The Guardian (USA)

Rudy Giuliani leaves hospital after receiving same drug cocktail as Trump

- Tom McCarthy

Rudy Giuliani, the public leader of a quixotic effort by Donald Trump to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election, was released from hospital on Wednesday evening after being treated for Covid-19.

Giuliani received “exactly the same” treatment that Trump received during his own hospitaliz­ation in October, the former New York mayor said, apparently including a drug cocktail of monoclonal antibodies that few patients have access to.

“His doctor sent me here; he talked me into it,” Giuliani said of the president in an interview with a local New York radio station. “The minute I took the cocktail yesterday, I felt 100% better. It works very quickly, wow.”

Giuliani, 76, was admitted to Georgetown University hospital in Washington DC on Monday.

“My treatment by the nurses and staff at Georgetown Med Star hospital was miraculous,” the former New York mayor tweeted on Thursday. “I walked in with serious symptoms. I walked out better than ever.”

That account echoed the experience­s of other members of Trump’s inner circle who have fallen grievously ill with coronaviru­s and been treated with monoclonal antibodies, synthetica­lly manufactur­ed proteins that mimic the immune system’s ability to fight off viruses.

But almost no one has access to the treatments in question: a cocktail manufactur­ed by Regeneron and a similar treatment made by Eli Lilly.

The health secretary, Alex Azar, said on Wednesday that a total of 278,000 doses of the two therapies had been distribute­d in past months. Some states use a lottery system to allocate the drugs, while others rank patients by eligibilit­y, the New York Times reported.

The United States has confirmed 15.5m cases of coronaviru­s over time, and more than 106,000 people are currently hospitaliz­ed in the United States with Covid-19, according to the Covid tracking project.

Giuliani, who has mocked contact tracing on Fox News and said people “overdo the mask”, is not the first member of Trump’s inner circle to credit the hard-to-get treatment with a fast return to health.

After the housing secretary, Ben Carson, 69, emerged from the hospital last month, he wrote on Facebook that he had been “desperatel­y ill” but “President Trump was following my condition and cleared me for the monoclonal antibody therapy that he had previously received, which I am convinced saved my life.”

After being hospitaliz­ed in early October at Walter Reed medical center, Trump, 74, told the radio host Rush Limbaugh, “I might not have recovered at all” without the drug cocktail.

Like many members of his inner circle, Trump has derided the pandemic as an overblown hoax and encouraged Americans to resist public health advice.

Giuliani tweeted on Thursday that he felt well enough to continue his election quest, announcing a meeting with Georgia Republican­s to talk about election fraud claims, for which no evidence has been produced and which Giuliani himself has not dared to advance in court.

Giuliani credited his celebrity status with his successful course of treatment.

“If it wasn’t me, I wouldn’t have been put in a hospital, frankly,” Giuliani told WABC New York. “Sometimes when you’re a celebrity, they’re worried if something happens to you they’re going to examine it more carefully, and do everything right.”

 ?? Photograph: Nathan Posner/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Rudy Giuliani has spearheade­d Donald Trump’s quixotic efforts to overturn the result of the presidenti­al election.
Photograph: Nathan Posner/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Rudy Giuliani has spearheade­d Donald Trump’s quixotic efforts to overturn the result of the presidenti­al election.

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