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Plan to use malaria drug in Mumbai slums temporarily shelved [Update #16]

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India’s financial capital Mumbai is fine-tuning a plan to administer an unproven but much touted anti-malarial drug in neighborhoods including Asia’s most crowded slum, the first-of-its-kind mass experiment to ward off the coronavirus.

The city officials are identifying a target group which will receive hydroxychloroquine, according to Suresh Kakani, additional commissioner at Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai. Medical experts are being consulted on the duration of dosage, he said, adding that a decision was expected in a couple of days.

The move underscores the desperation and mounting pressure on health care officials for solutions against a novel pathogen which has infected over 2.1 million people globally and killed over 146,000. It also explains the frenzied excitement over a decades-old drug -- U.S. President Donald Trump called it a “game changer” in the fight against the virus --despite a patchy efficacy record in some small studies and a documented list of side effects.

“This is a one-time window available to us and may give answers for the pandemic the world is struggling with,” Kakani said. “We are taking utmost care to understand the side effects before implementing this.”

Mumbai, which has seen more than a tenth of India’s over 13,800 cases and a quarter of its deaths, has emerged as the biggest virus hotspot in India and is racing against time to curb the contagion in several clusters.

The densely-packed slums of Dharavi are one of the two locations -- Worli, the worst-hit Mumbai neighborhood is the other-- where the city officials plan to start a hydroxychloroquine or HCQ-dosing drive as a prophylaxis or a preemptive medication aimed at warding off the disease.

There’s no conclusive scientific evidence that the drug works on virus patients, not to mention its use as a preventive therapy.

“For use of HCQ as prophylaxis in a hotspot, there is simply not enough evidence. No preventive studies published to say that this approach really protects people,” said Leena Menghaney, a New Delhi-based activist with Médecins Sans Frontières. “Potential risk may surpass the potential benefit of providing it widely for people without the disease.”

‘Too Many Uncertainties’

There have been reports of heart-rhythm problems in some people in France, especially if used in a larger dose or if it interacts with other drugs, according to Menghaney. “There are too many uncertainties to say if it will help or if it will be futile in the public health response” against the coronavirus outbreak, she said.

The anti-malarial drug didn’t help patients clear the virus better than standard care and was much more likely to cause side effects, according to a study in China. There were more side effects in the group who took hydroxychloroquine, but they were mostly mild, the most common being diarrhea, the study found.

Aware of the deeply divided stance on this drug, Mumbai’s city officials are being careful.

The original plan to dose 50,000 people between the ages of 18 years and 55 years, with no pre-existing liver and heart ailments, has now been scaled down as regular follow-up and surveillance of such a huge group would have been a challenge, said Kakani who is responsible for execution of this initiative.

The medicine will be given to only those people who are willing, he insists, after recording their personal and medical history, including any medication they may be on.

Spot Side Effects

As many as 4,500 health care workers in Mumbai can be roped in this initiative. Each health care worker will be alloted 25-30 houses to track during the tenure of the medication and will be well-trained to spot any side effects for three to seven weeks over which the drug may be administered.

Kakani refutes that the two locations were chosen because they are slum settlements.

“In Dharavi and Worli we have created quarantine zone with high risk patients. We are anyway monitoring that group for 14 days, so we are able to observe these people and provide medical services,” he said. “We are not going ahead just because this is a slum.”

Mumbai’s municipal authorities have completely sealed some areas, created quarantine zones, and are conducting door-to-door contact tracing of those found infected.

As the death toll mounts despite India being in a lockdown for nearly a month, local governments have begun weighing the risks and rewards of some unprecedented policy measures.

“We can try newer things if it’s permissible and advisable by relevant experts,” Kakani said. “Just because no one has tried it out yet does not mean we shouldn’t also. We can’t sit back and relax.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...down-how-to-reopen-offices-cafes-around-world
 
A test group thousands of miles away in absolute opposite conditions to those who this is intended for. Hahah

Would love to see anti vaxxer trump supporters line up for this drug if it gets approved!
 
I bet this was modi’s idea.. trying to score more brownie points with Stupid Donnie
 
Only in India can people be used as guinea pigs on this mass scale.

You should read atleast medical articles before commenting like this.

The drug is already in use for malaria. This test only tests whether it is effective against sars cov 2 or not. This isn't a first production drug which wasn't used in human before.
 
Let's hope that it works and we can finally defeat COVID-19.

A solution is needed badly.
 
This is called outsourcing a cure - lets see how it does in India then we will try it.
 
Let's hope that it works and we can finally defeat COVID-19.

A solution is needed badly.

How many poor Indian guinea pigs will need to die without following proper testing procedures and administering this unproven drug for Covid-19? The end does not justify the means here.
 
How many poor Indian guinea pigs will need to die without following proper testing procedures and administering this unproven drug for Covid-19? The end does not justify the means here.

I am not defending it. However, if they go with it, I hope it works.
 
I bet this was modi’s idea.. trying to score more brownie points with Stupid Donnie
Modi can't on Mumbai, even if he want to. That not how things in India work. I don't know about other countries, but heath belong to states in India, centre can only coordinate them, fund them or provide necessary help whenever they are needed
It is old news by 2 or 3days, Uddhav idea basically to stop Covid19 in Mumbai slum , very bold decision, if it become successful, he will get lot of praise.
 
You should read atleast medical articles before commenting like this.

The drug is already in use for malaria. This test only tests whether it is effective against sars cov 2 or not. This isn't a first production drug which wasn't used in human before.

It will be used in one of the worst slums you will find in any city on the planet. If Im right Dharavi is the slum from the movie slumdog millionaire? I heard some peope share 10 to a place and 80 people use one toilet?

This drug which the likes of Trump and Modi have been praising, has side effects and there is no proof it works at all. Many experts have said it can cause more damage than good. India will not be giving this for treatment of malaria or even for Covid19. It's a stab in the dark of the most poorest to see if it can prevent symptoms.

A disgrace and shame on humanity.
 
This is called outsourcing a cure - lets see how it does in India then we will try it.

Its called abusing the poor and not caring if they die. We dont need India to do this experiment, plenty of experts have rubbished this drug. I would advise 'we' or anyone not to try it, regardless of what Modi and Trump say. In fact this is the reason why we shouldn't try it.
 
Plan to use malaria drug in Mumbai slums temporarily shelved

NEW DELHI -- A plan to give the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine to thousands of people in Mumbai’s crowded slums to prevent coronavirus infections has temporarily been shelved, officials said Wednesday.

Health officials in Mumbai said that a test to prove the efficacy of the much touted but largely untested drug was still in the cards, but that for now they would follow federal Indian guidelines.

India, which reached the grim milestone of over 1,000 deaths from the virus on Wednesday, is one of the few countries that has pushed for the use of hydroxychloroquine, or HCQ, as a precautionary measure among high-risk groups such as health care workers or people who have come in close contact with COVID-19 patients.

Mumbai, one of the world’s most densely populated cities, has struggled to contain the spread of the virus, and has over 3,000 cases. In Mumbai slums like Dharavi, which is Asia’s largest, social distancing is nearly impossible. In response, the state government had said it would conduct a clinical trial to test the effectiveness of HCQ on slum residents.

But experts pointed to the scant evidence for the efficacy of the drug and the risks it poses, and questioned the ethics of using HCQ on a vulnerable population. Dr. Daksha Shah, Mumbai's deputy executive health officer, said that officials would now follow guidelines set by India’s top medical research body, and that they were waiting for approval to test the drug.

The state government has now said that HCQ — which has been touted by President Donald Trump — can be given only after patients consent to taking it while knowing the risks involved. It added that adverse reactions need to be immediately reported to authorities, and that doctors must sign off on giving the drug to those with heart ailments, diabetes or blood disorders.

But concerns remain over India’s policy of using the drug as a precautionary measure. India's National Task Force for COVID-19 issued a statement on March 22 that said its decision to allow the use of the drug was based on “risk-benefit considerations, under exceptional circumstances” and was “derived from available evidence of benefit as treatment and supported by preclinical data.”

After the statement was issued, health workers in Mumbai, like other parts of India, began taking HCQ. The drug was also given to healthy police officers in the city.

But experts say there is no evidence that the drug is a preventative tool against COVID-19. Even for the treatment of diagnosed patients, HCQ has shown no benefit.

An analysis of 368 patients in U.S. veterans hospitals published earlier this month reported more deaths among those given the drug versus standard care.

“If there is no evidence ... why are scientific bodies pushing this drug and giving the impression to the public that there is a magic bullet, and this is your last hope?” said Dr. Shriprakash Kalantri, an epidemiologist in the west Indian state of Maharashtra.

https://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/plan-malaria-drug-mumbai-slums-temporarily-shelved-70402810
 
And white house unfollowed Indian twitter handle lol, the coincidence.
 
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