https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30430-8/fulltext
We read with interest the Correspondence from Sahaj Rathi and colleagues1
on hydroxychloroquine prophylaxis for COVID-19 contacts in India. The
authors see the decision by the Indian Council of Medical Research,
under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, to recommend
chemoprophylaxis with hydroxychloroquine in select groups of contacts at
high risk as an abandonment of scientific reasoning in desperate times.
We present our counterview on this issue.
The criticisms made by Rathi and
colleagues overlook the fact that prophylactic hydroxychloroquine would
be targeted to individuals at high risk rather than the general
population. Projection of adverse events to the population level causes
unjustified alarm. The advisory from the Indian Council of Medical
Research includes a section of key considerations that address all such
concerns, which have been ignored by Rathi and colleagues. In addition,
the argument that there will be a shortage of the drug is not tenable.
Production has been ramped up and the Government of India is supplying
hydroxychloroquine to more than 50 countries, which has received
widespread appreciation.
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