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Richard C Phillips's avatar

As a physician with MPH and MS degrees in evidence-based medicine, medical informatics, and biostatistics, I totally agree with you critique of other "expert" analyses in substack. As you suggested, I downloaded and read the study. This RCT was a poor quality study, IMHO, with 12 different treatment centers for the 679 patients who received IVM and with no analysis of secondary outcomes like adverse events or death. I am happy to see the breadth of your analytic critique. Your critique is very much on-point.

The value of RCTs are over-rated since they generally are restricted to early outcomes and do not evaluate late events like adverse events, long-COVID type of events, and events associated with vaccination, which was not even addressed in this RCT analysis. It is truly sad that so many people do not read these studies or have the expertise to critique them. Medicine is a very complex science that is often over-simplified in critiques I have read from others.

Thank your for your thoughtful input.

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Jools's avatar

I also read a substack today where the author has previously expressed bias against IVM and clearly regurgitated something today that he read regarding this particular study. I’m not very good at data and statistics and I know people easily can use these to mislead people. In this particular study, the method seemed quite flawed for the reasons you stated. Also, as a provider, I don’t prescribe IVM without also making sure the patient is in zinc, and vitamin c and d3. Also, if they have Comorbid conditions, their prescribed dose is higher and generally IVM Is prescribed for 5 - 7 days, not three. IVM is also supposed to be taken with food. ( perhaps you mentioned this). It’s good to read and try to discern truth. I’m so skeptical about everything!

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