I think we're talking past each other. I asked for feedback about those statements as stand-alone facts. Can someone be pro-vaxx generally and not confident in
these vaccines, specifically? That's a yes or no response. You went far wide and introduced many other topics: motivation, demographics, etc.
I was trying to keep things simple so we could get clarity on that one point. If agreement can't be reached, clarity is the next best goal, in my opinion. You get clarity and can move on from there. But sometimes it doesn't happen.
What?? Why would someone would limit their health options by deferring to the FDA?
I don't think you understand. YES someone can be pro-vaccine and against this vaccine.
Hypocritical people CAN exist for a myriad of reasons. That doesn't mean their reasons are good, or change the fact that their actions can negatively effect other peoples lives.
As for the other ..........Uh. Most of the time it's not even LEGAL for doctors to prescribe outside that.
Look, I'm all for a certain amount of pushback against regulatory issues, especially in times of need. FDA doesn't approve things for stupid reasons sometimes and some pressure is needed. They even approved HCQ for a while there even though it was high risk. But there's a LOT of questions about all these experimental treatments.
Some of the follow up studies have shown no improvement in COVID, some of the studies have shown deterioration, some have shown improvement, some have shown improvement - but in cells at doses much higher than humans can take in a lab.
Some like this one were only 16 people for 4 weeks and didn't even have a single control, they just said "we gave 16 people the drug and they got better the end". It's very up in the air. It's one thing if you're dying. It's another if you're healthy and put your faith in something that may or may not work and go on as if it does work.
Because what if it doesn't?
What if it works but much less than expected?
Who's responsible then?
The person who put out the incorrect study in another country?
The doctor who said yes?
Someone who told the patient about it?
The person who didn't wear a mask?
The person who made the choice to rely on the experimental treatment?
Usually it's the last one and then we're back at square one. If someone relied on something that didn't actually work and wasn't proven it's their own fault. So why would anyone RELY on that to protect themselves when they have no way of being sure it would work? Even if you were taking it to try to protect yourself, unless you have definitive results you would still want other people wearing masks in case it didn't because you can't be sure.
Experimental treatments that have the potential to have serious negative consequences are not a fair option to suggest that majority of the population RELY ON. Use? Maybe. Sure even, especially if the consequences are low (ivermectin is PROBABLY fine but maybe not HCQ that has serious side effects). But RELY ON? Not really IMO. You're just asking people to take the blame for getting a preventable illness by using a treatment they don't even know for sure works.
Interestingly I saw there's a number of studies on ivermectin in the USA happening right now.
But there's also a huge shortage of drug trial participants causing it to go slow.
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04602507
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30460-4/fulltext
https://www.statnews.com/2020/10/28/recruitment-retention-silent-crises-clinical-trials/
https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20200702.963588/full/
If you're passionate about it, you should look into drug trials in your area and sign up for them! We could use the info! I'll be excited if it works and if it does and costs pennies, GREAT! But until we KNOW we can rely on it, we SHOULDN'T rely on it.