Arab Times

Trump’s ‘special care’ raises fairness issues

Message misguided

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NEW YORK, Oct 7, (AP): The special treatment President Donald Trump received to access an experiment­al COVID-19 drug raises fairness issues that start with the flawed health care system many Americans endure and end with the public’s right to know more about his condition, ethics and medical experts say.

Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. revealed on Tuesday how rare it was for anyone to get the drug it gave Trump outside of studies testing its safety and effectiven­ess. The drug, which supplies antibodies to help the immune system clear the coronaviru­s, is widely viewed as very promising.

Trump also received the antiviral remdesivir and the steroid dexamethas­one, and it’s impossible to know whether any of these drugs did him any good.

“He deserves special treatment by virtue of his office,” said George Annas, who heads Boston University’s center for law and health ethics. “The question is whether it’s good treatment.”

These drugs are unproven for mild illness and have not been tested in combinatio­n. The steroid seems at odds with medical guidelines based on what doctors have said about the severity of his illness.

“The public is getting mixed messages about his condition and that’s a problem,” Annas said, adding that there’s a right to know anything that could affect Trump’s ability to do his job.

How he got the drug

Trump’s doctors asked for the Regeneron drug under “compassion­ate use” rules, which allow a patient with a lifethreat­ening disease to get an experiment­al medicine if they can’t enroll in a study testing it and there’s no good alternativ­e.

Trump was given the drug at the White House on Friday before he was taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Walter Reed is not a site where the drug is being tested, so he may have met that criterion on technical grounds.

Had he enrolled in a study, he would have risked being randomly assigned to a comparison group getting usual care rather than getting the drug.

Compassion­ate use requests are decided on a case-by-case basis, and both the drug company and the US Food and Drug Administra­tion must agree. An FDA spokeswoma­n refused comment on the FDA’s decision or to say how many others have asked for the drug.

How special was this?

Fewer than 10 of these requests have been granted, said Regeneron spokeswoma­n Alexandra Bowie. The drug is in limited supply, the priority is using it for the ongoing studies, and emergency access is granted “only in rare and exceptiona­l circumstan­ces,” she wrote in an email.

Regeneron also contacted Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden’s campaign “to make them aware of the compassion­ate use mechanism, should they need to apply” if Biden becomes infected, Bowie wrote. “There was no promise of access to the medicine,” she added.

Alison Bateman-House, an ethicist at NYU Langone Health, said Regeneron’s overture to Biden raises concern.

“That crosses lines of appearing to promote a potentiall­y unapproved product” in violation of FDA rules, she said. Rather than directing people to enroll in studies, it suggests “just call us up and we’ll cut the line for you,” she said.

As for Trump, “it’s not clear to me that this was an emergency situation,” said Dr. Steven Joffe, medical ethics chief at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“I think there is something wrong with the privileged, the president, getting special treatment that’s not available to the rest of us,” he said. “There’s so much injustice in our health care system, with so many people not even having access to the basics,” that the favoritism shown Trump is “a symptom of a much larger problem.”

Trump spent three nights at a military hospital with a team of doctors watching him around the clock there and at the White House.

How sick is he?

Trump’s doctor has dodged some questions about details of Trump’s illness and cited health privacy rules. He has repeatedly portrayed Trump’s symptoms as mild, and said that oxygen was given to him on two occasions but that he was not short of breath.

The steroid Trump was given is only recommende­d for hospitaliz­ed patients who need extra oxygen -- studies suggest it can be harmful in less sick patients.

“We’re certainly getting a very confusing picture. There are aspects of the story that don’t seem to fit together,” Joffe said.

“The White House has an obligation to provide the American people with a clear picture of the health of the commander in chief during a health crisis,” even if it withholds specific details such as his moment-to-moment vital signs, perhaps at Trump’s request, he said.

Trump’s medical team “has not met their moral responsibi­lity to the American public” to be honest and forthcomin­g on his health, Bateman-House said. “You forgo much of your privacy when you become president.”

Finally, some are dismayed that Trump received special care while flaunting public health advice about wearing a mask and other steps to curb the spread of the virus.

“He has an obligation to follow the rules of the United States and he has an obligation to set a good example,” she said. “We have problems on both of those counts.”

Also:

NEW YORK: Should people fear the coronaviru­s?

Public health experts say 1 million worldwide deaths are among reasons to be concerned, if not fearful, and to take everyday precaution­s despite rosy advice from the still-recovering president.

“Don’t let it dominate you. Don’t be afraid of it. You’re going to beat it,” Donald Trump said in a White House video released after he left the hospital Monday.

In the United States alone, more than 210,000 people weren’t able to beat it.

The seven-day rolling average for new US cases has climbed over the past two weeks to almost 42,000 per day. The nation also sees more than 700 COVID-19 deaths each day.

COVID-19 also is deadlier than the flu, despite Trump’s claim otherwise. Flu has killed 12,000 to 61,000 Americans annually since 2010, according to CDC estimates.

It is true that the vast majority of people who get COVID-19 develop only mild symptoms. But experts can’t predict which patients will develop dangerous or deadly infections. And only a small percentage of Americans have been sickened by the coronaviru­s, meaning the vast majority are still at risk for infection.

It is true, as Trump said in the video, that medicines have been found that can treat the virus, reducing chances for severe illness and death. But there is still no cure for it and no definitive date for when an effective vaccine might become widely available.

Another reason for concern is uncertaint­y over which patients will develop lasting complicati­ons affecting the lungs, heart, kidneys and other organs.

While these are more common in patients with severe infections, persistent symptoms lasting several months have occurred even in those with mild disease. Fatigue is among the most common.

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