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That website is fake: - It is impossible to contact the owners of the website - The website has gotten direct critique of spreading misinformation in two papers - They draw their own conclusions from the paper. - A lot of the papers in its
meta-analysis doesn’t have control
groups or randomized trials. Some
studies only compare ivermectin+X vs
ivermectin+Y - The total sample size of all
studies are only 2000 people. But let's ignore all these red flags and focus on this. They claim that each of the following individual medicines works, Fluvoxamine, Proxalutamide, Iota-carrageenan, Molnupiravir, Quercetin, Povidone-Iodine, Curcumin, Casirivimab, Sotrovimab, Bamlanivimab, Nitazoxanide, Budesonide, Zinc, Bromhexine, Colchicine, Vitamin D, Aspirin, Favipiravir, Hydroxychloroquine, Remdesivir, and Vitamin C. I find it unlikely that ALL those claims are true which in turn makes me question their scientific approach. |
If you have the time to share an illustrative example paper, that would be helpful.
> I find it unlikely that ALL those claims are true which in turn makes me question their scientific approach.
Response posted here: https://news.ycombinator.com/edit?id=28335175