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  • yesterday, there has been some promise with dropsy.

  • Claure Quinn is potential therapy for people who are infected with the virus.

  • Is there any evidence to suggest that, as with malaria, it might be used as a prophylaxis against Kobe?

  • I think the answer is no.

  • And the evidence that you're talking about John is anecdotal evidence.

  • So as the commissioner of F d.

  • A.

  • And the president mentioned yesterday, we're trying to strike a balance between making something with a potential oven oven effect to the American people, available at the same time that we do it under the auspices of a protocol that would give us information to determine if it's truly safe and truly effective.

  • But the information that you're referring to specifically is anecdotal.

  • It was not done in a controlled clinical trial, so you really can't make any defendants of statement about without seeing too much.

  • I'm probably more of a fan of that than, uh maybe than anybody, but I'm a big fan.

  • We'll see what happens, and we all understand what the doctor said is 100% correct.

  • It's early, but we've, you know, I've seen things that air impressive will see we're gonna know.

  • So we're gonna know soon, including safety.

  • But you know, when you get that safety, this has been prescribed for many years for people to combat malaria, which was a big problem, and it's very effective.

  • It's a strong, strong drug.

  • So we'll see you again, Sergeant.

  • It was very it was, as I understand that.

  • Is that a correct statement?

  • It was fairly effective when stars John, you've got to be careful when you say fail the affected.

  • It was never done in a clinical trial.

  • They compared it to anything.

  • It was given to individuals and felt that maybe it works compared to Well, that's the point.

  • Whenever you do a clinical trial, you do standard of care.

  • Very sustained it of care.

  • Plus the agent you're evaluating.

  • That's the reason why we showed back in Ebola why particular interventions worked about possible therapies Yesterday, Mr President, you said that they were for immediate delivery immediately.

  • Heard.

  • We're ordering.

  • Yes, we have millions of units ordered.

  • Bear is one of the companies is you know, big company.

  • Very big, very great company.

  • Millions of units are ordered and we're going to see what happens.

  • We're going to be talking to the governors about it.

  • And the FDA is working on her right now.

  • The advantage is that it has been prescribed for a totally different problem.

  • But it has been described for many years, and everybody knows the levels of of the negatives and the positives.

  • But I will say that I am a man that comes from a very positive school when it comes to, in particular one of these drugs and we'll see how it works.

  • And Peter, I'm not I'm not saying it will, but I think that people may be surprised by the way that would be a game changer, but we're gonna know very soon.

  • But we have ordered millions of units.

  • It's being ordered, but from Bear.

  • And there is another couple of companies also that do it said there is no magic drug for Corona virus right now.

  • Which you would agree, I guess on this issue, way only, is this really sorry?

  • Uh, maybe.

  • And maybe not.

  • Maybe there is.

  • Maybe there isn't.

  • We have to see we're gonna know is impossible.

  • Is it possible that your impulse to put a positive spin on things, maybe giving Americans a false sense of.

  • I don't think there's any apparent this right now.

  • I don't think so.

  • I think that, uh, I think it's got not get a pretty strong guy.

  • Such a lovely question.

  • Look, it may work and it may not work.

  • And I agree with the doctor.

  • What he said may work.

  • May network the I feel good about it, that's all It is just a feeling, you know, smart guy.

  • I feel good about it and looking to see you're gonna see soon enough.

  • And we have certainly some very big samples of people, have you Look at the people have a lot of people that are in big trouble.

  • And this is not a drug that obviously I think I can speak for a lot of from a lot of experience because it's been out there for over 20 years.

  • So it's not a drug that you have a huge amount of danger with.

  • It's not like a brand new drug that's been just created that may have an unbelievable monumental effect like kill you.

  • We're gonna know very soon, and I can tell you the FDA is working very hard to get it out right now in terms of malaria.

  • If you want it, you can have a prescription, you get a prescription.

  • And by the way, and it's very effective, it works.

  • I have a feeling you may, and I'm not being overly optimistic, oppressive?

  • Pessimistic.

  • I sure as hell think we ought to give it a try.

  • I mean, there's been some interesting things happened and some good, very good things.

  • Let's see what happens.

  • We have nothing to lose.

  • You know the expression.

  • What the hell do you have to lose?

  • Okay, so what do you think?

  • They're more additional?

  • Follow up John's death.

  • Americans were scared, though.

  • I guess nearly 200 dead.

  • 14,000 yours sick millions.

  • As you witness who are scared right now, what you say to Americans were watching you right now you are scared.

  • I say that you're a terrible reporter.

  • That's what I say.

  • It worked.

  • I think it's a very nasty question, and I think it's a very bad signal that you're putting out to the American people.

  • The American people are looking for answers, and they're looking for hope, and you're doing sensationalism.

  • And the same with NBC and con cast I don't I don't know what Comcast cycle Comcast.

  • Let me just who do you work?

  • Let me just say something that's really bad reported and you want to get back to reporting instead of sensationalism.

  • Let's see if it works, it might, and it might not.

  • I happen to feel good about it, but who knows?

  • I've been right a lot.

  • Let's see what happens.

  • John.

  • Back to science and the logistics area, shaming three units that were ordered.

  • Are they for clinical trials?

  • Are they for distribution to the General Patient Way are going to a CZ?

  • I understand it.

  • We are going to be taking samples in New York.

  • Governor Cuomo very much is interested in this drug, and they are going to work on it also, after they get a certain approval, we're waiting for one final approval from the FDA.

  • We'll see what happens, but we'll use it on people that are not doing great or even at the beginning of not feeling well fallen under.

  • Then John.

  • What do we have to lose?

  • So this is the way John it's been out there for so long.

  • We hear good things.

  • Let's see.

  • Maybe it works out.

  • Maybe it doesn't just get the application, so that would be under sort of a modified compassionate access.

  • We're doing that, I guess.

  • And that's that's what it's called you.

  • Yes.

  • You don't want to follow up from what the president is saying.

  • Should Americans have hope in this drug right now?

  • And, sir, I would like to follow up on Peter's question here.

  • Could you please issue, uh, address Americans in this country who are scared right now?

  • This is a very balanced conservative.

  • People have.

  • No, there really isn't that much of a difference in many respects with what we're saying, the president feels optimistic about something.

  • His feeling about what I'm saying is that it might it might be effective.

  • I'm not saying that it isn't.

  • It might be effective, but as a scientist, as we're getting it out there, we need to do it in a way, as while we are making it available for people who might want the hope that it might work.

  • You're also collecting data that will ultimately show that it is truly effective and safe under the conditions of covert 19.

  • So there really isn't different is just a question of how one feels about it, believe it's not safe.

  • Well, certainly as a drug, any drug, John has some toxicities.

  • The decades of experience that we have with this drug indicate that the toxicities are rare, and they are in many respects, reversible.

  • What we don't know is when you put it in the context of another disease, whether it's safe fundamentally, I think it probably is going to be safe.

  • But I like to prove things for so it really is a question of not a lot of difference.

  • It's the hope that will work versus proving that it will work, so I don't see big differences here.

yesterday, there has been some promise with dropsy.

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