"Just 0.8 percent of patients at a facility in France who received hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and an antibiotic died, compared to 4.8 percent of patients who did not receive the drug combination"
And I assume they were there because their symptoms were serious enough for someone to bring them there for treatment. So if 10% of the population went to such a place, and 5% of them died, that would be a mortality rate of 0.5%, which seems about what was being reported for covid (or were they pumping it up to the percent levels in media?), and the 0.8% would equate to a general population mortality rate of 0.08 %, which is higher than regular flu. The flu killed ~80,000 people in the U.S. in 2018, which was a very high year. That equates to a mortality rate of 0.02%. Covid seems to have been significantly deadlier than regular flue, but not the bubonic plague government and media made it out to be.
Deaths from Covid went to 0.8% compared with 4.8%
"Just 0.8 percent of patients at a facility in France who received hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) and an antibiotic died, compared to 4.8 percent of patients who did not receive the drug combination"
And I assume they were there because their symptoms were serious enough for someone to bring them there for treatment. So if 10% of the population went to such a place, and 5% of them died, that would be a mortality rate of 0.5%, which seems about what was being reported for covid (or were they pumping it up to the percent levels in media?), and the 0.8% would equate to a general population mortality rate of 0.08 %, which is higher than regular flu. The flu killed ~80,000 people in the U.S. in 2018, which was a very high year. That equates to a mortality rate of 0.02%. Covid seems to have been significantly deadlier than regular flue, but not the bubonic plague government and media made it out to be.