The news: President Donald Trump has started receiving the steroid drug dexamethasone, which is usually reserved for patients with a severe case of covid-19. A study in June found that it significantly cut the chances that seriously ill patients died from the coronavirus. The World Health Organization recommends it is only given to patients with “severe and critical covid-19.”
Extra oxygen: At a news conference yesterday his doctors also announced that he had required extra oxygen, after his oxygen levels fell. Trump is also receiving a five-day course of remdesivir, which evidence suggests can shorten hospital stays and save lives for covid-19 patients. However in the news conference yesterday, his doctors said he was able to get out of the hospital bed and walk, and claimed he may be discharged on Monday. Later that day Trump briefly left the hospital to wave at supporters from his armored Chevrolet Suburban, a decision that was described as “insanity” by a doctor at Walter Reed Hospital, where Trump is being treated, due to the fact it may have put hospital staff members and Secret Service agents at risk.
Be careful reading too much into all it: Given that he is 74 and overweight, the president is at higher risk for serious illness. But we don’t know whether the cocktail of drugs is being given to Trump by his doctors due to their own medical assessment of his condition, or whether Trump has directed them to do so. On Friday Trump was given a dose of an unapproved, experimental, cutting-edge antibody treatment not available to other Americans. It’s being developed by Regeneron and is designed to mimic a powerful immune response in order to ward off a serious case of covid-19. Scientists have not studied the impact using all these drugs at once could have on their effectiveness.
How did Trump get covid-19 in the first place? It is extremely hard to answer with any certainty, because it can take anywhere from two to 14 days between being exposed to the coronavirus and testing positive. The prevailing theory has been that Trump caught covid-19 off his aide Hope Hicks, but evidence is emerging that a White House ceremony on September 26 could have been a “superspreading” event after at least seven of the people who attended tested positive. It’s unclear if Trump has infected others, but it is entirely possible given his busy schedule of campaign rallies, the debate, and fundraising events.
from MIT Technology Review https://ift.tt/33wbof1
No comments:
Post a Comment