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5 hours ago, Tippaporn said:

Was it peer reviewed?  No?  How do you treat non-peer reviewed studies performed by those on the other side of you?  Do you see a problem?  Want to talk about it?  Full disclosure?

 

Sure thing, I'll talk about it (The Royal Society (UK) report on the effectiveness of COVID intervention measures)... Some sources are not typically peer reviewed, because the authors aren't just ordinary individual researchers, such as was the case here... Guess you'll just have to settle for this below (though note below a separate independent review process that did occur with later published summary version of this report).

 

Screenshot_1.jpg.3f7d378f16d5de226465ad7c5b89f4dc.jpg

 

https://royalsociety.org/about-us/

 

And from the report itself:

 

"The Royal Society is a self-governing Fellowship of many
of the world’s most distinguished scientists drawn from all
areas of science, engineering, and medicine. The Society’s
fundamental purpose, as it has been since its foundation
in 1660, is to recognise, promote, and support excellence
in science and to encourage the development and use of
science for the benefit of humanity."

 

https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/impact-non-pharmaceutical-interventions-on-covid-19-transmission/the-royal-society-covid-19-examining-the-effectiveness-of-non-pharmaceutical-interventions-report.pdf

 

Highlights from the report itself:

 

Masks and enhanced hygiene measures
Published studies generally found that masks
reduced the transmission of SARS-CoV-2,
recognising the risk of bias, and allowing for
uncertain and variable efficacy. Importantly,
there was a ‘gradient of effectiveness’, with
evidence, mainly from studies in healthcare
settings, that higher quality N95/FFP2 masks
were more effective than surgical-type masks.

 

AND

 

Social distancing and ‘lockdowns’
Most effective of all the NPIs were the
social distancing measures, with a gradient
showing that the most stringent of these had
the strongest effects. Stay-at-home orders,
physical distancing measures, and restrictions
on gathering sizes were repeatedly found to
be associated with significant community-wide
reductions in SARS-CoV-2 transmission, as was
frequently assessed using the time-varying
reproduction number, Rt

 

AND

 

Travel restrictions and controls across
international borders

While most countries implemented some form
of border control, there are a limited number
of studies examining the effectiveness of their
implementation. Based on these, symptomatic
screening widely adopted in the early phases
of the pandemic was found to have had no
meaningful effect on reducing transmission.

 

Apart from the main and original published report, though, it does appear that a later summary version of the above report was published in the Royal Society's own journal with internal peer review, as follows:

Executive Summary to the Royal Society report "COVID-19: examining the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions"

The Royal Society

 

"This theme issue was put together by the Guest Editor team under supervision from the journal‘s Editorial staff, following the Royal Society‘s ethical codes and best-practice guidelines.

The Guest Editor team invited contributions and handled the review process. Individual Guest Editors were not involved in assessing papers where they had a personal, professional or financial conflict of interest with the authors or the research described. Independent reviewers assessed all papers. Invitation to contribute did not guarantee inclusion."
 
 

 

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2 hours ago, johng said:

 

Take your pick of the numerous study and public health agency recommendations against the general public use of ivermectin to treat COVID (outside of clinical trials) because it simply hasn't been found to work in credible research.

Yet another study shows little benefit for ivermectin with COVID-19

March 5, 2024
 
A new randomized control trial from the United Kingdom shows that using ivermectin during COVID-19 infections provided little improvement in recovery rates in patients treated in clinics. The study appeared in the Journal of Infection.
 
The anti-parasitic drug has been investigated since 2020 as a potential treatment for COVID-19. Some early trials suggested the drug was able to reduce mortality rates and improve outcomes, but several of them had serious flaws, the authors noted. Subsequent trials and systematic reviews have largely disproved those earlier results.
...

"Overall, these findings, while evidencing a small benefit in symptom duration, do not support the use of ivermectin as treatment for COVID-19 in the community among a largely vaccinated population at the dose and duration we used," the authors wrote.

 

https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/yet-another-study-shows-little-benefit-ivermectin-covid-19

 

-----------------------------

 

Ivermectin not effective in treating Covid-19, joint Mahidol-Oxford study shows

 

February 24, 2023

 

Ivermectin is not shown to be effective against Covid-19 in clinical trials according to the findings of a joint University of Oxford and Mahidol University study.

 

The study that was published on the peer-reviewed eLife medical journal found that high doses of the drug ivermectin, controversially recommended by some high-profile political and media figures during the pandemic, is ineffective at treating the virus.

 

https://www.thaienquirer.com/48271/ivermectin-not-effective-in-treating-covid-19-joint-mahidol-oxford-study-shows/

 

-----------------------------------------

 

New England Journal of Medicine editorial:

Time to Stop Using Ineffective Covid-19 Drugs

Published August 17, 2022

 

For ivermectin, a meta-analysis of 16 trials8 involving 2407 patients with both severe and nonsevere illness showed no reliable evidence of reductions in mechanical ventilation, hospital admission, duration of hospitalization, clinical severity, or mortality; in addition, the investigators found no effect related to the dose of ivermectin. In light of this available evidence of nonefficacy for ivermectin and fluvoxamine, how much evidence of nonefficacy is enough?

 

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2209017?query=recirc_curatedRelated_article

 

---------------------------

 

2023 WHO Guidelines for treatment of COVID:

WHO updates guidelines on treatments for COVID-19

10 November 2023
 
The update also includes a strong recommendation against the use of ivermectin for patients with non-severe COVID-19. WHO continues to advise that in patients with severe or critical COVID-19, ivermectin should only be used in clinical trials.
 
 
--------------------------------------
 
European Medicines Agency:
 

EMA advises against the use of ivermectin for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 outside randomised clinical trials.

 

In March 2021, EMA found that the published data from laboratory and observational studies, clinical trials and meta-analyses, do not support its use for COVID-19. It therefore concluded that using ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID-19 cannot be recommended outside controlled clinical trials.

 

https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/human-regulatory-overview/public-health-threats/coronavirus-disease-covid-19/covid-19-medicines/public-health-advice-covid-19-medicines

 

 

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41 minutes ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

Sure thing, I'll talk about it... Some sources are not typically peer reviewed, because the authors aren't just ordinary individual researchers, such as was the case here... Guess you'll just have to settle for this

 

LOL.  ". . . because the authors aren't just ordinary individual researchers . . ."  Are these mere mortals or are they Gods?

 

NEWS FLASH:  No one is infallible and thus beyond scrutiny.

 

Question of the Day for you, TallGuyJohninBKK.  What is politics?

 

Do you seriously believe this Royal Society would dare throw the UK government under the bus by finding their Covid protocols not only inept and ineffectual but harmful?  I know you weren't born yesterday, though it appears you were, but neither was I.

 

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Just now, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

 

Yet another study shows little benefit for ivermectin with COVID-19

March 5, 2024
 
A new randomized control trial from the United Kingdom shows that using ivermectin during COVID-19 infections provided little improvement in recovery rates in patients treated in clinics. The study appeared in the Journal of Infection.
 
The anti-parasitic drug has been investigated since 2020 as a potential treatment for COVID-19. Some early trials suggested the drug was able to reduce mortality rates and improve outcomes, but several of them had serious flaws, the authors noted. Subsequent trials and systematic reviews have largely disproved those earlier results.
...

"Overall, these findings, while evidencing a small benefit in symptom duration, do not support the use of ivermectin as treatment for COVID-19 in the community among a largely vaccinated population at the dose and duration we used," the authors wrote.

 

https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/yet-another-study-shows-little-benefit-ivermectin-covid-19

 

-----------------------------

 

Ivermectin not effective in treating Covid-19, joint Mahidol-Oxford study shows

 

February 24, 2023

 

Ivermectin is not shown to be effective against Covid-19 in clinical trials according to the findings of a joint University of Oxford and Mahidol University study.

 

The study that was published on the peer-reviewed eLife medical journal found that high doses of the drug ivermectin, controversially recommended by some high-profile political and media figures during the pandemic, is ineffective at treating the virus.

 

https://www.thaienquirer.com/48271/ivermectin-not-effective-in-treating-covid-19-joint-mahidol-oxford-study-shows/

 

-----------------------------------------

 

New England Journal of Medicine editorial:

Time to Stop Using Ineffective Covid-19 Drugs

Published August 17, 2022

 

For ivermectin, a meta-analysis of 16 trials8 involving 2407 patients with both severe and nonsevere illness showed no reliable evidence of reductions in mechanical ventilation, hospital admission, duration of hospitalization, clinical severity, or mortality; in addition, the investigators found no effect related to the dose of ivermectin. In light of this available evidence of nonefficacy for ivermectin and fluvoxamine, how much evidence of nonefficacy is enough?

 

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2209017?query=recirc_curatedRelated_article

 

---------------------------

 

2023 WHO Guidelines for treatment of COVID:

WHO updates guidelines on treatments for COVID-19

10 November 2023
 
The update also includes a strong recommendation against the use of ivermectin for patients with non-severe COVID-19. WHO continues to advise that in patients with severe or critical COVID-19, ivermectin should only be used in clinical trials.
 
 
--------------------------------------
 
European Medicines Agency:
 

EMA advises against the use of ivermectin for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 outside randomised clinical trials.

 

In March 2021, EMA found that the published data from laboratory and observational studies, clinical trials and meta-analyses, do not support its use for COVID-19. It therefore concluded that using ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID-19 cannot be recommended outside controlled clinical trials.

 

https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/human-regulatory-overview/public-health-threats/coronavirus-disease-covid-19/covid-19-medicines/public-health-advice-covid-19-medicines

 

 

 

Just remember, TallGuyJohninBKK, what's important is quality, not quantity.  You can overwhelm and flood the zone with all sorts of erroneous information but that in no way makes bad information true.  In other words, your MO isn't working.

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2 minutes ago, dhupverg said:

Take your pick of who is getting funded to publish such information.  Are these guys working for free, or do they get funding by pharma companies, " philanthropic causes" (cough cough Gates Foundation and their ilk), goverment agencies who are also funded by Pharma and private interests?  In this day and age, everyone is whoring themselves out to funding, and will write whatever is needed to secure and keep such funding, even if it means changing goal posts on trials to get a favourable outcome of said trials.  Remdesivir is just one rigged trial that comes to mind after failing ebola trials and killing people.  Follow the money...........................

 

Spot on, mate.  :thumbsup:

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Several posts commenting on fellow forum members -- instead of the actual thread topic -- have been removed.

 

Per the forum's rules:

 

You will respect other members and post in a civil manner. Personal attacks, insults or hate speech posted on the forum or sent by private message are not allowed.

 

31. You will not publicly discuss other members...

 

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My step grandson, 9 months old was not well, they took him to hospital (He is insured) for a check-up. 

He tested positive for Covid, which strain I don't know. We are all a bit mystified as to how he contracted it, as he has a pretty sheltered life.

 

Thankfully, he is dealing with it OK, they hope he will be able to go home sometime this week..🤗

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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, transam said:

My step grandson, 9 months old was not well, they took him to hospital (He is insured) for a check-up. 

He tested positive for Covid, which strain I don't know. We are all a bit mystified as to how he contracted it, as he has a pretty sheltered life.

 

Thankfully, he is dealing with it OK, they hope he will be able to go home sometime this week..🤗

 

Trans, so are you saying they admitted him to the hospital for COVID -- not just outpatient?

 

Quote

they hope he will be able to go home sometime this week

 

Edited by TallGuyJohninBKK
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Posted (edited)
6 minutes ago, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

 

Trans, so are you saying they admitted him to the hospital for COVID?

 

 

Weeell, Mrs.T was upset when she said the babe has Covid, is in an isolation room with mum & dad.

They sent us vids of him, looks OK, waiting for more info.. 🤗

 

If They have all made a mistake, you never know, I will report back...😉

Edited by transam
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8 hours ago, transam said:

Weeell, Mrs.T was upset when she said the babe has Covid, is in an isolation room with mum & dad.

They sent us vids of him, looks OK, waiting for more info.. 🤗

 

If They have all made a mistake, you never know, I will report back...😉

Update, the babe has got Covid, he was tested on entry. He has just had an x-ray to check out his lungs, all seems OK, so, see what happens in the next few days. Oh, mum & dad are clear.

 

I went to see a friend in a different hospital today, the place was packed, and I noticed most were wearing masks, as well as me, I am not going in a hozzy without one, not had Covid yet, so don't want it now........😷..............🤗

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9 minutes ago, transam said:

Update, the babe has got Covid, he was tested on entry. He has just had an x-ray to check out his lungs, all seems OK, so, see what happens in the next few days. Oh, mum & dad are clear.

 

I went to see a friend in a different hospital today, the place was packed, and I noticed most were wearing masks, as well as me, I am not going in a hozzy without one, not had Covid yet, so don't want it now........😷..............🤗

 

  Are you located in Issan ?

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10 minutes ago, transam said:

Update, the babe has got Covid, he was tested on entry. He has just had an x-ray to check out his lungs, all seems OK, so, see what happens in the next few days. Oh, mum & dad are clear.

 

I went to see a friend in a different hospital today, the place was packed, and I noticed most were wearing masks, as well as me, I am not going in a hozzy without one, not had Covid yet, so don't want it now........😷..............🤗

Hmmmm.

How  many Medical ,,, Hospital facililties do not continue to insist on attendees wearing  a mask?

 

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3 minutes ago, 0ffshore360 said:

Hmmmm.

How  many Medical ,,, Hospital facililties do not continue to insist on attendees wearing  a mask?

 

No idea, but I am sure you are going to tell us.........:saai:

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One of the biggest atrocities I saw in Pattaya/Jomtien were the farangs in the free food lines designated for Thais whose incomes were depleted by the lack of tourism and closing of businesses.

 

Second place was seeing photos of people driving their cars, windows rolled up wearing masks in farangland.

 

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4 minutes ago, 0ffshore360 said:

Hmmmm.

How  many Medical ,,, Hospital facililties do not continue to insist on attendees wearing  a mask?

 

 

 hospital I frequent will not allow entry without a mask.

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Just now, G_Money said:

One of the biggest atrocities I saw in Pattaya/Jomtien were the farangs in the free food lines designated for Thais whose incomes were depleted by the lack of tourism and closing of businesses.

 

Second place was seeing photos of people driving their cars, windows rolled up wearing masks in farangland.

 

No photos then..........🤗

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Posted (edited)
51 minutes ago, transam said:

No photos then..........🤗


Google is your best friend.

 

 

Edited by stats
flame comments removed
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11 hours ago, Ralf001 said:

 

 hospital I frequent will not allow entry without a mask.

I would go to another hospital. 
 

that’s how it’s supposed to work. In the heat of covid they made all airline passengers wear masks. Imo the way it should have worked is the airlines decide then the customers decide which airline they’d fly. But they cant have that I suppose

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Posted (edited)
23 hours ago, transam said:

My step grandson, 9 months old was not well, they took him to hospital (He is insured) for a check-up. 

He tested positive for Covid, which strain I don't know. We are all a bit mystified as to how he contracted it, as he has a pretty sheltered life.

 

Thankfully, he is dealing with it OK, they hope he will be able to go home sometime this week..🤗

 

Sorry to hear.  I'm sure he's resilient enough to get over it.  He has my positive thoughts.  Do keep us informed as to the outcome.

 

Edited by Tippaporn
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On 5/10/2024 at 12:32 PM, TallGuyJohninBKK said:

 

Sure thing, I'll talk about it (The Royal Society (UK) report on the effectiveness of COVID intervention measures)... Some sources are not typically peer reviewed, because the authors aren't just ordinary individual researchers, such as was the case here... Guess you'll just have to settle for this below (though note below a separate independent review process that did occur with later published summary version of this report).

 

Screenshot_1.jpg.3f7d378f16d5de226465ad7c5b89f4dc.jpg

 

https://royalsociety.org/about-us/

 

And from the report itself:

 

"The Royal Society is a self-governing Fellowship of many
of the world’s most distinguished scientists drawn from all
areas of science, engineering, and medicine. The Society’s
fundamental purpose, as it has been since its foundation
in 1660, is to recognise, promote, and support excellence
in science and to encourage the development and use of
science for the benefit of humanity."

 

https://royalsociety.org/-/media/policy/projects/impact-non-pharmaceutical-interventions-on-covid-19-transmission/the-royal-society-covid-19-examining-the-effectiveness-of-non-pharmaceutical-interventions-report.pdf

 

Highlights from the report itself:

 

Masks and enhanced hygiene measures
Published studies generally found that masks
reduced the transmission of SARS-CoV-2,
recognising the risk of bias, and allowing for
uncertain and variable efficacy. Importantly,
there was a ‘gradient of effectiveness’, with
evidence, mainly from studies in healthcare
settings, that higher quality N95/FFP2 masks
were more effective than surgical-type masks.

 

AND

 

Social distancing and ‘lockdowns’
Most effective of all the NPIs were the
social distancing measures, with a gradient
showing that the most stringent of these had
the strongest effects. Stay-at-home orders,
physical distancing measures, and restrictions
on gathering sizes were repeatedly found to
be associated with significant community-wide
reductions in SARS-CoV-2 transmission, as was
frequently assessed using the time-varying
reproduction number, Rt

 

AND

 

Travel restrictions and controls across
international borders

While most countries implemented some form
of border control, there are a limited number
of studies examining the effectiveness of their
implementation. Based on these, symptomatic
screening widely adopted in the early phases
of the pandemic was found to have had no
meaningful effect on reducing transmission.

 

Apart from the main and original published report, though, it does appear that a later summary version of the above report was published in the Royal Society's own journal with internal peer review, as follows:

Executive Summary to the Royal Society report "COVID-19: examining the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions"

The Royal Society

 

"This theme issue was put together by the Guest Editor team under supervision from the journal‘s Editorial staff, following the Royal Society‘s ethical codes and best-practice guidelines.

The Guest Editor team invited contributions and handled the review process. Individual Guest Editors were not involved in assessing papers where they had a personal, professional or financial conflict of interest with the authors or the research described. Independent reviewers assessed all papers. Invitation to contribute did not guarantee inclusion."
 
 

 

The Royal Society!! An old boys club, hopelessly out of date.

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23 hours ago, Ralf001 said:

 

 hospital I frequent will not allow entry without a mask.

BHP hasn't required masks for least 1 1/2 yrs.

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On 5/13/2024 at 7:30 PM, Ralf001 said:

 

 hospital I frequent will not allow entry without a mask.

I don't know any vendor that requires a mask, for at least 1 yr, maybe 2yrs.

15 hours ago, Robert Paulson said:

I would go to another hospital. 
 

that’s how it’s supposed to work. In the heat of covid they made all airline passengers wear masks. Imo the way it should have worked is the airlines decide then the customers decide which airline they’d fly. But they cant have that I suppose

With exception of Makro or 7-11, I wouldn't use any vendor that required a mask.

3 hours ago, EVENKEEL said:

BHP hasn't required masks for least 1 1/2 yrs.

Don't know anyone that does, and not sure I believe Ralf1

3 hours ago, EVENKEEL said:

Remember wearing masks riding solo on motorbikes just to appease the populace.

IMHO, that, and riding in car, whether alone or with wife wearing mask was pretty much the epitome of stupidity.

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3 hours ago, EVENKEEL said:

Remember wearing masks riding solo on motorbikes just to appease the populace.

 

85% of people where I live still do this(roughly)... and of course no helmet...

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6 minutes ago, Martin71 said:

 

85% of people where I live still do this(roughly)... and of course no helmet...

For the pollution

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