There are no "laws of scientific procedure". There's not even a singular 
scientific method. What we have are heuristics and best practices driven by 
repeatability and reproducibility. So, in order to build guidelines for *who* 
to give hydroxychloroquine to, how much to give them, and when to give it, we 
have to experiment. No experimentation means no guidelines.

No guidelines for how much to ship to any given hospital. No guidelines on 
dosage. No guidelines. We don't build bridges that way. We don't write software 
that way. We don't cook food that way. Etc. Why should we "treat" patients that 
way?

Yes, it's true that any particular doctor, imbued with the power of their 
license and their relationship with particular patients, should have the power 
to dose their patient with it. But logistical decisions made at massive and 
costly hospital system scale really do need those guidelines.

It blows my mind that you don't understand this point.

On 4/14/20 8:12 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> The Laws of Scientific Procedure ARE the laws I am talking about here.  In 
> good times, we can take the time to focus on the consequences to individuals. 
>  And so, we can design our health systems for the most vulnerable among us.  
> That imposes delays on the "mean" patient, but no problem, we have other ways 
> of treating the mean patient.  In an emergency,  the possibility that one in 
> a million patients might have an allergy to some component of 
> Chlorwhatitsface seems reasonably to be less relevant, even though it's built 
> into the laws of scientific medical  procedure. 


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