The majority of many populations are known to be vitamin d deficient and there's a pandemic happening to where tons of data is pointing towards vitamin d being important, why wouldn't health organizations and governments pass that message along? Why not have people be proactive in the pandemic and also the coming flu season (+ covid obviously) when even the people with good levels of vitamin d drop during the fall/winter? For the time being, there's a new normal obviously.
Hydroxy doesn't have those type of serious and near as common side effects as say Cymbalta; it's handed out like candy in some countries. Are we doing that with Cymbalta? I very much doubt it.
Hydroxy and remdesivir are for 2 different purposes. It seems like remdesivir can help when patients are doing rather poorly (the studies don't show great results either, it seems like it helps a bit) while hydroxy is there (outpatient) to hopefully stop hospitalizations from happening.
No, I didn't. I said the other side has bigger conflicts of interest.
Hydroxy's job isn't impeding the viral replication.
Just look at the data on all the studies, how do they not show hydroxy offers benefits? Looking at the
5 most recent hydroxy studies that had negative results; 4 were in already hospitalized patients, 1 was an observational study for people that had hydroxy prescriptions sometime in the preceding 6th months (if I summarized that properly). How are you gonna say there's more data saying hydroxy doesn't do anything or is harmful?
Why did anyone take the Surgishpere data seriously then? Also, some of the studies that have caused hydroxy to be seen as not working gave the patients nearly averaging 1,000mg of it per day over 10 days; 1 was 9,200mg over 10 days, 1 was 8,800 over 10 days. The WHO's own trial didn't even specify dosage. The fact that we have "low-dose" hydroxy studies when they are just giving people the recommended dosage the drug has had for 50+ years says something.
Just check out the map: