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Friday, February 11, 2022

The UK is an international outlier in its approach to covid in children

  • Simon Williams, lecturer in psychology, John Drury is professor of social psychology12,  
  • Susan Michie, professor of health psychology and director of the Centre for Behaviour Change3,  
  • Christina Pagel, professor of operational research, director of the Clinical Operational Research Unit, and co-director CHIMERA hub for mathematics in health care3,  
  • Adam Squires, senior lecturer4

  • doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.o327

    PDF: https://www.bmj.com/content/376/bmj.o327.full.pdf

     

    Recent declines in the overall rates of covid-19 in the UK have masked the rapid and steep rise in cases among children. As of 26 January 2022, Office for National Statistics data suggest that nearly 12% of children in primary school and below (ages 2 to 11), and 6.5% of children in secondary school (ages 11 to 16), tested positive for covid-19.1

    Early warnings that a lack of protections for children would lead to a wave of infections from the delta variant, causing disruption to education in the autumn term, were not heeded.2 The warnings were reiterated with omicron in December, but again, very little was done to make schools safer.3 When schools returned in January 2022, secondary school children (but not primary) were required to wear masks in school. Students in secondary schools (but not primary) were also asked to take a rapid antigen test twice a week at home and to isolate if positive. Children who were contacts of new cases (even household members) were not required to isolate. By the end of January all mask requirements in schools had been dropped and masks were actively discouraged. Just over half of 12-15 year olds had received one dose of vaccine and 5 to 11 year olds were not in general eligible for a vaccine. Carbon dioxide sensors have been distributed to assess ventilation, with advice on ventilation, and 7000 air cleaning filtration units have been made available for the worst ventilated classrooms, but it’s clear that classroom ventilation is not enough to stop omicron tearing through schools.

    Although children are at much lower risk of experiencing severe illness from covid compared to (particularly older) adults, there are still a number of harms that come from attempting to “live with” high rates of infection in schools. These include record numbers of hospital admissions in children with covid, increasing rates of long covid in children, educational disruption (very high pupil and teacher absenteeism related to infection), and disruption to other sectors (e.g. parents having to stay home from work to care for children who test positive or becoming infected themselves).456

    We have a much better idea now about what works to keep schools open and transmission lower: a combination of vaccination, clean indoor air, testing, contact tracing, isolation and face masks. The problem is that, particularly as far as vaccination and clean air are concerned, we are still yet to see these protections properly put in place for children.

    Parents are being denied to choice to vaccinate their 5-11 year olds

    The list of countries that are offering vaccines to children aged 5 and above is growing rapidly. The World Health Organisation recently recommended the reduced dose Pfizer vaccine for children aged 5-12. Research suggests that the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is safe and efficacious in children, and the benefits of vaccination for this age group outweigh risks.

    US. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) analysis of data for 12-17 year olds suggests it might well protect against PMS-TS as well.789

    Australia and New Zealand have already vaccinated approximately one-third of 5-11 year olds despite only offering them since 10 January 2022 and 17 January 2022 respectively. Key to the quick uptake has been clear messages that covid-19 vaccines are officially recommended for this age group and designed to protect the child, and their families and communities.10

    The European Union’s European Medicines Agency approved the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for use in 5-11 year olds in late November, and many countries have now provided a first dose to a growing proportion of children in that age group, including Denmark, where roughly three-in-10 have received two doses.11

    In the UK, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) approved the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for 5-11 year olds on 22 December 2021 and concluded “that there is robust evidence to support a positive benefit-risk profile for this age group.”12 However, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), is still to offer advice as to whether the vaccine should be offered to all children in that age group, rather than just those in a clinical risk group. Moreover, there is no estimate as to when such advice will be published beyond the vague statement that it “will be issued in due course following consideration of additional data.” No evidence based justification has provided for this delay.13

    More transparency over when advice is likely to be provided is necessary and urgent to explain why the UK is an international outlier by not giving parents the choice of whether to vaccinate their child.

    Where is the investment in clean air?

    There is growing evidence of the fact that air cleaning measures can help reduce the spread of covid-19 in schools, especially when combined with mask use among teachers and staff.14 Air cleaning can be achieved by replacing the stale air that people have breathed out, with fresh outdoor air (ventilation); or by filtering exhaled particles out of the air in the room (filtration, for example, with mobile HEPA units). Studies suggest that combining ventilation with filtration can have added benefits for student attention and health.15

    Whereas a growing number of countries are making substantial investment in ventilation as part of a longer term strategy to provide cleaner indoor air, the UK currently has focused only on “quick fixes to improve ventilation such as being able to open a window,” recently providing only 7,000 additional air cleaning units to schools, despite the fact there are more than 300 000 classrooms in England alone. Many classrooms are likely to need several units to compensate for poor ventilation.16

    What else should we be doing?

    Despite high and rising rates in secondary schools (currently approximately 7% according to latest ONS data), schools have been told to remove their mask wearing policy, with the Education Secretary going further arguing they should be “banned.”1 Facemasks should be considered a protection rather than a restriction, keeping children in school learning and teachers in school teaching. Whereas messages around facemasks in the UK, including in schools, have been confusing, other countries have provided a clear and consistent message around their value, for example the United States. We could get further protection by upgrading from cloth or disposable surgical to filtering masks, which should be provided for free as in other countries.

    With over one-third of a million children missing school, nearly one-in-10 teachers and school leaders absent and reinfection rates having increased meaning some children have had to isolate multiple times, the UK government’s claim to “keep children in the classroom” is disingenuous and overlays a laissez faire approach that in effect leaves children to get infected and miss out on the education and social and other development that school attendance brings.617

    Footnotes

    • Competing interests: SM and JD participate in the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Behavioural Science (SPI-B): 2019 Novel Coronavirus (Covid-19) and are members of Independent SAGE. CP is a member of Independent SAGE. AS is Bath University lead for the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Aerosol Science.

    • https://www.bmj.com/content/376/bmj.o327

    What Are Taxpayers Spending for ‘Free’ Covid Tests? Government Won’t Say

     The four free covid-19 rapid tests President Joe Biden promised in December for every American household have begun arriving in earnest in mailboxes and on doorsteps.

    A surge of covid infections spurred wide demand for over-the-counter antigen tests during the holidays: Clinics were overwhelmed with people seeking tests and the few off-the-shelf brands were nearly impossible to find at pharmacies or even online via Amazon. Prices for some test kits cracked the hundred-dollar mark. And the government vowed that its purchase could provide the tests faster and cheaper so people, by simply swabbing at home, could quell the spread of covid.

    The Defense Department organized the bidding and announced in mid-January, after a limited competitive process, that three companies were awarded contracts totaling nearly $2 billion for 380 million over-the-counter antigen tests, all to be delivered by March 14.

    The much-touted purchase was the latest tranche in trillions of dollars in public spending in response to the pandemic. How much is the government paying for each test? And what were the terms of the agreements? The government won’t yet say, even though, by law, this information should be available.

    The cost — and, more importantly, the rate per test — would help demonstrate who is getting the best deal for protection in these covid times: the consumer or the corporation.

    The reluctance to share pricing details flies against basic notions of cost control and accountability — and that’s just quoting from a long-held position by the Justice Department. “The prices in government contracts should not be secret,” according to its website. “Government contracts are ‘public contracts,’ and the taxpayers have a right to know — with very few exceptions —what the government has agreed to buy and at what prices.”

    Americans often pay far more than people in other developed countries for tests, drugs, and medical devices, and the pandemic has accentuated those differences. Governments abroad had been buying rapid tests in bulk for over a year, and many national health services distributed free or low-cost tests, for less than $1, to their residents. In the U.S., retailers, companies, schools, hospitals, and everyday shoppers were competing months later to buy swabs in hopes of returning to normalcy. The retail price climbed as high as $25 for a single test in some pharmacies; tales abounded of corporate and wealthy customers hoarding tests for work or holiday use.

    U.S. contracts valued at $10,000 or more are required to be routinely posted to sam.gov or the Federal Procurement Data System, known as fpds.gov. But none of the three new rapid-test contracts — awarded to iHealth Labs of California, Roche Diagnostics Corp. of Indiana, and Abbott Rapid Dx North America of Florida — could be found in the online databases.

    “We don’t know why that data isn’t showing up in the FPDS database, as it should be visible and searchable. Army Contracting Command is looking into the issue and working to remedy it as quickly as possible,” spokesperson Jessica R. Maxwell said in an email in January. This month, she declined to provide more information about the contracts and referred all questions about the pricing to the Department of Health and Human Services.

    Only vague information is available in DOD press releases, dated Jan. 13 and Jan. 14, that note the overall awards in the fixed-price contracts: iHealth Labs for $1.275 billion, Roche Diagnostics for $340 million, and Abbott Rapid Dx North America for $306 million. There were no specifics regarding contract standards or terms of completion — including how many test kits would be provided by each company.

    Without knowing the price or how many tests each company agreed to supply, it is impossible to determine whether the U.S. government overpaid or to calculate if more tests could have been provided faster. As variants of the deadly virus continue to emerge, it is unclear if the government will re-up these contracts and under what terms.

    To put forth a bid to fill an “urgent” national need, companies had to provide answers to the Defense Department by Dec. 24 about their capacity to scale up manufacturing to produce 500,000 or more tests a week in three months. Among the questions: Had a company already been granted “emergency use authorization” for the test kits, and did a company have “fully manufactured unallocated stock on hand to ship within two weeks of a contract award?”

    Based on responses from about 60 companies, the Defense Department said it sent “requests for proposals” directly to the manufacturers. Twenty companies bid. Defense would not release the names of interested companies.

    Emails to the three chosen companies to query the terms of the contracts went unanswered by iHealth and Abbott. Roche spokesperson Michelle A. Johnson responded in an email that she was “unable to provide that information to you. We do not share customer contract information.” The customers — listed as the Defense Department and the Army command — did not provide answers about the contract terms.

    The Army’s Contracting Command, based in Alabama, initially could not be reached to answer questions. An email address on the command’s website for media bounced back as out-of-date. Six phone numbers listed on the command’s website for public information were unmanned in late January. At the command’s protocol office, the person who answered a phone in late January referred all queries to the Aberdeen Proving Ground offices in Maryland.

    “Unfortunately, there is an issue with voicemail,” said Ralph Williams, a representative of the protocol office. “Voicemail is down. I mean, voicemail has been down for months.”

    Asked about the bounced email traffic, Williams said he was surprised the address — acc.pao@us.army.mil — was listed on the ACC website. “I’m not sure when that email was last used,” he said. “The army stopped using the email address about eight years ago.”

    Williams provided a direct phone number for Aberdeen and apologized for the confusion. “People should have their phone forwarded,” he said. “But I can only do what I can do.”

    Joyce Cobb, an Army Contracting Command-Aberdeen Proving Ground spokesperson, reached via phone and email, referred all questions to Defense personnel. Maxwell referred more detailed questions about the contracts to HHS, and emails to HHS went unanswered.

    Both the Defense and Army spokespeople, after several emails, said the contracts would have to be reviewed, citing the Freedom of Information Act that protects privacy, before release. Neither explained how knowing the price per test could be a privacy or proprietary concern.

    A Defense spokesperson added that the contracts had been fast-tracked “due to the urgent and compelling need” for antigen tests. Defense obtained “approval from the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics, & Technology to contract without providing for full and open competition.”

    KHN separately searched for the contracts on the sam.gov website during a phone call with a government representative who assisted with the search. During an extended phone session, the representative called in a supervisor. Neither could locate the contracts, which are updated twice a week. The representative wondered whether the numbers listed in the Defense press release were wrong and offered: “You might want to double-check that.”

    On Jan. 25, Defense spokesperson Maxwell, in an email, said that the Army Contracting Command “is working to prepare these contracts for public release and part of that includes proactively readying the contracts for the FOIA redaction.” Three days later, she sent an email stating that “under the limited competition authority … DOD was not required to make the Request for Proposal (RFP) available to the public.”

    Maxwell did not respond when KHN pointed out that the contracting provision she cited does not prohibit the release of such information. In a Feb. 2 email, Maxwell said “we have nothing further to provide at this time.”

    On sam.gov, the covid spreadsheets include a disclaimer that “due to the tempo of operations” in the pandemic response, the database shows only “a portion of the work that has been awarded to date.”

    In other words, it could not vouch for the timeliness or accuracy of its own database.

    https://khn.org/news/article/what-are-taxpayers-spending-for-those-free-covid-tests-the-government-wont-say/

    1 in 3 Adults With COVID Develops Other Health Issues Later: Study

     Nearly one-third of older COVID-19 survivors develop new health problems in the months after their infection, a new study finds.

    Those conditions involve a number of major organs and systems, including the heart, kidneys, lungs and liver, as well as mental health problems.

    With roughly 400 million people infected with the coronavirus worldwide, “the number of survivors with [new conditions] after the acute infection will continue to grow," wrote study author Dr. Ken Cohen and colleagues. Cohen is executive director of translational research at Optum Labs, which is based in Minnesota.

    The researchers analyzed 2020 health insurance data from more than 133,000 Americans 65 and older who were diagnosed with COVID before April 1, 2020.

    They compared them with groups of people 65 and older from 2019 and 2020 who did not have COVID, and a group diagnosed with viral lower respiratory tract illness.

    Among the COVID patients, 32% sought medical attention in the several months after their diagnosis for one or more new or persistent health conditions, which was 11 percentage points higher than the 2020 comparison group.

    The researchers found the COVID patients had a higher risk for a number of conditions, including respiratory failure, fatigue, high blood pressure and mental health diagnoses.

    And compared with the viral lower respiratory tract illness group, the COVID patients had a higher risk of respiratory failure, dementia and fatigue.

    Looking at just the COVID patients, the highest risk for several new health problems was seen in those admitted to the hospital, men, Black patients, and those 75 and older, according to the study. The findings were published Feb. 9 in the BMJ.

    This was an observational study, so it can't prove a direct link between COVID-19 and new health problems, said Cohen's team.

    Still, these findings further highlight the wide range of important conditions that may develop after infection with COVID, the authors said in a journal news release.

    "Understanding the magnitude of risk" might enhance their diagnosis and the management of patients with new problems after COVID infection, they said.

    CDC study: Booster effectiveness wanes after 4 months, but still significant

     The effectiveness of COVID-19 booster shots wanes somewhat after four months but still provides substantial protection against hospitalization, a new study shows. 

    The study, released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Friday, found that booster shot effectiveness against hospitalization with the omicron variant was 91 percent after two months, but waned to 78 percent after four months. 

    Protection against emergency department or urgent care visits declined from 87 percent to 66 percent after four months. It was just 31 percent after at least five months, though the study cautioned that finding was "imprecise because few data were available."

    Vaccine effectiveness was always higher after three doses than after two, so people are still urged to get a booster shot. 

    The finding of some waning immunity could inform discussions of the possible need for additional shots.

    "The finding that protection conferred by mRNA vaccines waned in the months after receipt of a third vaccine dose reinforces the importance of further consideration of additional doses to sustain or improve protection against COVID-19–associated [Emergency Department/Urgent Care] encounters and COVID-19 hospitalizations," the study states. "All eligible persons should remain up to date with recommended COVID-19 vaccinations to best protect against COVID-19–associated hospitalizations and ED/UC visits."

    Speaking earlier this week at a press briefing, President Biden's chief medical adviser, Anthony Fauci, said data is being monitored closely on metrics like protection against hospitalization when it comes to deciding whether a fourth dose is needed. Another shot might not be necessary for everyone, he said.

    "There may be the need for yet again another boost — in this case, a fourth-dose boost for an individual receiving the mRNA — that could be based on age, as well as underlying conditions," he said.

    "So I don’t think you’re going to be hearing, if you do, any kind of recommendations that would be across the board for everyone," he added. "It very likely will take into account what subset of people have a diminished, or not, protection against the important parameters such as hospitalization."

    For the time being, a third shot is still recommended. An earlier CDC study found unvaccinated adults were 23 times more likely to be hospitalized during the omicron wave than adults who were boosted. Unvaccinated people were 5.3 times more likely to be hospitalized than people who were vaccinated but not boosted.

    https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/593896-cdc-study-booster-effectiveness-wanes-after-4-months-but-immunity-still

    Canadian judge orders protesters to end blockade

     A Canadian judge on Friday ordered protesters on the Ambassador Bridge at the border between the U.S. and Canada to end their five-day blockade.

    Ontario Superior Court Chief Justice Geoffrey Morawetz said during a virtual hearing the order will go into effective at 7 p.m., The Associated Press reported. Police in Windsor, Ontario, warned that demonstrators who continue to block the streets could be subject to arrest and having their vehicles seized.

    The province of Ontario declared a state of emergency earlier on Friday as protesters continued to block the crossing, disrupting the flow of goods at the border connecting Windsor and Detroit.

    "I will convene Cabinet to use legal authorities to urgently enact orders that will make crystal clear it is illegal and punishable to block and impede the movement of goods, people and service along critical infrastructure," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said. He added that protesters violating those orders could face jail time or fines.

    As the blockade at the border crossing continued, automakers on Thursday voiced concerns that the protest was causing disruptions in the industry.

    "The situation at the Ambassador Bridge, combined with an already fragile supply chain, will bring further hardship to people and industries still struggling to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic," the automotive manufacturing company Stellantis said in a statement.

    The "Freedom Convoy" protests began last month as a movement against COVID-19 protocols and a vaccine mandates affecting truck drivers. The demonstrations have since spread to cities around Canada and led to disruptions at three border crossings between the country and the U.S.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a series of tweets on Thursday that the protests were causing "real harm."

    “They’re harming the communities they’re taking place in – and they’re hurting jobs, businesses, and our country’s economy,” he said.

    https://thehill.com/policy/transportation/593939-canadian-judge-orders-protesters-to-end-blockade

    Surgeon General: As pandemic improves, 'we should be pulling back on restrictions'

     Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said that as the COVID-19 pandemic improves in the United States, “we should be pulling back on restrictions,” which a handful of states have already done. 

    Murthy told The Associated Press in an interview published on Friday that he believed that restrictions should start being eased as pandemic indicators in the country improve; however, he stressed that the pandemic is not over yet.

    “I think that as the pandemic gets better, we should be pulling back on restrictions. The conversation now is about what should determine when that happens,” Murthy told the news wire. 

    “The pandemic is not over today,” he noted. “We are still seeing record numbers of hospitalizations, deaths, and cases in this country.”

    He noted that health officials would need to look at several pandemic data indicators before making moves to lift restrictions. 

    “It’s likely going to be some combination of the hospitalization rate or hospital capacity itself, which is about health care staffing, about the death rate, and also just about where we’re going in terms of cases,” he told the AP.

    Already a number of states have announced that they are or will be lifting indoor mask mandates. Among some of the states that have announced their intentions to lift restrictions are New York, Illinois, Rhode Island and California. 

    Some states have stipulations on which people will be allowed to do away with masks, or exceptions where masks may still be required in certain places, like schools.

    Murthy told the AP that he could imagine a future without masks, but he said he was not sure when that timeline would be.

    “I can’t tell you if it’s coming in a couple of months or in six months or in 12 months,” he said.

    Not all health officials, though, are in favor of lifting restrictions. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Rochelle Walensky urged officials against getting rid of school mask mandates, noting that the CDC's guidance had not yet changed.

    "We have and continue to recommend masking in areas of high and substantial transmission - that is essentially everywhere in the country in public indoor settings," Walensky told Reuters in an interview earlier this week

    During a media briefing earlier this month, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus similarly urged nations to remain vigilant against the virus. 

    “We're concerned that a narrative has taken hold in some countries that because of vaccines, and because of omicron’s high transmissibility and lower severity, preventing transmission is no longer possible and no longer necessary,” the WHO official said. 

    “Nothing could be further from the truth. More transmission means more disease,” he continued.

    https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/593944-surgeon-general-as-pandemic-improves-we-should-be-pulling-back-on

    Authoritarian Science and the Case of Hydroxychloroquine

     Imperial County, California, a poor, largely Hispanic agricultural region in the southeastern corner of the state, has been hit hard by Covid-19. By the end of January, according to the New York Times’s Covid-19 database, Imperial County had suffered 845 Covid deaths, or 4.7 per thousand inhabitants—a rate almost 80 percent higher than the U.S. average. The case fatality rate in Imperial County is 1.44 percent, the second-highest in California—and was significantly higher, 2.10 percent, at the end of October 2021 before the Omicron wave.

    Two doctors in Imperial County, though—George Fareed and Brian Tyson, who run the All Valley Urgent Care network of medical centers—claim to have done far better with their Covid-19 patients. In fact, they claim near-perfect success: in a book that they published last January, they claim to have seen more than 7,000 patients and had only three deaths, all among patients who began treatment in later disease stages. A statistical analysis of part of their results by the statistician Mathew Crawford, included in their book, counts only seven hospitalizations and three deaths among 4,376 patients seen up through March 13, 2021—a reduction in hospitalization risk of well over 90 percent from the county average, even after (admittedly imperfect) statistical adjustments for differences in age between Fareed and Tyson’s patients and the general population.

    According to prevailing medical views, Fareed and Tyson’s claimed results should be impossible. The doctors’ first protocol was based around hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), a repurposed anti-malarial drug, with other drugs such as ivermectin as more recent additions. Received opinion on the drugs is that ivermectin is at best unproven in treating Covid-19 (the Food and Drug Administration maintains an official webpage warning against using it as a treatment for the virus), and that HCQ has been actively disproved: early optimism from laboratory experiments and small clinical studies did not hold up in larger, more rigorous trials.

    Such opinions have influenced not just news coverage but also the moderation policies of social media platforms, which have imposed ever-stricter rules against “misinformation” (meaning, in practice, contradicting American public health authorities). After Fareed and Tyson spoke by invitation at a meeting of the Imperial County Board of Supervisors, the Los Angeles Times ran an article noting that the Imperial County Medical Society “had urged supervisors to ‘not contribute to the dissemination of false or misleading information by legitimizing unproven treatments.’” The paper also quoted an executive at an Imperial County hospital, saying, “We need to stick with what we know is approved by the FDA for COVID-19 treatments. . . . Misinformation itself ought to be stopped.” In December, Twitter also suspended Tyson’s account for breaking its policies against Covid misinformation.

    The dismissal of hydroxychloroquine as a possible Covid-19 treatment, however, was never based on solid science. The Los Angeles Times article reveals a fundamentally authoritarian worldview: medical claims are “unproven,” and dangerous for the public to discuss, until some official body endorses them—an approach that threatens public health and science alike.

    Interest in hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus treatment stretches back at least to 2005, when an in vitro study showed that chloroquine, a very similar compound, might protect against SARS infection. Based on laboratory studies and small clinical trials, medical authorities in China and South Korea recommended chloroquine as a Covid-19 treatment in February 2020.

    Some doctors outside East Asia followed. Vladimir Zelenko, a doctor in a Hasidic community in New York, advocated a combination of HCQ, azithromycin (an antibiotic to guard against secondary infections), and a zinc supplement: HCQ increases the uptake of zinc ions into cells, a property that Zelenko surmised might provide antiviral effects. In an open letter in April 2020, Zelenko claimed to have treated about 1,450 patients, including 405 that he judged “high risk,” with only two deaths. Luigi Cavanna, a doctor in Piacenza, Italy, also claimed about the same time that thanks to an HCQ treatment protocol, none of his patients had died and only 5 percent were hospitalized—one-sixth the contemporaneous Italian hospitalization rate of over 30 percent. Many more systematic “observational” studies of HCQ—comparing patients in a hospital or elsewhere who received a drug (because of their own or a doctor’s choice) with those who did not—returned good results both as a treatment of Covid-19 cases (including one large study from the Henry Ford Health System in metropolitan Detroit) and for prevention of Covid-19 in individuals at high exposure risk. One especially striking example of the latter is a set of 11 “case-control” studies from India, where medical authorities recommended but did not mandate a weekly prophylactic dose of HCQ for medical workers. Most of these studies found that workers who took HCQ had reduced odds of testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, with especially marked reductions for those who took six or more doses of the protocol.

    Medical researchers tend to discount doctors’ reports and observational studies—which, granted, have many potential biases that can’t always be spotted or corrected. For instance, observational studies can underestimate the efficacy of a treatment that’s given more often to sicker patients—or overestimate it, if health-conscious patients are more likely to demand experimental treatments, or if doctors who give ineffective experimental drugs are also more likely to give effective experimental drugs (this latter point was a common and valid criticism of the Henry Ford study). So doctors generally consider randomized trials, which avoid these classes of bias, to be more reliable—though they have drawbacks, too, such as considerably greater expense and, therefore, typically smaller sample sizes.

    And most analyses of randomized trials of HCQ—on the basis of which mainstream medical opinion decided that it doesn’t work for Covid-19—do draw negative conclusions. For instance, a February 2021 review by Cochrane, an organization that produces comprehensive reviews of randomized trials, concludes, “HCQ for people infected with COVID‐19 has little or no effect on the risk of death and probably no effect on progression to mechanical ventilation.” Another meta-analysis in Nature by Cathrine Axfors et al. estimates an 11 percent increase in risk of death on the basis of 26 randomized trials.

    The results of both meta-analyses were essentially determined by two large, similar trials: the Solidarity trial run by the World Health Organization and the Recovery trial at the University of Oxford. These trials accounted together for over 97 percent of the statistical weight in Cochrane’s main analysis, and both claimed to rule out more than a tiny benefit of HCQ for hospitalized Covid-19 patients.

    But neither trial disproves claims such as Fareed and Tyson’s. First and most importantly, both trials were on hospitalized patients and are not necessarily applicable to “outpatients” earlier in the disease course. Antiviral treatments work better earlier: for instance, oseltamivir (also known as Tamiflu), an antiviral influenza treatment, works well if started within two days of symptom onset, but not later. In Covid-19, viral load peaks soon after symptom onset, and viral replication has already ceased in most hospitalized patients, guaranteeing that antiviral treatments will have limited effect. One review in The Lancet found that dozens of studies consistently find that viral load in Covid-19 peaks in the first week of symptoms and that “No study detected live virus beyond day 9 of illness.” Lethal symptoms of Covid-19 in hospitalized patients are usually secondary effects, such as blood clotting and a dysregulated, hyperinflammatory immune response called “cytokine storm,” not continued action of the virus itself.

    The Recovery and Solidarity trials also both tested HCQ alone, even though the most widespread protocols combined it with other medications such as zinc, and they used bizarrely high doses. Most doctors who prescribed HCQ used low doses: for instance, Zelenko’s original treatment regimen comprised 2,000 milligrams in total of hydroxychloroquine sulfate (a compound that is about 78 percent HCQ by weight), comprising two doses of 200 mg each per day for five days—quite similar to the regimen of 2800 mg total recommended by a group of Chinese researchers based on in vitro study.

    Most of the trials reviewed by Cochrane used dosages about this size or, at most, about twice as large. But the Recovery and Solidarity trials used much larger doses: respectively, 10,000 mg and 9,600 mg of HCQ sulfate, according to Cochrane’s summary table, comprising a “loading dose” of 1,600 mg given within the first six hours followed by twice-daily doses of 400 mg for several days. HCQ at high doses can cause potentially dangerous heart rhythm distortions, and the total-day dose of 2,400 mg of HCQ sulfate (or roughly 1,860 mg of base HCQ) is already nearly half the dose of 4 grams that a report from 2017 called “potentially fatal in adults.” (Other sources give higher lethal doses: for instance, one paper estimates 2 to 3 grams as a potentially fatal dose of chloroquine and estimates that HCQ is one-quarter as toxic as chloroquine.) The Indian Council of Medical Research, India’s equivalent of the CDC, even wrote to the WHO warning that the Solidarity trial’s dose was needlessly and possibly dangerously high, approximately quadruple the dose commonly used in Indian hospitals.

    The Recovery writeup argues that since there was no excess mortality in the HCQ arm in the first few days of the trial, the high doses were unlikely to have been harmful. But this argument is hardly bulletproof: HCQ has a long half-life (an FDA data sheet gives an estimate of 22 days), and it is not out of the question that the studies’ high continued doses could have accumulated to dangerous effect. The Recovery trial’s appendix even mentions that the HCQ group had a rate of major cardiac arrythmia 31 percent higher than the control group (8.2 percent versus 6.3 percent), though the authors dismiss this finding as not statistically significant.

    The Recovery researchers may even have chosen HCQ dosage based on confusion with another medication. In a June 2020 interview with the magazine France Soir, Martin Landray, one of the directors of the Recovery trial, justified the dose as “in line with the sort of doses that you used for other diseases such as amoebic dysentery”—a disease for which HCQ has not been regularly used for decades. It’s plausible that the researchers confused hydroxychloroquine with hydroxyquinoline, which is indeed used for amoebic dysentery.

    Amore optimistic picture emerges from studies of earlier treatment with HCQ. Axfors et al. mention five trials with “outpatients” (that is, outside hospitals). Only two have more than a few dozen subjects: Mitjà et al., from a team in Catalonia; and Skipper et al., from researchers at the University of Minnesota. A third substantial outpatient trial has since been published: the TOGETHER trial, conducted in Brazil. Though all these trials report no effects for HCQ, the truth is a bit more complicated: all three found some positive effects for HCQ, including a reduction in hospitalizations, but were not large enough on their own to establish these results with certainty.

    This point rests on a subtle distinction: a study that fails to prove that a treatment is effective has not necessarily proved that the treatment is ineffective. Medical researchers typically decide whether an experiment proves a treatment’s efficacy by reversing the question, and calculating the probability, called a p-value, that an ineffective treatment would generate equal or better results in the same experiment. A p-value of 5 percent or less is by convention designated “statistically significant” and regarded as at least preliminary proof of efficacy. A small study with a statistically insignificant result, though, has not necessarily proved a treatment to be ineffective: small experiments can turn up good results by chance, so they are simply not powerful enough to distinguish worthless treatments from many good ones.

    By analogy, imagine flipping a coin 20 times to test if it’s more likely to come up heads than tails. Getting 18 or 19 heads out of 20 flips would be firm evidence that the coin was biased, but not, say, only 12 heads out of 20 flips: an unbiased coin would give at least 12 heads out of 20 flips about a quarter of the time. But a larger experiment with the same disproportion, such as 120 heads out of 200 flips, would be powerful evidence of bias—as would be, for that matter, several repeated experiments of 20 flips each that all yielded more heads than tails.

    In any case, though all three RCTs of HCQ for outpatients mentioned above reported no statistically significant results, a closer look suggests potential substantial benefits for HCQ that each study was too weak to establish on its own. Mitjà et al. reported no statistically significant findings, but the HCQ group did have a lower rate of Covid-19-related hospitalizations: 5.9 percent (8 of 136) against 7.1 percent (11 of 157) in the control group, a reduction of 16 percent (the paper elsewhere claims a 25 percent reduction, likely an arithmetic error), and the HCQ group had somewhat faster cessation of symptoms. Skipper et al., similarly, found a moderate acceleration in the pace of symptom improvement among a group of American and Canadian participants treated with HCQ; the control group also had eight Covid 19-related hospitalizations out of 211, versus four of 212 in an equally sized experimental group. The TOGETHER trial, finally, was stopped early for “futility,” even though the preliminary results showed a reduction of about one-quarter in hospitalizations in the HCQ group compared with placebo: 8 of 214 versus 11 of 227.

    All trials, furthermore, used HCQ in isolation, without zinc or any other treatments. Skipper et al., furthermore, compared HCQ against folate as a placebo—and according to weak but suggestive evidence, folate might help fight Covid-19 . One paper from Iran published in March 2020 noted that a computer simulation predicted that folic acid could inhibit an enzyme, furin, vital to SARS-CoV-2 replication; and one blogger from the United Kingdom has noted that hospitalizations of pregnant women for Covid-19 in the U.K. almost all occurred during later stages of pregnancy, while folate supplementation in the first trimester is near-universal. (In personal communication, David Boulware, one of the study authors, explained that the study used folate as a placebo because folate and HCQ pills matched one another in appearance well, and other common placebos such as talc or lactose would have been too expensive or harmed study participants with lactose intolerance.)

    Another trial run by a similar University of Minnesota team considered post-exposure prophylaxis—that is, medication to stop people exposed to SARS-CoV-2 from developing symptoms. The trial sent subjects either HCQ or a folate placebo by overnight mail if they came into contact with a Covid case, finding a 17 percent reduction (not statistically significant) in total cases. A commentary by one professor from Brazil points out a sign from the study data that the HCQ might do even better under optimal conditions: excluding trial participants who began showing Covid symptoms before completing a full five-day course of medication gives a significantly higher efficacy, approximately 40 percent. (The results of another post-exposure prophylaxis study, unfortunately, don’t trend towards toward showing effectiveness of HCQ—though this study used a lower HCQ dose and a Vitamin C placebo that itself might have beneficial effects, though the study authors claim that the Vitamin C dose used was too low to be effective.)

    Finally, a brief mention is worthwhile of two pre-exposure prophylaxis studies, each with several hundred health-care worker participants and dozens of Covid-19 cases in both placebo and control groups, one conducted mostly by the same University of Minnesota team and another conducted by Duke University. Both studies estimated that once- or twice-weekly consumption of HCQ reduced the incidence of Covid-19 cases by about one-quarter—neither quite statistically significant on its own.

    In short, the actual scientific evidence used to dismiss HCQ is far from an absolute proof that it doesn’t work. Many of the studies commonly cited to dismiss the drug are irrelevant, too weak to bear much weight, or actually suggest some benefits. The RCT evidence alone is not enough for an affirmative case that HCQ certainly works, but neither does it provide any grounds to declare a priori that the results achieved by doctors such as George Fareed and Brian Tyson constitute “misinformation,” or are entirely due to confounding factors. At the very least, their claims merit good-faith close examination, including more formal trials that try to replicate their results with their exact protocol.

    But there is a broader point here: the brokenness of the criteria that political authorities and Internet platforms use to determine acceptable opinion. With a handful of largely politically motivated exceptions—the scientific backing for mask mandates, for instance, amounts to scarcely more than artificial laboratory studies and cherry-picked epidemiological comparisons, with scant if any support from randomized controlled trials—medical regulatory agencies consider RCTs the only acceptable source of evidence. Though RCTs are immune from certain classes of bias, though, they can be poorly designed in other ways and are hardly infallible. Moreover, RCTs are expensive, labor-intensive, and typically beyond the reach of researchers without institutional backing, for often wholly artificial reasons—such as pettifogging ethical oversight requirements imposed by institutional review boards, and a ban on human challenge trials that could allow conclusive randomized testing of disease treatments with drastically reduced expense and time.

    As blogger Scott Alexander has pointed out, the phrase “no evidence,” frequently used to dismiss potential alternative Covid-19 treatments, is one of the most overused in science communication, applied both to assuredly false statements and to those that are likely true but simply lack sufficiently authoritative proof. Critical thinking about medicine or any topic requires weighing multiple sources against one another and distinguishing between degrees of certainty, not ruling out all sources of evidence but one and equating “unproven” with “false.” The approach to health information increasingly taken by public officials, reporters, and social media—under which any statement is “unproven” and must be assumed harmful, barring some definitive pronouncement by public health authorities to the contrary—is thus not only authoritarian but also damaging to public health and science as a whole.