Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Saturday, April 11, 2020

Actor Says This Was The 'Secret Weapon' in Fighting His Wuhan Coronavirus Infection

Hollywood actor Daniel Dae Kim became a household name starring in hit television series, like Lost and Hawaii Five-O. He’s also recovering from being infected by the Wuhan coronavirus which has virtually locked down the United States. The economy has been ground to a halt, as the vast majority of the U.S. population lives under stay-at-home orders. This is a highly contagious disease that has infected close to 500,000 Americans and killed over 18,500. For Kim, he believes one drug has helped him immensely in his recovery: hydroxychloroquine. The anti-malarial drug that is said to be highly effective against the symptoms of the pneumonia-like virus. Thousands of doctors have spoken to the drug’s effectiveness. In the U.S., out of 1,200 doctors surveyed nationwide, 65 percent would prescribe this drug to fight COVID-19 symptoms in family members, 67 percent would take it themselves. Kim says this drug was the “secret weapon” in battling his infection (via PageSix):

“Lost” star Daniel Dae Kim believes the anti-malarial drug touted by President Trump was the “secret weapon” in his recovery from the coronavirus.

The 51-year-old actor praised hydroxychloroquine as being “critical” in the treatment that has left him now “practically back to normal” just days after confirming he had been infected.

“Yes, this is the drug that the President mentioned the other day,” Kim said in an Instagram video Saturday, noting that Dr. Anthony Fauci had cautioned that supposed success stories were “only based on personal accounts.”

“Well, add my name to those personal accounts, because I am feeling better,” Kim insisted of the drug he noted was being “used with great success” against the virus in Korea.

More

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Too much about "believing" it works for covid-19. Let's see the scientific proof that it works. Anecdotal evidence is just that, anecdotal. The placebo effect is anecdotal too, but can be proved to be effective at treating disease, as well. The placebo effect has to be gleaned out in double blind studies for any effective cure to be quantified or validated. Until that is done, all we are seeing is the placebo effect. People are being given the drug with the BELIEF that it may help them survive. When they do survive after being given the drug, they attribute their recovery to the drug. Anecdotal evidence, at best. Until proven, it's no more than a placebo effect. The scientific community is having a hard time explaining that to the parts of the public that are not educated enough to understand the scientific method and scientific validation.

Anonymous said...

10#41 screw your scientific method if I'm sick and it makes me feel better I'm takin it.