriously high rates of Covid. There are several examples of this, where men In authority think more like those here, rather than in Uttar Pradesh, or any other place in the world where they’ve made the ‘leap of faith’ you consider/believe the adoption of ivermectin to be. Although the official policy at head office in the Indian government may indeed be that of the WHO, etc, ie no ivermectin use, those States where they have decided to use it seem to have a far better outcome.Ivermectin is taken by lots of people in India.
The transmission rate in India is falling.
The widespread use of ivermectin is causing the transmission rate to fall in India.
Rice is the staple diet of lots of people in India.
The transmission rate in India is falling.
The widespread consumption of rice is causing the transmission rate to fall in India.
He’s not a naught boy, he’s only trying to save humanity, Chuck! Funny how it’s only the big players who are deemed to be allowed to make a ‘living’ from the dying.Maybe I'm missing your point. I'm not an expert in medical patents but I have a few engineering patents. The general advice from the patent attorneys is you don't talk about the invention in public until you file the patent because it makes it harder to defend. Now it clearly states that the patent was applied for months after Barody made public his treatment. Subsequent 2 papers he printed after trials he declared his interest. So Lipworth ignores the 2 subsequent papers where the interest is declared. Whether the first paper was a genuine mistake or not I don't know but it appears above board afterwards. In medical patents, of which I have no experience, if he is using proven drugs but in a novel way to treat another disease I guess he's have to have willing test subjects and analyze those results before wasting time and money on applying for a patent so its a bit of a catch 22. If the patent and treatment is crap or not required then he'll make no money for his effort. But it annoys me that a public servant paid by the taxpayers medical professional is more worried about the promotion of the idea rather than the actual outcomes. If she has a bone to pick with the papers his published on the effectiveness that would be much better in my eyes than complaining about her perceived medical conflict of interest.
O, wad some power the giftie gie' us…Sic Iv’ry tow’red romantics,
They’ll confuse folk with semantics
But - The world moves on, till Covid’s gone
- though they yet will be ‘pedantics’…
it’s rather obviously wrong, for the simple reason that in the states in India where people are denied ivermectin, they still eat rice, but have seriously high rates of Covid.
But your faith reduces your ability to critically evaluate evidence that your beliefs might be wrong
Why does it not surprise me that you would mention this ridiculous myth that NASA spent millions on developing a pen?It’s a big thing these days, especially where it has been deployed and the virus is on the back foot, whereas here, where the confirmation bias has been more inclined toward ‘believing’ your way, ie the vaccine narrative, not so much. We agree to differ, my only real qualm is why ivermectin might not be offered, given its safety record, when at least in areas where it has already been rolled out the results have been far, far better than those of the vaccines, and continue to be so, coincidence, as you allege, or not. The say-so of those whose prescription isn’t currently working does not seem to be much to set store in, but ‘believe what you will’, and try to keep an open mind, as we all do. It’s not as if I’ve not considered your reasoning, and I fully accept the flaws you kindly illuminate in my own reasoning, and presumably in those too for whom ivermectin has worked so well, be it as a placebo or not; I’ve explained the modes of function, early on in the thread, and since, yet all I hear from you and yours is that ivermectin doesn’t work, or at best we don’t know if it works or not. In a non-pandemic time I would be happy to look further into your scientific claims, but right now they stand in contrast with the mainstream observed evidence where ivermectin is being used. So to my understanding, your stance insists that we here should not try it on that basis, ie you prefer to continue to fight this next wave, variant, etc and presumably the one after that in the same failing way we presently are obliged to, rather than taking a chance on something that works elsewhere but may only be ‘a coincidence’ and/or you do not as yet understand the mechanism of action, according to your method and cautious approach.
it reminds me of the story of the US space programme, where millions were sunk into making a pen that could write in a reduced gravity environment; the Russians used pencils.
Good luck selling your plan to Stalin, he might not have been so ‘convinced‘ as you yourself are, lol!


Maybe not NASA , but a man did spend a million dollars on a space pen , which he did sell to NASA.Why does it not surprise me that you would mention this ridiculous myth that NASA spent millions on developing a pen?
They would indeed , especially if the drug that saved millions of lives was out of licence , and they couldn't make any money from it !I can't see how you can argue against the official statement of the manufacturer of the drug, they would look like tw@ts if they are proven wrong
Line of the thread so far "Jason and the argue-nuts"
I can't see how you can argue against the official statement of the manufacturer of the drug, they would look like tw@ts if they are proven wrong :-
Merck Statement on Ivermectin use During the COVID-19 Pandemic - Merck.com
More than likely because there is no proof whatsoever that it is suitable.
Wierd why merck would not want to push a drug thet cost pennies and is off patent![]()
@zambezi: where does the NIH state this opinion? I can't find reference to it. Apologies if I have missed something obvious.
