Months after China allowed a few dozen cases of a new coronavirus to grow into a global pandemic, the world is racing to find a cure for COVID-19.
While a clinically proven vaccine is still in the works, there are hopeful reports of existing drugs that are seemingly able to help patients triumph over the worst the disease has to offer.
These apparent wonder drugs, which include hydroxychloroquine, have sparked a worldwide debate over their usefulness.
Some who have taken the anti-malarial drugs credit the medications for their survival, and proponents point to these uplifting examples as the best news yet in the current pandemic.
Others, like Democratic Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, took a different stance on hydroxychloroquine.
Thune eyes longer stopgap funding bill as shutdown drags on
Musk follows Trump’s lead with eleventh-hour Cuomo endorsement
Hamas returns body of American Israeli IDF captain
Pro-Trump legal group launches toolkit to help parents challenge ‘woke’ lessons in schools
Hakeem Jeffries digs in on SNAP blame-game with 42 million Americans’ food benefits at risk
Fact Check: Kash Patel Was Actually Following Regulations When He Took FBI Jet on Personal Visit
Surveillance Footage: Chicago Family’s Trick-Or-Treating Plans Dashed as Three Thugs Sprint Toward Them
Florida man facing death penalty for killing 18-year-old girlfriend, unborn child after she refused abortion
Photos show Bryan Kohberger’s forgotten Ka-Bar knife sheath for first time
Watch: Unlike Past GOP Presidents, Trump Doubles Down When Faced With Media Bias – Outflanks ’60 Minutes’ on Deportation Question
Trump backs Huckabee Sanders and a bunch of House Republicans for re-election with midterms on the horizon
Watch: Panicking Brennan Spins Out, Makes Physical Contact Repeatedly with Conservative Asking About Laptop Cover-Up
Why northern Virginia schools are still woke battlegrounds
Pelosi spokesman sidesteps retirement rumors as Dem primary threats wait in wings
Antisemitism watchdog issues scathing ‘alarm bell’ report on Mamdani as NYC election nears
Whitmer’s Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs threatened doctors who prescribed the drug with investigations and administrative punishments, according to a letter issued by the agency last week.
This came after President Donald Trump himself hyped the promising drugs, a move which caused critics in politics and the media to wage a campaign against the medicines’ use:
President spreading super dangerous misinformation that will make crisis worse.
— David Rothschild (@DavMicRot) March 21, 2020
The Michigan governor, whose anti-Trump attitude and political presence make her a potential vice presidential pick for Democratic candidate Joe Biden, appears to have changed her mind on the usefulness of hydroxychloroquine.
Only a day after the Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization for hydroxychloroquine sulfate, Whitmer was gunning for her cut from the national stockpile.
Thune eyes longer stopgap funding bill as shutdown drags on
Musk follows Trump’s lead with eleventh-hour Cuomo endorsement
Hamas returns body of American Israeli IDF captain
Pro-Trump legal group launches toolkit to help parents challenge ‘woke’ lessons in schools
Hakeem Jeffries digs in on SNAP blame-game with 42 million Americans’ food benefits at risk
Fact Check: Kash Patel Was Actually Following Regulations When He Took FBI Jet on Personal Visit
Surveillance Footage: Chicago Family’s Trick-Or-Treating Plans Dashed as Three Thugs Sprint Toward Them
Florida man facing death penalty for killing 18-year-old girlfriend, unborn child after she refused abortion
Photos show Bryan Kohberger’s forgotten Ka-Bar knife sheath for first time
Watch: Unlike Past GOP Presidents, Trump Doubles Down When Faced With Media Bias – Outflanks ’60 Minutes’ on Deportation Question
Trump backs Huckabee Sanders and a bunch of House Republicans for re-election with midterms on the horizon
Watch: Panicking Brennan Spins Out, Makes Physical Contact Repeatedly with Conservative Asking About Laptop Cover-Up
Why northern Virginia schools are still woke battlegrounds
Pelosi spokesman sidesteps retirement rumors as Dem primary threats wait in wings
Antisemitism watchdog issues scathing ‘alarm bell’ report on Mamdani as NYC election nears
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services spokeswoman Lynn Sutfin confirmed to Michigan news outlet Bridge Magazine on Monday that the administration is not only asking, but “pursuing a request” for the drug.
The change of heart could not have come at a better time, either.
Michigan has been one of the areas of America hardest hit by the coronavirus.
While it doesn’t have the same sheer number of cases as New York, Michigan’s 7,615 confirmed cases make it the fourth-worst-off state, according to data from Johns Hopkins.
The new flow of drugs provides hope that the tide may soon turn.
Some experts, like Dr. Vladimir Zelenko of New York, say the drugs are a game-changer.
Zelenko claims his cure rate with a hydroxychloroquine cocktail is 100 percent.
#coronavirus News Alert: Dr. Vladimir Zelenko, a board-certified family practitioner in NY, has now treated 699 Covid-19 patients with 100% success using Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate, Zinc and Z-Pak. All symptoms of shortness of breath resolved within 4-6 hr https://t.co/siCvNg845Q pic.twitter.com/lOrUvBHp0A
— Adam Milstein (@AdamMilstein) March 29, 2020
Although several countries have embraced the drugs, many still remain skeptical of the promised effects.
Hydroxychloroquine is becoming such a hot commodity that one of the medication’s main producers, Hungary, has banned the export of the potentially life-saving substance, according to Reuters.
It remains unclear if this will threaten the supply chain enough to endanger American lives, but if it does, it could be high time for President Donald Trump to whip out his infamous “Art of the Deal” negotiation style so that every citizen — Democrat and Republican alike — will have access to this drug when it’s needed the most.
Story cited here.









