*It's indefensible—a crime against humanity.*

*MCM*

*Veteran Virologist Slams Mainstream Media’s “Misinformation” About An
Effective COVID Treatment*
AUGUST 5, 2020

Veteran Virologist Slams Mainstream Media’s “Misinformation” About An
Effective COVID Treatment

https://thedailyreformer.com/veteran-virologist-slams-mainstream-medias-misinformation-about-an-effective-covid-treatment/

Tyler Durden <https://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden>

Tue, 08/04/2020 – 23:25

*Authored by Steven Hatfill via RealClearPolitics.com,*
<https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2020/08/04/an_effective_covid_treatment_the_media_continues_to_besmirch_143875.html>

On Friday, July 31,* in a column ostensibly dealing with health care
“misinformation,” *Washington Post media critic Margaret Sullivan opened by
lambasting “fringe doctors spouting dangerous falsehoods about
hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 wonder cure.”

<https://www.zerohedge.com/s3/files/inline-images/510673_6_.jpg?itok=dkZHPACm>

*Actually, it was Sullivan who was spouting dangerous falsehoods about this
drug,* something the Washington Post and much of the rest of the media have
been doing since for months. On May 15, the Post offered a stark warning to
any Americans who may have taken hope in a possible therapy for COVID-19.

*In the newspaper’s telling, there was nothing unambiguous about the
science — or the politics* — of hydroxychloroquine:

*“Drug promoted by Trump as coronavirus game-changer increasingly linked to
deaths,” blared the headline.*

Written by three Post staff writers, *the story asserted that the
effectiveness of hydroxychloroquine in treating COVID-19 is scant and that
the drug is inherently unsafe.*

This claim is nonsense.

*Biased against the use of hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19 – and the
Washington Post is hardly alone* — the paper described an April 21, 2020,
drug study on U.S. Veterans Affairs patients
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/04/21/anti-malarial-drug-trump-touted-is-linked-higher-rates-death-va-coronavirus-patients-study-says/?tid=lk_inline_manual_38&itid=lk_inline_manual_38>hospitalized
with the illness. It found a high death rate in patients taking the drug
hydroxychloroquine. But this was a flawed study with a small sample, the
main flaw being that the drug was given to the sickest patients who were
already dying because of their age and severe pre-existing conditions. *This
study was quickly debunked. It had been posted on a non-peer-reviewed
medical archive that specifically warns that studies posted on its website
should not be reported in the media as established information.*

Yet, the Post and countless other news outlets did just the opposite,
making repeated claims that hydroxychloroquine was ineffective and caused
serious cardiac problems. Nowhere was there any mention of the fact that
COVID-19 damages the heart during infection, sometimes causing irregular
and sometimes fatal heart rhythms in patients not taking the drug.

*To a media unrelentingly hostile to Donald Trump, this meant that the
president could be portrayed as recklessly promoting the use of a
“dangerous” drug.* Ignoring the refutation of the VA study in its May 15
article, the Washington Post cited a Brazil study published on April 24 in
which a COVID trial using chloroquine (a related but different drug than
hydroxychloroquine) was stopped because 11 patients treated with it died.
The reporters never mentioned another problem with that study: The
Brazilian doctors were giving their patients lethal cumulative doses of the
drug.

On and on it has gone since then, in a circle of self-reinforcing
commentary. Following the news that Trump was taking the drug himself,
opinion hosts on cable news channels launched continual attacks on both
hydroxychloroquine and the president. “This will kill you!” Fox News
Channel’s Neil Cavuto exclaimed. “The president of the United States just
acknowledge that he is taking hydroxychloroquine, a drug that [was] meant
really to treat malaria and lupus.”

Washington Post reporters Ariana Cha
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/ariana-eunjung-cha/> and Laurie
McGinley <https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/laurie-mcginley/> were back
again on May 22, with a new article shouting out the new supposed news:

“Antimalarial drug touted by President Trump is linked to increased risk of
death in coronavirus patients, study says.”

*The media uproar this time was based on a large study just published in
the Lancet. There was just one problem. The Lancet paper was fraudulent and
it was quickly retracted.*

*Click on the link for the rest.*

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