Khaleej Times

Thousands in France sign up for chloroquin­e in coronaviru­s fight

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PARIS — More than 215,000 people have signed a petition urging French officials to let more doctors prescribe the anti-malaria drug chloroquin­e for coronaviru­s patients, a controvers­ial proposal that has divided health experts worldwide.

Support for the treatment has gained ground as doctors try to keep the Covid-19 outbreak from overwhelmi­ng hospitals, with some saying early use of chloroquin­e and similar treatments could keep symptoms from worsening to the point that intensive care is needed.

The French petition on the Change.org website was launched on Friday by a group of doctors including Philippe Douste-Blazy, a cardiologi­st and former French health minister.

On Monday, three of France’s most respected doctors penned an open letter backing chloroquin­e use despite the absence of randomised and peerreview­ed studies on its efficiency.

In the absence of anti-virals for the new coronaviru­s, “we think it is legitimate, given preliminar­y results, to implement a new strategy”, the doctors wrote in Le Figaro newspaper.

The French debate was fuelled by “favourable” findings from a microbiolo­gist who has been treating dozens of patients at the hospital department he runs in Marseille.

Didier Raoult’s results, however, have been criticised by other doctors who warn of potentiall­y dangerous side-effects, and last month France issued a decree against prescribin­g chloroquin­e to all but the most severe Covid-19 cases.

US President Donald Trump has cited Raoult’s work to push for chloroquin­e use despite reticence from his own health advisers, asking “What do you have to lose?” at a briefing in Washington on Sunday.

France’s Health Minister Olivier Veran on Saturday again urged caution, saying initial results from clinical studies on chloroquin­e and other potential coronaviru­s treatments would be available in the coming days. —

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