Sunday, March 22, 2020
Senate Intel chairman asks Ethics Committee to review stock sales under scrutiny
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/19/politics/richard-burr-coronavirus-comments/index.html
Senate
Intelligence Chairman Richard Burr is asking the Senate Ethics
Committee to review his sale of up to $1.7 million in stocks last month
ahead of the sharp market decline that's resulted from the novel
coronavirus global pandemic, according to Senate documents.
Burr's
stock sales have come under fire after he sold them off just days
before the market began a downturn as a result of the coronavirus
outbreak shutting down businesses and travel in the US and across the
world.
Burr said Friday that he did not base his sales on any information he received as chairman of the Intelligence Committee.
There's no indication that the stock
sales were made on the basis of any inside information Burr received as a
senator, or that he broke any Senate rules by selling the stock.
Congress passed the Stock Act in 2012 that made it illegal for lawmakers
to use inside information for financial benefit. Burr was one of three
senators to vote against the bill.
A 'Chinese Coronavirus'? Officials accuse Trump of stoking xenophobia and violence against Asian-Americans
https://www.newsweek.com/chinese-coronavirus-officials-accuse-trump-stoking-xenophobia-violence-against-asian-americans-1493546
Organizations and lawmakers throughout California as well as
nationally are condemning recent rhetoric by President Donald Trump
describing the novel coronavirus. They say his words, intentionally or
not, encourage prejudice and violence against people of Chinese or Asian
descent. On Thursday a group of civil rights organizations announced
the creation of a reporting center
to track anti-Asian violence and discrimination in California and
across the country. Assemblymember David Chiu (D-San Francisco), chair
of the California Asian and Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus, told
Capital & Main that the creation of the site was motivated by more
than 300 recent incidents collected from media outlets and other
organizations.
Is Hydroxychloroquine the Answer to COVID-19 Pandemic? Racing For a Cure
https://www.newsweek.com/2020/04/03/hydroxychloroquine-answer-coronavirus-pandemic-inside-race-find-covid-19-cure-1493349.html
The antimalarial drug chloroquine, and its derivative, hydroxychloroquine,
are also candidates for COVID-19 treatments. Researchers first began
testing their ability to halt the spread of viruses during the battle
against AIDS. The drugs are designed to interfere with "endocytosis,"
the process by which a virus or other microbe enters a cell. They have
since been shown to have some success in the lab against a wide range of
viral diseases including the common cold and the SARS virus. On March
16, Chinese public health officials announced that a clinical trial at
10 hospitals in Beijing, Guangdong and Hunan Provinces involving more
than 100 patients showed a positive effect—patients who took chloroquine
were more likely to show a reduction in fever, showed clearer lungs on
CT scans and reduced the amount of time to recover.
Saturday, March 21, 2020
Trump will be judged on one thing now -- and it won't be impeachment
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/21/politics/race-for-the-white-house-trump-impeachment-ford-carter-gore-bush/index.html
There's a worldwide pandemic and many Americans are confined to their homes as the US government tries to halt the spread of Covid-19.
So come November, despite being the first impeached President to appear on a presidential ballot afterward, Donald Trump will likely be judged by one thing: His response to the coronavirus.
Coronavirus and chloroquine: Has its use been approved in US?
https://www.bbc.com/news/51980731
President Trump claims a drug used against malaria has been approved in the United States to treat the new coronavirus.
Chloroquine is one of the oldest and best-known anti-malarial drugs.
So is the president right and what is known about its effectiveness?
Chloroquine
has been around for decades. It's no longer recommended in much of
Africa because of the resistance built up to it by the malaria
parasites.
Some countries have introduced regulations to curb
the use of the drug, but it has remained popular in those with an active
private-sector drug market and is sold widely.
This is
especially true in Nigeria where there have been reports of high demand
for chloroquine in pharmacies leading to shortages, in part fuelled by
Mr Trump's statement.
Chloroquine has not been approved for coronavirus
President
Trump, at his daily press briefing, claimed that chloroquine had been
approved for use in treating the coronavirus by the US Food and Drugs
Administration (FDA). That is the body in charge of licensing medicines
in America.
"We're going to be able to make that drug available
almost immediately. And that's where the FDA has been so great. They've
gone through the approval process - it's been approved."
However, the FDA has made it clear it has not been approved for treating those infected with the Covid-19 coronavirus.
"There are no FDA-approved therapeutics or drugs to treat, cure or prevent Covid-19."
However,
the FDA does say that studies are under way to see if chloroquine can
be effective in the treatment of Covid-19. It also says it has been
directed by Mr Trump to set up a large clinical trial to investigate the
drug.
Trump vs Fauci: President’s gut sense collides with science
https://apnews.com/432a37435f28015e8b45eeff710cd254
WASHINGTON
(AP) — In a clash of gut instinct versus science, President Donald
Trump and the government’s top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony
Fauci, publicly sparred over whether a malaria drug would work to treat
people with coronavirus disease.
Trump
clung to his feeling that a malaria drug widely available could be the
answer-in-waiting to an outbreak spreading around the nation, shutting
down major parts of the economy, and posing the biggest challenge he has
faced as president. Calmly and quietly, Fauci insisted that the science
is not yet there to validate Trump’s hope. Neither man directly
challenged the other.
The extraordinary scene played out on national television Friday during the White House briefing on the outbreak. Anxious for answers, Americans heard conflicting views.
Reporters
asked both men — first Fauci, then Trump — if a malaria drug called
hydroxychloroquine could be used to prevent COVID-19, the disease caused
by the virus. A day earlier, when Fauci wasn’t with him at that
briefing, Trump had called attention to the drug.
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