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by incrudible
1608 days ago
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I'm not going to argue the ethics, I'm going to argue that these trials are under-powered and insufficient to make bold claims about vaccine efficacy. The trials are in fact not completed until the end of the year, but there is little further information to be gained after dissolution of the placebo group. Remember, the people defending Ivermectin also argue that it's unethical to do further trials when it is "clearly effective" (according to under-powered studies). Consider that pharma companies deliberately avoid follow-up trials to avoid finding results that don't align with business interest. Remdesivir and Molnupiravir both looked promising in early trials, but were found to be rather ineffective (and dangerous) in later trials. I don't have a problem with administering drugs/vaccines based on good faith and speculative benefit if that is declared appropriately. Just don't dress it up as "scientifically validated". |
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The evidence for covid vaccines is that they provide robust protection for months, and then protection may begin to wain.
Evidence for ivermectin is that, ehhh it might have some effect.
Those aren't the same. Trying to dress them up as similar is wrong. These two things as re not equally scientifically validated.