WHO stops hydroxychloroquine use to treat COVID-19
8 || risingbd.com

The World Health Organization (WHO) has stoped use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19 patients.
WHO took the decision after finding it did not reduce the mortality rate.
Doctor Ana Maria Henao Restrepo, from the WHO’s health emergencies programme, told a virtual press conference in Geneva that it was being withdrawn from its multi-country Solidarity Trial of a range of potential treatments.
“The internal evidence from the Solidarity/Discovery Trial, the external evidence from the Recovery Trial and the combined evidence from these large randomised trials, brought together, suggest that hydroxychloroquine — when compared with the standard of care in the treatment of hospitalised COVID-19 patients — does not result in the reduction of the mortality of those patients,” she said.
A decades-old malaria and rheumatoid arthritis drug, hydroxychloroquine has been at the centre of political and scientific controversy.
It has been touted as a possible treatment for the new coronavirus by high profile figures, including US President Donald Trump.
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