SARS CoV-2 coronavirus / Covid-19 (No tin foil hat silliness please)

But does that really happen often? I thought it is more a legend than a real thing.

I think it looks placebo is actually a myth except when it involves something the mind can influence e.g. mood or pain but not a virus or cancer

That said I think it still has to be considered because it is not always clear when the mind is involved and regulations also change slowly.
 
Last edited:
Another embarassment for WHO, who posted Chinese draft on failure of Remdesivir.

Although it's not a cure but it certainly a step in that direction.
 
Another embarassment for WHO, who posted Chinese draft on failure of Remdesivir.

Although it's not a cure but it certainly a step in that direction.

Why is publishing their findings embarrassing? The limitations of the study was also published.
 
Perhaps I'm missing something but I don't follow the logic of administering a placebo when there is plenty of data of the death/survival rate of patients who haven't been administered the drug in the local area. I've never heard of drug companies administering placebos to cancer patients testing new experimental treatments, but you're implying this does happen? I always thought that the placebo was administered primarily on healthy human testers, rather than those suffering from the disease, to study the side effects of the new drugs.

Any clinical trial has to include placebos. In any proper study, even cancer patients testing experimental treatments, half of them, or a good proportion at any rate, will only be given a placebo.
 
Why is publishing their findings embarrassing? The limitations of the study was also published.
I would imagine for an organization of WHO stature should know that initial draft which isn't peer reviewed should not be published on its main site. It's not a gossip site. It's official WHO website.

It's like how you don't tweet initial findings of Chinese government without checking first that human to human transmission was not likely.
 
I would imagine for an organization of WHO stature should know that initial draft which isn't peer reviewed should not be published on its main site. It's not a gossip site. It's official WHO website.

It's like how you don't tweet initial findings of Chinese government without checking first that human to human transmission was not likely.

The reports from the US aren't peer reviewed. Things are evolving too fast to say nothing until peer reviewed journal publication.
 
I would imagine for an organization of WHO stature should know that initial draft which isn't peer reviewed should not be published on its main site. It's not a gossip site. It's official WHO website.

It's like how you don't tweet initial findings of Chinese government without checking first that human to human transmission was not likely.
The current study is not peer-reviewed too. For most part, peer-reviewed means that a few folks thought that the research is alright, but it hardly makes it bullet proof.
 
I read the BBC article about the remdesivir trial and what struck me is that they gave people the drug as well as a placebo. I know for testing purposes its vital that you have a percentage of people given a placebo but in these literally life and death scenarios it strikes me as a bit harsh that the ones who weren't given the drug had a higher mortality rate (albeit statistically not significant). I would assume that pretty much everyone who went on this trial actually wanted to be given this drug and I imagine it must be hard on the families of those who died having been given a placebo because if the deceased were given the option of being administered the drug they would have taken it.
It's the chance you take when you consent to take part in the RCT. Sometimes the people given the proposed treatment drug will suffer ill-effects from it, of course - in which case it's better to have been in the placebo group.
 


With news coming out of Switzerland of kids don't spread the virus and grandparents can hug their grandchildren it could be important to read this and wait for more information.

To be honest they don't really have a lot of observations in those two lowest age groups.
 
The reports from the US aren't peer reviewed. Things are evolving too fast to say nothing until peer reviewed journal publication.
The difference is Fauci explains why he is making it public. Says it's ethical to explain to other members of group who are on placebo that the other drug works and they have the right to switch.

WHO posted a botched up trial report which wasn't peer reviewed. Some would argue it was motivated report created by a country who is at information warfare with the world right now. To use that report and publish on their website is extremely unprofessional.
 
I read the BBC article about the remdesivir trial and what struck me is that they gave people the drug as well as a placebo. I know for testing purposes its vital that you have a percentage of people given a placebo but in these literally life and death scenarios it strikes me as a bit harsh that the ones who weren't given the drug had a higher mortality rate (albeit statistically not significant). I would assume that pretty much everyone who went on this trial actually wanted to be given this drug and I imagine it must be hard on the families of those who died having been given a placebo because if the deceased were given the option of being administered the drug they would have taken it.

When they started the trial there was no evidence that the drug would help. It might even cause harm.

That is why they set up an independent panel of experts (the DSMB) to constantly monitor safety and efficacy to stop the trial early if patients on the drug were being harmed or on placebo were missing out on benefit.

The DSMB stopped this study early to allow placebo patients switch to drug, when they realised there was a clear benefit.
 
I would imagine for an organization of WHO stature should know that initial draft which isn't peer reviewed should not be published on its main site. It's not a gossip site. It's official WHO website.

It's like how you don't tweet initial findings of Chinese government without checking first that human to human transmission was not likely.

Their aim is to publicise developments not endorse findings. I'm not sure why you think they'd need to check the latter point when it was just a statement of fact. Their wasn't evidence at that point as monitoring was ongoing.
 
The difference is Fauci explains why he is making it public. Says it's ethical to explain to other members of group who are on placebo that the other drug works and they have the right to switch.

WHO posted a botched up trial report which wasn't peer reviewed. Some would argue it was motivated report created by a country who is at information warfare with the world right now. To use that report and publish on their website is extremely unprofessional.

That’s not a reason to go to the press.

That said, when a DSMB stops a big, important study early pharma companies will often issue a press release. As it’s important information for financial markets.
 
Last edited:
Their aim is to publicise developments not endorse findings. I'm not sure why you think they'd need to check the latter point when it was just a statement of fact. Their wasn't evidence at that point as monitoring was ongoing.

WHO didnt need to put out that development without fact checking. Initial developments should not be publicized by WHO. That could have easily come out of Chinese government and WHO should have waited for its own independent inquiry before making it public. Atleast that's what i expect from WHO.
 
https://www.power987.co.za/news/western-cape-expects-80-000-covid-19-cases-per-week-by-august/

Seems our peaks are far from being reached - July and August being currently envisaged for us (Cape Town), based on their modelling.

The developing world is going to suffer. We've done so well, doing a stringent lockdown very early because of our "unique" society. Truth be told, we don't have the economy that is strong enough to sustain any form of lockdown, so we're having to open up a bit now (after 5 weeks of one of the strictest lockdowns around the world). Now the virus has started spreading through the townships (informal settlement) and there the people just physically cannot self isolate. (imagine families or homes, no bigger than your kitchen, housing 4-7 individuals and they are stacked one on top of the other).

Then we have the issue of aids and TB within the population as well. It's a pity, really. Because we've acted early and we acted swiftly, but there's just no way we had the resources to get ahead of it for a sustained period.

Hope for the best but prepare for the worst I guess.
@kouroux @Shakesey
 
We're down the rabbit hole with BBC News having a live news feed page exclusively on Cpt Tom Moore's 100-year birthday. It's getting more coverage than any scrutiny of the government, on the day when they are going to have a swing and a massive miss at their very public testing target.
 
WHO didnt need to put out that development without fact checking. Initial developments should not be publicized by WHO. That could have easily come out of Chinese government and WHO should have waited for its own independent inquiry before making it public. Atleast that's what i expect from WHO.



Your expectations don't mean anything to be fair but fact check what exactly?

I assume you're referring to the above tweet which is completely factual. It doesn't say there's no human to human transmission or that it won't occur it's merely highlighting evidence at that date.

Let's go down that rabbit hole though, who do you think was failed this by tweet?
 
When they started the trial there was no evidence that the drug would help. It might even cause harm.

That is why they set up an independent panel of experts (the DSMB) to constantly monitor safety and efficacy to stop the trial early if patients on the drug were being harmed or on placebo were missing out on benefit.

The DSMB stopped this study early to allow placebo patients switch to drug, when they realised there was a clear benefit.
I do understand that the evidence of the drug's effectiveness was sketchy and anecdotal but nonetheless I'm still unsure of the reason for a placebo to be administered in the first place. I'm struggling to see how the placebo effect could have any influence on the immune system's response to a novel virus. In my mind it's the same as comparing the mortality rate of those who received remdesivir with those who have gone to a witch doctor to be cured. The drug's effectiveness is based on mortality and not on anything that a placebo should have any effect on. It was said by @Revan earlier that the results would be anecdotal if the placebo wasn't administered, but it can't be just anecdotal if you've got a large set of data from those who have survived/died having not taken remdesivir but who have received the same type of care as the others in the trial, minus the drugs. I'm clearly no medical professional so I'll happily be explained the reasoning behind it.
 


Your expectations don't mean anything to be fair but fact check what exactly?

I assume you're referring to the above tweet which is completely factual. It doesn't say there's no human to human transmission or that it won't occur it's merely highlighting evidence at that date.

Let's go down that rabbit hole though, who do you think was failed this by tweet?


But evidence was already there as late as December 2019. There is nothing factual in that tweet even at that time. Not sure how much WHO knew at that time but i was merely pointing out that reporting Chinese authority findings is not WHO job. Same case in aborted trial report. Not sure why you are so touchy about WHO criticism.
 
Na it's definitely real. Shows how funny human psychology can be.

The power of placebo is unimaginable. It consistently proves the power of the mind, which should never be underestimated.


Wouldn't this support the views of those out-there hippy/new age types who believe in curing certain illnesses through the power of positive thought and your diet? I mean, if people get better because they believe they are getting better, it baffles me why nobody gives these new age types anything but scorn when they claim to be able to defeat illness without anything else.

Obviously not talking about stuff as serious as covid19, but isn't it quite interesting that so much scorn is thrown at these people? It's almost as though it would be financially damaging to big pharmaceutical companies if it was common knowledge that their drugs weren't needed for certain ailments......



We're down the rabbit hole with BBC News having a live news feed page exclusively on Cpt Tom Moore's 100-year birthday. It's getting more coverage than any scrutiny of the government, on the day when they are going to have a swing and a massive miss at their very public testing target.



I keep saying, we are living in an episode of Brasseye and the majority of the population are happy to be starring in it.
 
But evidence was already there as late as December 2019. There is nothing factual in that tweet even at that time. Not sure how much WHO knew at that time but i was merely pointing out that reporting Chinese authority findings is not WHO job. Same case in aborted trial report. Not sure why you are so touchy about WHO criticism.

No there were suspicions but no clear evidence. And it's definitely WHO's job to report chinese authorities findings(or findings from anywhere else), that's one of the most efficient way to have critical reviews of researches/reports.
 
Last edited:


With news coming out of Switzerland of kids don't spread the virus and grandparents can hug their grandchildren it could be important to read this and wait for more information.


I'd say the red one is the best Christmas tree.
 
But evidence was already there as late as December 2019. There is nothing factual in that tweet even at that time. Not sure how much WHO knew at that time but i was merely pointing out that reporting Chinese authority findings is not WHO job. Same case in aborted trial report. Not sure why you are so touchy about WHO criticism.

I'm sorry if you find someone questioning the validity of your posts to be touchy but you're misled. Disseminating updates on novel viruses is exactly part of the job of the WHO.

They believed a new virus may be circulating in Decmeber but it wasn't confirmed as not just SARS until the second week of Jan. It wasn't until the 21st that Chinese experts confirmed human to human transmission.

You seem to want to attack the WHO on this but not know why? Which efforts were disadvantaged because of that tweet exactly?
 
I do understand that the evidence of the drug's effectiveness was sketchy and anecdotal but nonetheless I'm still unsure of the reason for a placebo to be administered in the first place. I'm struggling to see how the placebo effect could have any influence on the immune system's response to a novel virus. In my mind it's the same as comparing the mortality rate of those who received remdesivir with those who have gone to a witch doctor to be cured. The drug's effectiveness is based on mortality and not on anything that a placebo should have any effect on. It was said by @Revan earlier that the results would be anecdotal if the placebo wasn't administered, but it can't be just anecdotal if you've got a large set of data from those who have survived/died having not taken remdesivir but who have received the same type of care as the others in the trial, minus the drugs. I'm clearly no medical professional so I'll happily be explained the reasoning behind it.

The placebo affect is very real. Even thought it obviously won't keep someone alive who would otherwise die. If a patient knows they are getting a new experimental drug they might be more likely to say they're getting side effects. Feeling a bit queasy, having a headache, whatever. If enough patients decide the drug is making them sick(er) that could cause a promising drug to get canned. Conversely, they might ignore how shitty the new drug is making them feel because they're desperate to continue with this potential miracle cure.

Same thing applies to treating physicians. They might be quicker to stop treatment if they know a patient is on an untested medicine and they worry that it's making them unwell. Or persist with treatment past the point where it's obvious that it's not helping. And so on and so forth.

To be clear, the patients on the placebo arm don't get no treatment. They usually get SOT (standard of care) which is the best possible drugs/treatment that we are certain will help. All they're missing out on is the uncertain benefit that adding an unproven treatment to SOT might bring.
 


Absolute doozy of a twitter thread on a new Nature publication about spread within China.

Two things I learned.

Chinese outbreak precisely coincided with Chinese version of spring break and enormous migration of Chinese people. Which was shit luck for the whole world.

Travel bans delay (by a few weeks) but don’t stop spread.
 
Utter twat, genuinely despise people like this. An actual grown woman behaving like this. Amazingly she’ll publish this to her social media account and people will be agreeing with her behaviour.
Virtually all 99 posts on YouTube slammed her
 
Utter twat, genuinely despise people like this. An actual grown woman behaving like this. Amazingly she’ll publish this to her social media account and people will be agreeing with her behaviour.

Have things changed so much in Ireland? Why didn't she just say initially I'm on my way to court and have a dispensation? Harassing a couple of police officers doing their job, its ridiculous hope every police officer watching takes the car registration!