Showing posts with label doctor says. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doctor says. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 October 2021

New COVID drug is no substitute for vaccines, doctor says

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (WREG) – As medical experts call an experimental anti-viral pill developed by Merck and Company a serious game changer in the fight against COVID-19, a Memphis doctor warned Friday that people shouldn't think of it as a substitute for the vaccine.

Dr. Stephen Threlkeld, an infectious disease specialist with Baptist Memorial Healthcare, says this pill is the latest potential weapon in the fight against COVID-19, a battle that seems to have no end.

"It is the first therapy that we might have that would be a simple pill we could give someone early on in disease to help them avoid more serious illness, hospitalization and death," Threlkeld said. "Health care workers are just very, very, very exhausted at watching people die and increasingly those deaths are unnecessary and they just don't make any sense."

Threlkeld says clinical trials have been so successful that Merck is seeking emergency use authorization as soon as possible from the FDA.

But Threlkeld, like many in the medical field, worry some people will see the pill as a substitute for getting vaccinated, even though it's not.

"It's a potentially dangerous thing, because if you give me two interventions – the vaccine intervention gives a 95 percent, or so, plus protection against death and severe disease right now. Why would I trade that to wait around for a 50 percent protection that you would get from the pill?" Threlkeld said.

Threlkeld calls the pill a "hedge" against potential resistance to vaccine efficacy, which has, in his words, "waned" a bit and that's why a booster shot has been approved.

New York residents Charles and Charlene Rainone told Nexstar's WREG that they have both been vaccinated and believe the pill is a giant step forward.

"I think anything that they come up with that helps fight this virus, to get our country back on its feet working, I'm all for it," Charles Rainone said.

If approved, Merck expects to mass produce the pill by the end of the year.



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Wednesday, 30 December 2020

COVID or allergies? Face masks can help with both, doctor says

AUSTIN (KXAN) —Feeling a little under the weather? Runny nose? Sore throat? Well, it could be your allergies as the cedar pollen count has spiked in the last couple days.

Matt Brazitis and his dog Deacon walk their neighborhood on a regular basis, but with the cedar count high, he hasn't been feeling great.

"My throat has been itching and my eyes have been watering," Brazitis said as Deacon pulled him along during their walk.

He even got a COVID-19 test thinking it could be the virus.

"We were a little worried, but the results came back negative," Brazitis said.

Brazitis certainly isn't the only one dealing with allergies right now.

"People can feel pretty miserable during cedar if they are allergic," said Dr. Sheila Amar with the Allergy and Asthma Center of Georgetown.

Amar says Cedar won't cause a fever, even though most call the reaction to the pollen "cedar fever," but many symptoms can be confused with COVID-19.

"This week it can be difficult because a lot of people are coughing and have sore throats," Amar said.

Like the virus, a mask might be the best way to fight back.

"Masks are actually quite helpful for allergies and even before COVID-19 pandemic we used to tell people to wear masks if they are doing yard work or mowing the lawn," Amar said.

But make sure to wash those masks or get another after your done using it.

"Most of the pollen is sticking to the outside of the mask," Amar said.

Dr. Amar says this year the pollen counts have been higher than in years past.

"I think wearing masks people have felt a little bit better, and people have been generally a little more restrictive in their activities because of COVID-19," Amar said.

Dr. Amar says pets can also pick up pollen while outside and bring it into a home. If you are highly allergic, she says your best bet is to stay inside when pollen counts are very high.

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