Health
Related: About this forumWhat Happened to Paxlovid?
Paxlovid, the COVID antiviral developed by Pfizer, was hailed as a miracle drug against COVID-19 when it was approved for use by the FDA in December. But it was nowhere to be found during the Omicron wave that followed and now is little discussed and underused, with doses reportedly piling up on pharmacy shelves. Has Paxlovid failed to live up to the hype as a pandemic game changer, or is it another effective defense against COVID thats been unjustly snubbed by a misinformed public?
For a frontline view I turned to my brother-in-law, John Emy, a doctor of internal medicine who practices with CareMount Medical in Manhattan and has been prescribing Paxlovid to his patients with COVID. He said hes a fan with qualifications. I think its a great drug. Its certainly very effective. It starts working pretty quickly, he told me over the phone while walking to work. Usually within 24 hours, the symptoms start to improve. He wondered how badly it was really needed, though. Its probably wasted on the mildly ill, he said. Before we had Paxlovid, plenty of people who had mild symptoms would get over it and they were fine.
Five hours later, he texted me that hed thought of another argument for taking Paxlovid. By reducing viral load quickly it could reduce contagiousness, he wrote, before dropping the lede: I woke up feeling not great, but then much worse on the subway after I spoke with you. I have COVID.
He was on the fence about taking Paxlovid. His symptoms were mild. He felt feverish and mentally fuzzy but his temperature was normal. As an extremely healthy marathon-runner whos fully vaxxed, he wasnt particularly worried about getting seriously ill. On the other hand, hes got asthma, which is a risk factor for severe COVID. In the end, a talk with a colleague helped push him toward a decision. I think Id be fine without an antiviral, he texted, but Im going to take it with the hope of getting back to work more quickly.
Read more: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/04/what-happened-to-paxlovid-the-covid-19-wonder-drug.html
Response to TexasTowelie (Original post)
mopinko This message was self-deleted by its author.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)but there just hasn't been the kind of demand for it that people expected, I guess it lacks the effective PR that ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine had.
The thing is that there has been no one magic bullet against this infernal virus. There are treatments, like properly timed decadron, that can allow seriously ill people to survive. Vaccinations have sharply cut the number of people who are getting seriously ill, the problem being encouraging people who were convinced by Fakebook bullshit to get vaccinated in spite of it.
Another problem is that the newest antivirals and the monoclonal antibodies are on patent, that means $$$ that a lot of insurance companies are balking over.
So all that adds up to why you're not hearing all that much about the new antivirals. It doesn't mean they don't work, it means research is ongoing, that one treatment doesn't fit all cases, and that money is a factor.
Duppers
(28,246 posts)He's also vax'ed, but as we all now know that does not guarantee you won't get covid....So, KEEP WEARING THOSE MASKS, folks, please. This virus will continue mutating.
Yesterday, he decided to order & take Paxlovid. 3 hrs ago, sometime after he took his first pill, he texted me:
"Paxlovid mouth is awful...
Just spent like 10 mins vomiting and can't consume anything because my mouth tastes like burnt and soapy grapefruit."
He's (was) a healthy 35yo living in NYC. I don't know what advice to give him. He & his g.f. broke up months ago, that's why he's leaning on his Mom now. I am not complaining; I just do not know what to tell him.
Any suggestions, please.
TexasTowelie
(116,704 posts)Saw an article that described the taste almost exactly what you stated.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2022/05/pfizer-paxlovid-covid-pill-side-effects/629772/
Duppers
(28,246 posts)Will tell my son to try applesauce.
He sounded so sick & desperate.