The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: July 2021
Ivermectin for Prevention and Treatment of COVID-19… : American Journal of Therapeutics – LWW Journals
Posted: July 14, 2021 at 1:31 pm
INTRODUCTION
To date, very few treatments have been demonstrated to reduce the burden of morbidity and mortality from COVID-19. Although corticosteroids have been proven to reduce mortality in severe disease,1 there has been little convincing evidence on interventions that may prevent disease, reduce hospitalizations, and reduce the numbers of people progressing to critical disease and death.
Ivermectin is a well-known medicine that is approved as an antiparasitic by the World Health Organization and the US Food and Drug Administration. It is widely used in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to treat worm infections.2,3 Also used for the treatment of scabies and lice, it is one of the World Health Organizations Essential Medicines.4 With total doses of ivermectin distributed apparently equaling one-third of the present world population,5 ivermectin at the usual doses (0.20.4 mg/kg) is considered extremely safe for use in humans.6,7 In addition to its antiparasitic activity, it has been noted to have antiviral and anti-inflammatory properties, leading to an increasing list of therapeutic indications.8
Since the start of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, both observational and randomized studies have evaluated ivermectin as a treatment for, and as prophylaxis against, COVID-19 infection. A review by the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance summarized findings from 27 studies on the effects of ivermectin for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 infection, concluding that ivermectin demonstrates a strong signal of therapeutic efficacy against COVID-19.9 Another recent review found that ivermectin reduced deaths by 75%.10 Despite these findings, the National Institutes of Health in the United States recently stated that there are insufficient data to recommend either for or against the use of ivermectin for the treatment of COVID-19,11 and the World Health Organization recommends against its use outside of clinical trials.12
Ivermectin has exhibited antiviral activity against a wide range of RNA and some DNA viruses, for example, Zika, dengue, yellow fever, and others.13 Caly et al14 demonstrated specific action against SARS-CoV-2 in vitro with a suggested host-directed mechanism of action being the blocking of the nuclear import of viral proteins14,15 that suppress normal immune responses. However, the necessary cell culture EC50 may not be achievable in vivo.16 Other conjectured mechanisms include inhibition of SARS-CoV-2 3CLPro activity17,18 (a protease essential for viral replication), a variety of anti-inflammatory effects,19 and competitive binding of ivermectin with the viral S protein as shown in multiple in silico studies.20 The latter would inhibit viral binding to ACE-2 receptors suppressing infection. Hemagglutination via viral binding to sialic acid receptors on erythrocytes is a recently proposed pathologic mechanism21 that would be similarly disrupted. Both host-directed and virus-directed mechanisms have thus been proposed, the clinical mechanism may be multimodal, possibly dependent on disease stage, and a comprehensive review of mechanisms of action is warranted.
Developing new medications can take years; therefore, identifying existing drugs that can be repurposed against COVID-19 that already have an established safety profile through decades of use could play a critical role in suppressing or even ending the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Using repurposed medications may be especially important because it could take months, possibly years, for much of the world's population to get vaccinated, particularly among LMIC populations.
Currently, ivermectin is commercially available and affordable in many countries globally.6 A 2018 application for ivermectin use for scabies gives a direct cost of $2.90 for 100 12-mg tablets.22 A recent estimate from Bangladesh23 reports a cost of US$0.60US$1.80 for a 5-day course of ivermectin. For these reasons, the exploration of ivermectin's potential effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 may be of particular importance for settings with limited resources.24 If demonstrated to be effective as a treatment for COVID-19, the cost-effectiveness of ivermectin should be considered against existing treatments and prophylaxes.
The aim of this review was to assess the efficacy of ivermectin treatment among people with COVID-19 infection and as a prophylaxis among people at higher risk of COVID-19 infection. In addition, we aimed to prepare a brief economic commentary (BEC) of ivermectin as treatment and as prophylaxis for COVID-19.25
The conduct of this review was guided by a protocol that was initially written using Cochrane's rapid review template and subsequently expanded to a full protocol for a comprehensive review.26
Two reviewers independently searched the electronic databases of Medline, Embase, CENTRAL, Cochrane COVID-19 Study Register, and Chinese databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) up to April 25, 2021 (see Appendix 13, Supplemental digital content 1, http://links.lww.com/AJT/A95); current guidance25 for the BEC was followed for a supplementary search of economic evaluations. There were no language restrictions, and translations were planned to be performed when necessary.
We searched the reference list of included studies, and of two other 2021 literature reviews on ivermectin,9 as well as the recent WHO report, which included analyses of ivermectin.12 We contacted experts in the field (Drs. Andrew Hill, Pierre Kory, and Paul Marik) for information on new and emerging trial data. In addition, all trials registered on clinical trial registries were checked, and trialists of 39 ongoing trials or unclassified studies were contacted to request information on trial status and data where available. Many preprint publications and unpublished articles were identified from the preprint servers MedRiv and Research Square, and the International Clinical Trials Registry Platform. This is a rapidly expanding evidence base, so the number of trials are increasing quickly. Reasons for exclusion were recorded for all studies excluded after full-text review.
We extracted information or data on study design (including methods, location, sites, funding, study author declaration of interests, and inclusion/exclusion criteria), setting, participant characteristics (disease severity, age, gender, comorbidities, smoking, and occupational risk), and intervention and comparator characteristics (dose and frequency of ivermectin/comparator). The primary outcome for the intervention component of the review included death from any cause and presence of COVID-19 infection (as defined by investigators) for ivermectin prophylaxis. Secondary outcomes included time to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) negativity, clinical recovery, length of hospital stay, admission to hospital (for outpatient treatment), admission to ICU or requiring mechanical ventilation, duration of mechanical ventilation, and severe or serious adverse events, as well as post hoc assessments of improvement and deterioration. All of these data were extracted as measured and reported by investigators. Numerical data for outcomes of interest were extracted according to intention to treat.
If there was a conflict between data reported across multiple sources for a single study (eg, between a published article and a trial registry record), we contacted the authors for clarification. Assessments were conducted by 2 reviewers (T.L., T.D., A.B., or G.G.) using the Cochrane RCT risk-of-bias tool.27 Discrepancies were resolved by discussion.
Continuous outcomes were measured as the mean difference and 95% confidence intervalss (CI), and dichotomous outcomes as risk ratio (RR) and 95% CI.
We did not impute missing data for any of the outcomes. Authors were contacted for missing outcome data and for clarification on study methods, where possible, and for trial status for ongoing trials.
We assessed heterogeneity between studies by visual inspection of forest plots, by estimation of the I2 statistic (I2 60% was considered substantial heterogeneity),28 by a formal statistical test to indicate statistically significant heterogeneity,29 and, where possible, by subgroup analyses (see below). If there was evidence of substantial heterogeneity, the possible reasons for this were investigated and reported. We assessed reporting biases using funnel plots if more than 10 studies contributed to a meta-analysis.
We meta-analyzed data using the random effects model (DerSimonian and Laird method)30 using RevMan 5.4.1 software.27,31 The results used the inverse variance method for weighting.27 Some sensitivity analyses used other methods that are outlined below and some calculations were performed in R32 through an interface33 to the netmeta package.34 Where possible, we performed subgroup analyses grouping trials by disease severity, inpatients versus outpatients, and single dose versus multiple doses. We performed sensitivity analyses by excluding studies at high risk of bias. We conducted further post hoc sensitivity analyses using alternative methods to test the robustness of results in the presence of zero events in both arms in a number of trials35 and estimated odds ratios [and additionally RR for the MantelHaenszel (MH) method] using a fixed effects model. The models incorporate evidence from single-zero studies without having to resort to continuity corrections. However, double-zero studies are excluded from the analysis; so, the risk difference was also assessed using the MH method as this approach can adequately incorporate trials with double-zero events. This method can also use a random-effects component. A treatment-arm continuity correction was used, where the values 0.01, 0.1, and 0.25 were added where trials reported zero events in both arms. It has been shown that a nonfixed continuity correction is preferable to the usual 0.5.35 Other methods are available but were not considered due to difficulty in interpretation, sensitivity of assumptions, or the fact they are rarely used in practice.3640
When a meta-analysis is subjected to repeated statistical evaluation, there is an exaggerated risk that naive point estimates and confidence intervals will yield spurious inferences. In a meta-analysis, it is important to minimize the risk of making a false-positive or false-negative conclusion. There is a trade-off between the risk of observing a false-positive result (type I error) and the risk of observing a false-negative result (type II error). Conventional meta-analysis methods (eg, in RevMan) also do not take into account the amount of available evidence. Therefore, we examined the reliability and conclusiveness of the available evidence using trial sequential analyses (TSA).4143 The DerSimonianLaird (DL) method was used because this is most often used in meta-analytic practice and was also used in the primary meta-analysis.30
The TSA was used to calculate the required information size (IS) to demonstrate or reject a relative reduction in the risk (RRR) of death in the ivermectin group, as found in the primary meta-analysis. We assumed the estimated event proportion in the control group from the meta-analysis because this is the best and most representative available estimate. Recommended type I and II error rates of 5% and 10% were used, respectively (power of 90%),43 powering the result on the effect observed in the primary meta-analyses. We did not identify any large COVID-19 trials powered on all-cause mortality, so powering on some external meaningful difference was not possible. Any small RRR is meaningful in this context, given the scale of the pandemic, but the required IS would be unfeasibly high for this analysis if powered on a small difference. The only reliable data on ivermectin in its repurposed role for treatment against COVID-19 will be from the primary meta-analysis. Therefore, assuming it does not widely deviate from other published systematic reviews, a pragmatic decision was therefore made to power on the pooled meta-analysis effect estimate for all-cause mortality a priori. This is more reflective of a true meaningful difference. We used a model variance-based estimate to correct for heterogeneity. A continuity correction of 0.01 was used in trials that reported zero events in one or both arms. The required IS is the sample size required for a reliable and conclusive meta-analysis and is at least as large as that needed in a single powered RCT. The heterogeneity corrected required IS was used to construct sequential monitoring boundaries based on the O'BrienFleming type alpha-spending function for the cumulative z-scores (corresponding to the cumulative meta-analysis),43 analogous to interim monitoring in an RCT, to determine when sufficient evidence had been accrued. These monitoring boundaries are relatively insensitive to the number of repeated significance tests. They can be used to further contextualize the original meta-analysis and enhance our certainty around its conclusions. We used a two-sided test, so also considered futility boundaries (to test for no statistically significant difference) and the possibility that ivermectin could harm. Sensitivity analyses were performed excluding the trial of Fonseca,44 which was a cause of substantial heterogeneity (but retained in the core analysis because it was at low risk of bias). Its removal dramatically reduced I2 and D2 (diversity) estimates, thus reducing the model variance-based estimate to correct for heterogeneity. Two further sensitivity analyses were performed using 2 alternative random effect models, namely the BiggerstaffTweedie (BT) and SidikJonkman (SJ) methods.43
All outcomes have been assessed independently by 2 review authors (T.D. and A.B.) using the GRADE approach,45 which ranks the quality and certainty of the evidence. The results of the TSAs will also form part of the judgment for the primary all-cause mortality outcome. The results are presented in a summary of findings table. Any differences in judgments were resolved by discussion with the wider group. We used Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care guidance to interpret the evidence.46
The combined and preliminary deduplicated total was n = 583. We also identified 11 records from other sources (reference lists, etc). See PRISMA flow diagram for inclusion and exclusion details of these references (Figure 1).
Study flow diagram from search on 25 April 2021.
The supplementary search for the BEC identified 17 studies, of which 4 were retrieved in full. No full trial- or model-based economic evaluations (costutility analyses, costeffectiveness analyses, or costbenefit analyses) were identified.
Twenty-one trials in treatment and 2 trials in prophylaxis of COVID-19 met review inclusion. One further study47 reported separate treatment and prophylaxis components; we label this study Elgazzar under both questions. In effect, there were 22 trials in treatment and 3 in prophylaxis. All of these contributed data to at least one review outcome and meta-analysis. Fifteen trials contributed data for the primary outcome for ivermectin treatment (death); 3 studies reported the primary outcome for prophylaxis (COVID-19 infection). Characteristics of included studies are given in Table 1. Seventeen studies4763 were excluded as they were not RCTs and we identified 39 ongoing studies64102 and 2 studies103,104 are awaiting classification.
*Also administered doxycycline.
multiarm trial.
SOC, standard of care; PR, peer review.
A risk-of-bias summary graph is given in Figure 2. Eleven studies23,24,44,47,105,106111 used satisfactory random sequence generation and allocation concealment. Two trials described satisfactory sequence generation, but it was unclear whether allocation was concealed.112,113
Risk-of-bias summary: review authors' judgments about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Ten trials reported adequate blinding of the participants/personnel and/or the outcome assessors.23,24,44,105,107,109,110,111,113,114 The others were either unclear or high risk for blinding. We considered blinding to be a less important criterion for evaluation of evidence related to the review's primary outcomes, namely death and laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 infection, which are objective outcomes.
We did not consider publication on preprint web sites to constitute a risk of bias because all studies were scrutinized and peer reviewed by us during the review process and, where additional information was needed, we contacted the authors for clarification.
Twenty-four RCTs (including 3 quasi-RCTs) involving 3406 participants were included, with sample sizes ranging from 24 to 476 participants. Twenty-two trials in treatment and 3 trials in prophylaxis met review inclusion, including the trial of Elgazzar et al, which reported both components. For trials of COVID-19 treatment, 16 evaluated ivermectin among participants with mild to moderate COVID-19 only; 6 trials included patients with severe COVID-19. Most compared ivermectin with placebo or no ivermectin; 3 trials included an active comparator (Table 1). Three RCTs involving 738 participants were included in the prophylaxis trials. Most trials were registered, self-funded, and undertaken by clinicians working in the field. There were no obvious conflicts of interest noted, with the exception of two trials.85,139
Twenty-two trials (2668 participants) contributed data to the comparison ivermectin treatment versus no ivermectin treatment for COVID-19 treatment.
Meta-analysis of 15 trials, assessing 2438 participants, found that ivermectin reduced the risk of death by an average of 62% (95% CI 27%81%) compared with no ivermectin treatment [average RR (aRR) 0.38, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.73; I2 = 49%]; risk of death 2.3% versus 7.8% among hospitalized patients in this analysis, respectively (SoF Table 2 and Figure 3). Much of the heterogeneity was explained by the exclusion of one trial44 in a sensitivity analysis (average RR 0.31, 95% CI 0.170.58, n = 2196, I2 = 22%), but because this trial was at low risk of bias, it was retained in the main analysis. The source of heterogeneity may be due to the use of active comparators in the trial design. The results were also robust to sensitivity analyses excluding 2 other studies with an active treatment comparator (average RR 0.41, 95% CI 0.230.74, n = 1809, I2 = 8%). The results were also not sensitive to the exclusion of studies that were potentially at higher risk of bias (average RR 0.29, 95% CI 0.100.80, 12 studies, n = 2095, I2 = 61%), but in subgroup analysis, it was unclear as to whether a single dose would be sufficient. The effect on reducing deaths was consistent across mild to moderate and severe disease subgroups. Subgrouping data according to inpatient and outpatient trials was not informative because few outpatient studies reported this serious outcome. The conclusions of the primary outcome were also robust to a series of alternative post hoc analyses that explored the impact of numerous trials that reported no deaths in either arm. Extreme sensitivity analyses using a treatment arm continuity correction of between 0.01 and 0.5 did not change the certainty of the evidence judgments (Table 3).
*Only one study contributed to the severe COVID-19 subgroup and subgroup data were not pooled due to subgroup differences.
Downgraded 1 for study design limitations.
Downgraded 1 for inconsistency.
Downgraded 1 for imprecision.
Downgraded 2 for imprecision/sparse data.
Downgraded 1 for indirectness.
Death due to any cause.
FE, fixed effects; IV, inverse variance; M-H, Mantel-Haenszel; RD, risk difference; RE, random effects; TACC, treatment arm continuity correction.
TSA, using the DL random-effects method, showed that there may have been sufficient evidence accrued before the end of 2020 to show significant benefit of ivermectin over control for all-cause mortality. The cumulative z-curve in Figure 8 crossed the trial sequential monitoring boundaries after reaching the required IS, implying that there is firm evidence for a beneficial effect of ivermectin use over no ivermectin use in mainly hospitalized participants with mild to moderate COVID-19 infection.
The TSA was used to calculate the IS required to demonstrate or reject a 62% RRR of death in the ivermectin group, as observed in the primary meta-analysis. This estimate is similar to effect estimates reported in other reviews.10 We assumed a 7.8% event proportion in the control group, which was the average control group event rate from the primary meta-analysis. We used a model variance-based estimate of 49.1% (diversity estimate) to correct for heterogeneity. The required IS was 1810 participants (Figure 8), which was exceeded by the total number of observed participants in the meta-analysis (n = 2438). In the TSA plots, the red dashed lines in Figure 8 represent the trial sequential monitoring boundaries using the O'BrienFleming alpha-spending function. The solid blue line is the cumulative z-curve and represents the observed trials in the cumulative meta-analysis. The adjusted significance boundaries for the cumulative z-curve were constructed under the assumption that significance testing may have been performed each time a new trial was added to the meta-analysis. In Figure 8, the z-curve crosses the boundary after reaching the required IS, thereby supporting the previous conclusion in RevMan 5.4.131 using the DL method that ivermectin is superior to control in reducing the risk of death.
Sensitivity analysis excluding the trial of Fonseca44 significantly reduced heterogeneity in the meta-analysis and thus the diversity estimate in the TSA using the DL model. This strengthened the suggestion in the primary core analysis that the required IS had been reached (Figure 9). Because the DL estimator could potentially underestimate the between-trials variance,43 we performed further sensitivity analyses using 2 alternative random-effects model approaches. The results of the primary TSA analysis were robust to sensitivity analysis using the BT method with the same parameters, excluding the Fonseca44 trial, which was a cause of substantial heterogeneity (Figure 10). The TSA comprehensively confirms the result of the conventional meta-analysis. The required IS was 1064.
The required IS was not reached in the TSA using the SJ method, largely because diversity from the model was high (Figure 11). The SJ estimator may overestimate the between-trials variance in meta-analyses with mild heterogeneity, thus producing artificially wide confidence intervals.43 When the diversity estimate was reduced to the same as in the DL model, the required IS was reached in the SJ model (data not shown). There was no evidence of futility using the SJ method in any scenario.
Overall, death from any cause, taking into account all composite analyses, was judged to provide moderate-certainty evidence (SoF Table 2 and Figures 411). A funnel plot corresponding to the primary outcome of death from any cause did not seem to suggest any evidence of publication bias (Figure 7). Furthermore, the ease with which trial reports can be uploaded as preprints should reduce this risk.
Death due to any cause, excluding an outlier study responsible for the heterogeneity.
Death due to any cause, excluding high risk-of-bias studies.
Death due to any cause, excluding studies with active controls.
Funnel plot of ivermectin versus control for COVID-19 treatment for all-cause death (subgrouped by severity).
Trial sequential analysis using DL random-effects method with parameter estimates of = 0.05, = 0.1, control rate = 7.8%, RRR = 62%, and diversity = 49.5%.
Sensitivity analysis excluding an outlier study responsible for the heterogeneity, showing trial sequential analysis using DL random-effects method with parameter estimates of = 0.05, = 0.1, control rate = 7.8%, = 62%, and diversity = 0%.
Sensitivity analysis excluding an outlier study responsible for the heterogeneity, showing trial sequential analysis using BiggerstaffTweedie random-effects method with parameter estimates of = 0.05, = 0.1, control rate = 7.8%, RRR = 62%, and diversity = 14.2%.
Sensitivity analysis excluding an outlier study responsible for the heterogeneity, showing trial sequential analysis using SidikJonkman random-effects method with parameter estimates of = 0.05, = 0.1, control rate = 7.8%, RRR = 62%, and diversity = 71.9%.
Secondary outcomes provided low to very low certainty evidence (SoF Table 2). Low-certainty findings suggested that there may be no benefit with ivermectin for need for mechanical ventilation, whereas effect estimates for improvement and deterioration favored ivermectin but were graded as low certainty due to study design limitations and inconsistency (Figures 1214). All other secondary outcome findings were assessed as very low certainty.
Need for mechanical ventilation.
Improvement.
Deterioration.
Meta-analysis of 11 trials, assessing 1533 participants, found that there was no significant difference between ivermectin and control in the risk of severe adverse events (aRR 1.65, 95% CI 0.446.09; I2 = 0%; low certainty evidence, downgraded for imprecision and study design limitations). Seven severe adverse events were reported in the ivermectin group and 2 in controls. The SAEs were as follows: 2 patients in the Mahmud trial107 had esophagitis (this is a known side effect of doxycycline, which was coadministered with ivermectin in this trial); one patient in the study by Krolewiecki et al106 had hyponatremia (this trial used high-dose ivermectin for 5 days); and 2 patients in a study from Turkey115 had serious delirium-like behavior, agitation, aggressive attitude, and altered state of consciousness, which the authors attributed to metabolic insufficiencies in MDR-1/ABCB1 or CYP3A4 genes, screening for which was a study feature. In the Lopez-Medina et al85 trial, there were 2 SAEs in each arm (SoF Table 2).
Three studies involving 738 participants evaluated ivermectin for COVID-19 prophylaxis among health care workers and COVID-19 contacts. Meta-analysis of these 3 trials, assessing 738 participants, found that ivermectin prophylaxis among health care workers and COVID-19 contacts probably reduces the risk of COVID-19 infection by an average of 86% (79%91%) (3 trials, 738 participants; aRR 0.14, 95% CI 0.090.21; 5.0% vs. 29.6% contracted COVID-19, respectively; low-certainty evidence; downgraded due to study design limitations and few included trials) (Figure 15). In 2 trials involving 538 participants, no severe adverse events were recorded (SoF Table 4).
COVID-19 infection (prophylaxis studies).
GRADE working group grades of evidence; High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect; Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate; Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate; Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
*The basis for the assumed risk (eg, the median control group risk across studies) is provided in footnotes. The corresponding risk (and its 95% CI) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95% CI).
Downgraded 2 for study design limitations.
NNT, number needed to treat.
The findings indicate with moderate certainty that ivermectin treatment in COVID-19 provides a significant survival benefit. Our certainty of evidence judgment was consolidated by the results of trial sequential analyses, which show that the required IS has probably already been met. Low-certainty evidence on improvement and deterioration also support a likely clinical benefit of ivermectin. Low-certainty evidence suggests a significant effect in prophylaxis. Overall, the evidence also suggests that early use of ivermectin may reduce morbidity and mortality from COVID-19. This is based on (1) reductions in COVID-19 infections when ivermectin was used as prophylaxis, (2) the more favorable effect estimates for mild to moderate disease compared with severe disease for death due to any cause, and (3) on the evidence demonstrating reductions in deterioration.
The evidence on severe adverse events in this review was graded as low certainty, partly because there were too few events to reach statistical significance. Evidence from a recent systematic review of ivermectin use among people with parasitic infections suggests that ivermectin administered at the usual doses (0.2 or 0.4 mg/kg) is safe and could be safe at higher doses.7,116 A recent World Health Organization document on ivermectin use for scabies found that adverse events with ivermectin were primarily minor and transient.22
We restricted the included studies to the highest level of evidence, that is, RCTs, as a policy. This was despite there being numerous observational but nonrandomized trials of ivermectin, which one could argue could also be considered in an emergency. We included preprint and unpublished data from completed but not yet published trials due to the urgency related to evidence synthesis in the context of a global pandemic.117 Although there is the potential for selective reporting of outcomes and publication bias, we have factored in these considerations in interpreting results and forming conclusions. We adhered to PRISMA guidelines and the WHO statement on developing global norms for sharing data and results during public health emergencies.117
There are a number of limitations with this review. Several of the studies contributing data did not provide full descriptions of methods, so assessing risk of bias was challenging. Where descriptions of study methods were sparse or unclear, we attempted to contact authors to clarify methods, but lack of information led us to downgrade findings in several instances. Overall interpretation of findings was hampered due to variability in the participants recruited, treatment regimen, and the care offered to those in control groups. We have tried to take this variation into account through subgroup and sensitivity analyses. Nevertheless, dosing and treatment regimens and the use of ivermectin with other components of standard care require further research. We did not include laboratory outcome measures, such as viral clearance. The latter and other biochemical outcomes have been reported in several studies and reviews and tend to favor ivermectin.10,47,105,108 Several trials reported continuous data, such as length of hospital stay, as medians and interquartile ranges; therefore, we were unable to include these data in meta-analysis. Because we did not undertake in our protocol to perform narrative evidence synthesis, and because these data tended to favor ivermectin, the certainty of the effects of ivermectin on these continuous outcomes may be underestimated.
At least 5 other reviews of ivermectin use for COVID-19 have been published, including one coauthored with Nobel Laureate Professor Satoshi mura, discoverer of ivermectin,9,10,118,119,120 but only 3 have been peer-reviewed9,118,120 and only 2 attempt full systematic review.10,119 We applied AMSTAR 2,121 a critical appraisal tool for systematic reviews of health care interventions, to the 2 nonpeered systematic reviews10,119 and both were judged to be of low quality (Table 5). However, there was also a suggestion that ivermectin reduced the risk of death in treatment of COVID-19 in these reviews.
*Not documented or inadequately reported.
Participant population, description of comparator interventions, and time frame for follow-up were not described or inadequately reported.
No summary of risk-of-bias assessment was given in the main text in the review, other than stating trials were of poor, fair, or high quality. There were some further details about bias in the discussion, but these were largely generic and did not follow the recommended Cochrane tool used to assess risk of bias in RCTs.
There was some further details about bias in the discussion, but this was largely generic and did not follow the recommended Cochrane tool used to assess risk of bias in RCTs. Similarly, in terms of certainty/quality of the evidence, the authors used terms in a summary table that included good, fair, and limited, without offering any explanation or justification.
Outcomes were reported but lacked definitions.
#A significant number of pertinent RCTs have not been included in the review. Given the adequate due diligence of review process, the comprehensive nature of the search strategy is questionable.
**No description of risk-of-bias assessment in any domain apart from missing outcome data but attrition rates not documented to justify judgment.
Authors did not report data from RCTs that we obtained from various sources and some conclusions were not reflective of the observed data. It was reported that in an analysis of 4 preprint retrospective studies at high risk of bias, ivermectin was not associated with reduced mortality (logRR 0.89, 95% CI 0.091.70, P = 0.04). Although the caveat of studies being at high risk of bias and statistical heterogeneity should be added to any interpretation, it is incorrect to interpret these results as not demonstrating a potential association based on the observed result. Furthermore, the high risk of bias judgment is not adequately justified.
A sensitivity analysis was performed excluding those studies without adjustment for confounding but no details are provided. Given that there was some evidence of a potential association with ivermectin treatment and survival in 4 retrospective studies (although downplayed as no association due to concerns about attrition), it is highly implausible that any sensitivity analysis would not remove any suggestion of association.
The recently updated WHO therapeutics guidelines12 included 7 trials and 1419 people in the analysis of mortality. Reporting a risk reduction of 81% (odds ratio 0.19, 95% CI 0.090.36), the effect estimate favoring ivermectin was downgraded by 2 levels for imprecision, although the justification for this is unclear as the reported CI is precise (64%91%).
In addition to the evidence from systematic reviews, the findings of several controlled observational studies are consistent with existing evidence and suggest improved outcomes with ivermectin treatment.55,57,59 Similarly, with respect to ivermectin prophylaxis of frontline workers and those at risk, controlled observational studies from Bangladesh and Argentina (the latter which involved 1195 health care workers) have shown apparent reductions in COVID-19 transmission with ivermectin prophylaxis, including in some reports total protection (zero infections) where infection rates in the control group exceeded 50%.122,123 A very large trial of ivermectin prophylaxis in health care workers in India124 covered 3532 participants and reported risk ratios not significantly different from this meta-analysis (prophylaxis outcome).
Clarifying ivermectin safety in pregnancy is a key question in patient acceptability for pregnant women contracting COVID-19. A recent meta-analysis5 found little evidence of increased risk of abnormal pregnancies but similarly weak evidence of absence of risk. For (pre-exposure) prophylaxis in pregnancy, where vaccines may be contraindicated, the alternative of hydroxychloroquine has been advocated.125,126 In addition to safety and relative efficacy, different riskbenefit judgments may be presented for prophylaxis (pre- and post-exposure), and for treatment, with pregnancy a high-risk status for COVID-19.
RCTs in this review did not specifically examine use of ivermectin in the elderly, although this is a known high-risk group for severe COVID-19. In the setting of care homes, it is also notorious for rapid contagion. A standard indication for ivermectin in the elderly is scabies. We identified 2 recent reports suggesting that ivermectin may be efficacious as prevention and treatment of COVID-19 in this age group.50,127 A letter on positive experience in 7 elder care facilities in Virginia covering 309 patients was sent to NIH127 and has recently been submitted for publication.
There is also evidence emerging from countries where ivermectin has been implemented. For example, Peru had a very high death toll from COVID-19 early on in the pandemic.128 Based on observational evidence, the Peruvian government approved ivermectin for use against COVID-19 in May 2020.128 After implementation, death rates in 8 states were reduced between 64% and 91% over a two-month period.128 Another analysis of Peruvian data from 24 states with early ivermectin deployment has reported a drop in excess deaths of 59% at 30+ days and of 75% at 45+ days.129 However, factors such as change in behavior, social distancing, and face-mask use could have played a role in this reduction.
Other considerations related to the use of ivermectin treatment in the COVID-19 pandemic include people's values and preferences, equity implications, acceptability, and feasibility.130 None of the identified reviews specifically discussed these criteria in relation to ivermectin. However, in health care decision making, evidence on effectiveness is seldom taken in isolation without considering these factors. Ultimately, if ivermectin is to be more widespread in its implementation, then some considerations are needed related to these decision-making criteria specified in the GRADE-DECIDE framework.130
There are numerous emerging ongoing clinical trials assessing ivermectin for COVID-19. The trade-off with policy and potential implementation based on evidence synthesis reviews and/or RCTs will vary considerably from country to country. Certain South American countries, Indian states, and, more recently, Slovakia and other countries in Europe have implemented its use for COVID-19.129,131,132,133,134 A recent survey of global trends118 documents usage worldwide. Despite ivermectin being a low-cost medication in many countries globally, the apparent shortage of economic evaluations indicates that economic evidence on ivermectin for treatment and prophylaxis of SARS-CoV-2 is currently lacking. This may impact more on LMICs that are potentially waiting for guidance from organizations like the WHO.
Given the evidence of efficacy, safety, low cost, and current death rates, ivermectin is likely to have an impact on health and economic outcomes of the pandemic across many countries. Ivermectin is not a new and experimental drug with an unknown safety profile. It is a WHO Essential Medicine already used in several different indications, in colossal cumulative volumes. Corticosteroids have become an accepted standard of care in COVID-19, based on a single RCT of dexamethasone.1 If a single RCT is sufficient for the adoption of dexamethasone, then a fortiori the evidence of 2 dozen RCTs supports the adoption of ivermectin.
Ivermectin is likely to be an equitable, acceptable, and feasible global intervention against COVID-19. Health professionals should strongly consider its use, in both treatment and prophylaxis.
This work was inspired by the prior literature review of Dr Pierre Kory.
The authors thank Information Specialist, Jo Platt, of the Cochrane Gynaecological, Neuro-oncology, and Orphan Cancer (CGNOC) group for designing the search strategy and running the search, as well as Anna Noel Storr for reviewing the strategy. The authors also thank Isabella Rushforth for her voluntary assistance with the preparation of the reference lists.
The authors thank Gill Gyte for detailed comments, feedback, and involvement in this review, and Michael Grayling and David Tovey for useful peer review comments before submission. The authors also thank the external peer reviewers for their helpful comments and Peter Manu for the opportunity to publish our findings.
Go here to see the original:
Posted in Covid-19
Comments Off on Ivermectin for Prevention and Treatment of COVID-19… : American Journal of Therapeutics – LWW Journals
Government accused of signing away fishing rights at Rockall, Taoiseach says claim is ‘absolute rubbish’ – TheJournal.ie
Posted: at 1:31 pm
THE GOVERNMENT HAS been accused signing away Irelands historic fishing rights atRockall in the North Atlantic.
The uninhabited island of Rockall is around 419km off the cost of Donegal, and around386km from St Kildas, to the north-west of Scotland.
Ownership of the island and the fishing rights in the waters surrounding it has been a hot topic over the last couple of years.
In 2019, the Scottish government previously said it would apprehend Irish vessels found fishing in Rockalls waters.
Earlier this year, the government said there remains an increased risk to Irish vessels fishing off Rockall after engagement with Scottish authorities.
The warning came after aDonegal fishing vessel was preventedfrom fishingin the waters around Rockall by a Marine Scotland patrol boat.
Speaking in the Dil today, Sinn FinsPdraig Mac Lochlainn said the Maritime Jurisdiction Bill, whichaims to update and set out in law the States maritime jurisdiction, formally cedesRockallto Britain.
He said this has never been done in legislation before, and criticised the 45 minutes allocated to the debate.
It is derisory and disrespectful and the order must change. I ask the Taoiseach to agree to more sitting days this week and next week, he said.
Mac Lochlainn said the Irish people have never recognised or accepted Britains claim to Rockall.
He said the government led by the Taoiseach will sign away Irish sovereignty, and, with it, our historic fishing rights at Rockall. This is utterly shameful.
At a time when the entire industry is fighting for its very survival, the action the Government is taking tonight will put the future of many fishing families on the line. We will not accept the ceding of Irish sovereignty to Britain. I am asking the Taoiseach to stand up for his country and intervene to stop this legislation going before the Oireachtas tonight. Rock on, Rockall, as the song says. It is the Taoiseachs time to do something about it, he added.
Not impressed, the Taoiseach said whatMac Lochlainn was asserting is absolute rubbish.
We are not ceding anything, particularly in regard to fishing rights. We are ceding nothing. It is just another game, is it not? It is just another slogan and just another approach, and it is consistent with the Deputys approach on everything.
#Open journalism No news is bad news Support The Journal
Your contributions will help us continue to deliver the stories that are important to you
I engaged with the fishermen of Ireland and their representatives. I am serious about it and I am going to do everything I possibly can to help fishers in this country. I am not going to be engaging in the silly, shallow sort of presentations that the Deputy engages in, pretending to be the friend of everybody but with absolutely zilch when it comes to substance on very serious matters that affect livelihoods. For Gods sake, I think we need better than that.
A statement from the Department of Foreign Affairs to The Journal said the purpose of the Maritime Jurisdiction Bill is to regulate the exercise of the States maritime jurisdiction, not to make sovereign claims to land territory.
The department said amending the Bill to claim sovereignty over Rockall would be beyond the scope of the Bill.
The position of successive Governments has been that no state should seek to claim sovereignty over uninhabitable rocks in the middle of the ocean for that reason no Irish Government has ever claimed Rockall nor has it ever recognised the UKs claim, said the department.
It stated that a 2013 agreement fixed the boundaries on the continental shelf which were agreed in 1988 as the exclusive economic zone boundaries also, creating a single maritime boundary in the water and on the seabed beneath.
The agreement was implemented by a 2014 statutory instrument made under the existing Maritime Jurisdiction legislation it was laid before both Houses of the Oireachtas, as required, and it was open to any Deputy or Senator to propose a motion to annul it within 21 sitting days. No such motion was ever proposed, they added.
Read more:
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Government accused of signing away fishing rights at Rockall, Taoiseach says claim is ‘absolute rubbish’ – TheJournal.ie
Irish Government is waving the white flag on Rockall says Donegal TD – Derry Journal
Posted: at 1:31 pm
He called on his fellow Donegal TD and the Minister for the Marine, Charlie McConalogue to stand up for Donegals fishermen and to withdraw the Marine Jurisdiction Bill from the Dil tonight, Wednesday, that puts British control of Rockall into Irish law.
He said: Since the EU/ UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement came into effect on January 1st of this year, boats and fishermen from Donegal have been blocked by the British authorities from fishing in their traditional fishing grounds in the 12-mile limit around Rockall.
I have raised this repeatedly with the Minister for Foreign Affairs and the Minister for the Marine, Charlie McConalogue and almost seven months on, there is no sign of a solution. Despite repeated assurances and denials from consecutive Irish governments, an agreement with the British government in 2014 and other similar agreements in the past, have led to the shameful handing away of our fishing rights to these waters. Rather than tear up or even renegotiate these agreements, the Irish government is doubling down and putting them into Irish law. This is astonishing and a kick in the teeth to our Donegal fishermen.
He continued: The government intends to put the controversial 2014 Agreement between Ireland and Britain on the maritime boundary of each country into law through this Maritime Jurisdiction Bill. That agreement was never scrutinised, debated, and voted on in the Houses of the Oireachtas in contravention of the Constitution and its legal standing is heavily disputed. That agreement has also been further discredited by Brexit and the changeover of control of key fishing waters from the mutual control of the EUs Common Fisheries Policy over to the exclusive control of Britain.
It is truly shocking that the Irish government are not only not seeking to renegotiate this agreement but now they are waving the white flag and strengthening the hand of the British government.
I am calling on my fellow Donegal TD and the Minister for the Marine, Charlie McConalogue to stand up for the rights of our Donegal fishermen and to withdraw this bill.
Originally posted here:
Irish Government is waving the white flag on Rockall says Donegal TD - Derry Journal
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Irish Government is waving the white flag on Rockall says Donegal TD – Derry Journal
The Mandalorian leads 2021 Emmy nominations, followed by WandaVision – Polygon
Posted: at 1:31 pm
Nominations for the 73rd Emmys were announced on Tuesday, and to the surprise of no one, Disney absolutely cleaned up, with 146 nominations across all categories. The media giant earned nominations all across its platforms and networks, but Disney Plus had a particularly standout morning with massive showings from both The Mandalorian and WandaVision.
The Mandalorian season 2 earned 24 nominations, bringing it into a tie with the latest season of Netflixs The Crown for the most nominations of any series this year. Among a litany of technical awards, The Mandalorian also earned a nomination for Best Drama Series, as well as guest actor nominations for Timothy Olyphant and Carl Weathers and a supporting actor nomination for Giancarlo Esposito.
Disneys other Emmy contender was WandaVision, which was submitted as a Limited Series for this years competition. The series earned a total of 23 nominations, including Best Limited Series, and acting nominations for both of its leads. Meanwhile meme-star Kathryn Hahn also got nominated for the series as a supporting actress. Disneys other Marvel show, The Falcon and Winter Soldier, earned five nominations, including one for Don Cheadles guest appearance.
Elsewhere in the nominations, Ted Lasso had a particularly impressive day, earning 20 nominations. This brings Apple TV Plus soccer comedy just two nomination shy of 30 Rocks all-time comedy record of 21 nominations. Perhaps the funniest part of the shows nominations came in the supporting actor in a comedy series category, where it earned four of the categories eight total nominations including one for the series co-creator Brendan Hunt.
Among the other highly-nominated shows and series are HBOs Mare of Easttown, which earned 16, Netflixs Queens Gambit, which earned 18, Saturday Night Live, which earned 21, Hulus The Handmaids Tale, with 21, and HBOs Lovecraft Country, which had 18.
The Emmy Awards will be broadcast on Sunday, Sept. 19 at 8 p.m. ET.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misstated the number of Emmy nominations for The Falcon and the Winter Soldier.
Read the original post:
The Mandalorian leads 2021 Emmy nominations, followed by WandaVision - Polygon
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on The Mandalorian leads 2021 Emmy nominations, followed by WandaVision – Polygon
Simi Chahal Teaches Netizens How To Style The Desi Jewellery To Score High – IWMBuzz
Posted: at 1:30 pm
Check out Simi Chahal's stunning looks in desi jewellery
Simi Chahal, the popular actress, predominantly works in Punjabi films. The actress first stepped into the entertainment industry in 2014 where she appeared in some Punjabi music videos. After being discovered by talent scouts, she then went on to make her Punjabi film debut with the 2016 film Bambukat directed by Pankaj Batra and starred alongside Ammy Virk which was a success
The popular diva is the most stylish and elegant star we have in the entertainment industry. From giving us style lessons on how to rock all traditional outfits to nailing winter street fashion with elegance and charm, Simi has been on a roll.
Simi took to Instagram to share her gorgeous looks in desi attires. We really loved the tribal nuances in her oxidised neckpiece. Styled upon her black dress, is whats drawing all the attention to it. Check out her looks which will help you to style the desi jewellery to score high.
Also Read: Punjabi Kudi: Simi Chahal Showing Off the Punjab Da Swag In Punjabi Attires
Excerpt from:
Simi Chahal Teaches Netizens How To Style The Desi Jewellery To Score High - IWMBuzz
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on Simi Chahal Teaches Netizens How To Style The Desi Jewellery To Score High – IWMBuzz
10 Things To Do in Greater Cincinnati This Weekend (July 9-11) – Cincinnati CityBeat
Posted: at 1:30 pm
PRIDE on MainPhoto: Provided by Second Sunday on Main
From neighborhood block parties and outdoor shopping pop-ups to a drive-in laser light show, here's what we recommend doing this weekend.
Shakespeare in the Park at Boone WoodsPhoto: Cincinnati Shakespeare Company
Shakespeare in the Park
If you've missed live theater, Cincinnati Shakespeare Company is bringing back its annual Shakespeare in the Park tour, offering free, outdoor Bard classics all summer long. With performances through September, works will be staged at outdoor theaters from Madeira to Covington and Over-the-Rhine to Mason. The professional touring cast of six actors Marcus Anthony, Angelique Archer, Arrianna Chai, Tyren Duncan, Colleen Dougherty, and Brianna Miller will present truncated versions ofRomeo and Juliet,A Midsummer Night's DreamandMacbeth. This weekend, catch Romeo and Juliet at 7 p.m. July 9 at Eden Park's Seasongood Pavilion (1600 Art Museum Drive, Eden Park); at 7 p.m. July 10 at Keenher Park (7411 Barrett Road, West Chester); and 7 p.m. July 11 at Washington Park (1230 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine). More info atcincyshakes.com.
Drive-In Laser Light Show at Coney Island
What exactly is a drive-in laser light show? According to an exclamation-point-infused description, it includes "some of your favorite Musical Hits from Current Pop to Classic Rock! All choreographed with cutting-edge effects, high-powered lasers, and DUAL large screen video projection!" The show is family-friendly and aimed at all ages. Event organizers say ticketholders will pull their cars into the lot and park like they would at a drive-in movie. There will be tailgating space in front of each spot so people can set up lawn chairs while still socially distancing. An FM radio station will be synced to the musical score.9 p.m. July 8; 9 and 10:30 p.m. July 9 and 10; and 9 p.m. July 11.Tickets start at $29.99 per carload and go up to $99.99 per car for front-row parking. 6201 Kellogg Ave., California,freshtix.com.
Bacon, Bourbon and Brew Festival
This fest focuses on the titular bacon, bourbon and beer in its name. Sample limited edition bourbons and bourbon flights, drink local beer partake in educational events and trivia, listen to live local music and consume copious amounts of bacon. There will be bacon-wrapped little smokies, bacon on a stick, bacon cheese fries, barbecue bacon sundae in a waffle cone and even a bacon-wrapped corn dog. Check out the full bourbon lineup and music acts online. 5-11 p.m. July 8 and 9; noon-11 p.m. July 10; noon-9 p.m. July 11. Free admission. Festival Park at Newport on the Levee, Newport,cincinnatifestivalsandevents.com.
Paintings, Politics, and the Monuments Men: The Berlin Masterpieces in Americaat the Cincinnati Art Museum
Art, intrigue, Nazis and World War II are the subject of a new exhibit at the Cincinnati Art Museum (CAM).Paintings, Politics and the Monuments Menwill take visitors through a lesser-known period of art history via the "Berlin 202."These 202 paintings, which were originally on display in the State Museums of Berlin, were extracted from salt mines by the U.S. Army after World War II. The works then went on a 14-city journey across America in 1948-49 in what the CAM says became the "first blockbuster art exhibition of our time." More than 2.5 million guests viewed the 16th- to 18th-century works before they were returned to Germany. The paintings play into a larger story about Nazis and their systematic looting of precious artworks, monuments and other pieces of history during World War II, as well as the ethics of America's "temporary transfer"of the German-owned paintings out of that country.ThroughOct. 3. $10 general admission; $5 for students, seniors and children 6-17; and free for members. Active-duty military, reserves, retirees and veterans of the United States Armed Forces can receive a free three-month membership. 953 Eden Park Drive, Eden Park, cincinnatiartmuseum.org.
The O.F.F. Market
After six years of summer and winter markets at both Oakley Square and MadTree Brewing Company, the O.F.F. Market was canceled in 2020 due to COVID.This year, the market moved to Summit Park in Blue Ash. O.F.F. Market will be popping up across the expanse, featuring up to 120 vendors per event. Booth offerings run the gamut from artisan eats and apothecary items to vintage shops, flower stalls and T-shirt companies. This year, it's also partnering with Fifty West Brewing Co. to serve brews on tap. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. July 10. Free.4335 Glendale Milford Road, Blue Ash, facebook.com/theoffmarket.
The City Flea
The City Flea will be back at Washington Park from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. July 10. Founded in 2011, the City Flea has hosted hundreds of local vendors to date and offers a platform for entrepreneurs and creators to introduce their goods to the community and grow their businesses. From food to plants to jewelry to vintage dealers, theres something for almost everyone at every market including food. The Flea is also adding live music to the mix, with a performance by Black Brass at noon this Saturday.10 a.m.-4 p.m. July 10. Free. 1230 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine,thecityflea.com.
Market Bleu
This quarterly indoor pop-up market takes place at the Contemporary Arts Center lobby and features a slew of artisans and artists. Shop handmade items (in the air conditioning) and grab a cocktail from the bar. 6-10 p.m. July 10. Free. 44 E. Sixth St., Downtown, facebook.com/marketbleu.
Indoor Tour of Music Hall
After taking a hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic, Music Hall is once again opening its doors for guests to go behind the scenes of Cincinnati's landmark structure.The Friends of Music Hallare restarting tours inside the walls of the "beautifully and thoughtfully restored 1878 building," says the group. Starting July 9, tours which will last about an hour will take place Mondays, Fridays and Saturdays. More weekly dates will return after Aug. 23. "This stunning and majestic structure reflects the spirit of Cincinnatis past and present," reads a release from Friends of Music Hall. "Designed by legendary architect Samuel Hannaford, the spectacularhallwas the envy of countless cities in the 19th century. Today its the cornerstone of the 21st-century renaissance of Cincinnati's cultural heart in historic Over-the-Rhine."1 p.m. Mondays and Fridays and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturdays.$15; $5 for children under 12; discounts available for ticket bundles/groups. 1241 Elm St., Over-the-Rhine,friendsofmusichall.org.
"Butterflies of Bali"Photo: Krohn Conservatory
Butterflies of Bali at Krohn Conservatory
Krohn Conservatory reopened in May, welcoming folks back with its 25th butterfly show a reboot ofButterflies of Bali. The show features 120,000 fluttering butterflies and is inspired by the country's vibrant forests, rice paddies beautiful beaches and lakes. The conservatory has extended the event's hours past its typical 5 p.m. closure, welcoming guests from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily, and it only lets 40 visitors in per hour, making for a comparatively unique and intimate experience with the show.Through Sept. 26. $10 adults; $7 for ages 5-17; free for under 4. Krohn Conservatory, 1501 Eden Park Drive, Eden Park,cincinnatiparks.com/krohn.
Second Sunday on Main
Over-the-Rhine street festival Second Sunday on Mainis back this summer, and this weekend, the monthly neighborhood party now in its 16th year is celebrating Pride. On July 11, there will be live music, a drag show and belly dancing in addition to a Braxton biergarten and more than 100 different vendors. The main stage will feature performances from BERSHY, the Cincinnati Opera, Brooklyn Rae,Jess Lamb & the Factory, The Bumbling Bard, Mysfits and Anya Belly Dance. Below Zero Lounge (which recently made Yelp's top 100 best LGBTQ+ bars across America list) is also hosting a drag show with PH Dee, Queen Danicure, Sister MSG, Sister Barely Clearance, LaLa St. James, Brock Leah Spears, and Tayta the Queen.Noon-5 p.m. July 11. Free. Main Street from 12th Street to Liberty, Over-the-Rhine, secondsundayonmain.org.
Sign upfor our weekly newsletters to get the latest on the news, things to do and places to eat delivered right to your inbox.
Follow us onFacebook,TwitterandInstagram.
See original here:
10 Things To Do in Greater Cincinnati This Weekend (July 9-11) - Cincinnati CityBeat
Posted in Rockall
Comments Off on 10 Things To Do in Greater Cincinnati This Weekend (July 9-11) – Cincinnati CityBeat
Loki Creator Influenced by Calvin and Hobbes’ ‘Nihilism and Heart’ – MovieMaker Magazine
Posted: at 1:30 pm
Loki creator Michael Waldron proudly lists influences that you can probably see when you watch his show from Mad Men to Indiana Jones to Star Warsto Nora Ephron. But oneinfluence you mayhave missed is the beloved Bill Watterson comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, about a rambunctious boy and the stuffed tiger only he can dream to life.
Waldron, who at 33 is already not only running a Disney Plus show but also writing the upcoming Marvel film Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness and a secret Star Wars project, describes his rise as a writer in the latest MovieMaker podcast, available on Spotify or above or wherever you get podcasts.
He credits much of it to his very clever method of getting more face time with Community and Rick and Morty creator Dan Harmon when he worked with him as an intern, but well let him tell the story.
All Newsletters Are Awful Except Ours. Sign Up Here
Waldron seized the opportunity after knowing he wanted to write from an early age. A story called Jim the Fat Cat that he wrote in third grade contains many of the subjects that would continue to fascinate him, from TV to wrestling.
Another feline was also important to his creative evolution.
For probably 10 years straight I was just always reading Calvin and Hobbes,on just repeat. Never not reading it. Because theres so much of it. By the time you get to the end, youve kind of forgotten it. And so Bill Watterson was a huge influence, just in joke-telling and storytelling, and making me want to write like that.
Calvin and Hobbes is a very special comic strip: Watterson wrote and meticulously drew its gorgeous, understated panels from 1985 to 1995, before announcing that he had done what I can do within the constraints of daily deadlines and small panels. He never allowed it to be commercialized or cheapened with cheesy products or tie-ins, and has avoided publicity and entreaties to revive the characters.
The tone of Calvin and Hobbes, like the tone of Loki, can be hard to describe, but we asked Waldron to try.
Its just a very particular blend of at times cynical, very self-aware humor, and kind of not jaded, but just not afraid to be cynical humor, but with heart, he explains.
It doesnt pull punches, but its also not afraid of being sweet. I think thats why, later in life, I was drawn to Community and Harmons writing. Rick and Morty is a show that can be very nihilistic in a way that Calvin and Hobbes could be, Waldron continues. Sometimes Calvin and Hobbes can feel very nihilistic. But it also isnt afraid to go to a place where it makes you cry because a baby raccoon died.
And Rick and Morty isnt afraid to make you feel stuff. And so a lot of times, its like nihilism and heart are mutually exclusive in things, and the cool thing, maybe, that I took to with Bill Watterson, was it felt like they could they could really work together.
Some of the most emotional scenes in Loki, for example, take place betweenLoki (Tom Hiddleston) andSylvie (Sophia Di Martino) on the moon of Lamentis, as its apocalypse draws near. Throughout the show, which airs its season finale on Wednesday, Loki learns to move past his fatalistic attitude (he notes in Episode 4 that hes already died countless times) and to become invested in the possibility of a relationship with Sylvie and friendship with Mobius (Owen Wilson). He forms some of his closest attachments in the most hopeless moments.
As the finale approaches, Waldron says the guiding principle of the shows writing so far has been that audiences are smart, and that the show needs to be aware of what they know. One major reveal took place in Episode 4, when another show might have used it in the finale. What will happen in the season finale of Loki feels impossible to predict.
You try to kind of put yourself in the shoes of the audience, and not let the audience be ahead of you or your story for too long, Waldron says. At the same time there, I think theres a sweet spot where the audience does catch up or kind of knows, and you want to live in that freefall. And let the characters live in that for a little bit.
Waldron wasnt overwhelmed by the prospect of telling a story in the Marvel Universe, because he didnt read many comics growing up. But he did grow up a huge Star Wars fan. How does he handle the pressure of working on Marvel chief Kevin Feiges upcoming Star Wars project?
Well, it helps, he jokes, that I guess Ive been dreaming about doing that my entire life.
Theseason finale of Loki, created for television by Michael Waldron, streams Wednesday on Disney Plus.
Main image: Michael Waldron. Photo credit: CassieMireya Rodriguez Waldron.
Here is the original post:
Loki Creator Influenced by Calvin and Hobbes' 'Nihilism and Heart' - MovieMaker Magazine
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on Loki Creator Influenced by Calvin and Hobbes’ ‘Nihilism and Heart’ – MovieMaker Magazine
Robinhood has figured out how to monetize financial nihilism – The Verge
Posted: at 1:30 pm
Its sometimes hard to identify era-defining moments when they happen; usually you can only really see them after the wave rolls back. Helpfully, Robinhood has given us a high place to stand so we can see a little farther though I dont think thats the point of its S-1, which is a document filed in order to make an IPO.
Robinhood, you may recall, has been controversial. Just before the S-1 landed, we discovered a $70 million fine from FINRA, a finance industry corporation that regulates its members; Robinhood was fined for among other things failing to protect its customers. This is the largest fine its ever handed out. (Seems weird to me that $53 million is for FINRA and only $17 million is for the investors who FINRA says were harmed, but whatever, finance industry gonna finance industry.) Anyway this is the consequences of those whoopsie outages in March 2020 around major trading days. Robinhood has also had oopsies around Dogecoin in April, so I guess well find out if anyone cares about that sometime next year.
Robinhoods messiness is part of the fun. Theres like, six pages of lawsuit disclosures in the S-1, including 50 class-actions stemming from January alone, some beef with the Securities and Exchange Commission, allegations from Massachusetts that Robinhoods broken some laws, New York just asking questions about money laundering, and so on. Oh, and the Northern California US Attorneys Office has CEO Vlad Tenevs cell phone. (The actual phone, not just his number.) On the positive side, Robinhood has settled a civil suit brought by the family of Alex Kearns, a 20-year-old novice trader who killed himself wrongly believing hed lost more than $700,000.
Messiness aside, the financials suggest that Robinhood had a good Q1! There were 18 million net cumulative funded accounts on Robinhood by the end of the first quarter, according to the document. Thats 44 percent growth over the end of 2020, when there were 12.5 million such accounts. If you can cast your mind back to last January, there was that GameStonk thing, where a bunch of retail traders piled into GameStop and sent the shares, in their parlance, to the moon. Robinhood caught some flack and, apparently, a pile of lawsuits for restricting trading during that period, but it looks like the entire episode was a net positive, even if it did piss some users off! Laissez le bon temps rouler, bb.
But lets talk about payment for order flow, which, whew, 81 percent of first-quarter revenue! (Man, Id personally put some eggs in another basket.) That tells you who Robinhoods clients are: Citadel Securities et al, the people who pay for its service. So what, exactly, are they buying?
Look, the Robinhood app has lovely design, but the app isnt the product. Trades from Robinhood users are Robinhoods real product. The main insight Robinhood had was that in a mobile-first world, they could outflank other brokerages by reaching retail customers. They were right about that! But it means we have to be clear about what the real value in the financial system looks like: data, and fees.
Robinhood loves to brag that it is giving access to people who have never traded before. To my eye, however, it seems like Robinhood is advertising that most of its users are fish. Its not impossible for a novice to enter the markets, understand them, and make money... but, man, its weird out here. Like, a stablecoin issuer is trying to SPAC for a cool $4.5 billion without saying exactly whats backing the stablecoin. If you did not understand that sentence, thats because its fucking nonsense. I wish all the first-time investors the absolute best of luck in the markets; they will need it.
Goldman Sachs, underwriter of Robinhoods S-1, is doing this IPO for the fees, as are the other banks listed. The big money is serving as a middleman in a maximum number of transactions; Goldman made a couple billion on its underwriting business alone in Q1. Citadel Securities is one of Robinhoods actual clients; it works as a market maker, and pays Robinhood to route its trades to Citadel Securities so Citadel Securities can make money on the bid-ask spread.
The setup means that Robinhood makes its money when users trade. The more frequent the trading, the more money Robinhood makes. This is part of what makes the mobile-first design on Robinhood noteworthy its a trading app for a group of users who are accustomed to reacting to our smartphone notifications.
But it is also important to understand that Robinhoods retail customers are n00bs. (They phrase it more politely, like this: We take pride in the fact that we are expanding the market by welcoming new investors into the financial system.) Theyre also pretty young about 70 percent of the assets under Robinhoods custody come from people aged 18 to 40. Robinhood continues to welcome an increasing proportion of women to our platform, a hilariously indirect phrase. What do we think, ladies? Is Robinhood 70 percent men? 90 percent men? 95 percent? I wouldnt have to contemptuously speculate if that number were in the document, you know.
The default settings on the Robinhood app turn on notifications for price movements; the user can choose whether the threshold is 5 percent or 10 percent. (There are also notifications for 52-week highs and lows.) Its possible those notifications encourage users to make trades that arent in their interests; impulse selling, for instance. Of course, users can turn them off, but companies get to choose the default. The default for Robinhood isnt to encourage buy-and-hold by requiring users to manually check in on their investments, allowing them to forget about them most of the time; instead, Robinhood wants to send notifications for movement, which might inspire trades.
Now, study after study shows that day traders mostly lose money. And research that focuses on Robinhood specifically shows that their traders are mostly noise. During herding events, when Robinhood users all crowd into a stock together, intense buying by Robinhood users forecast negative returns, researchers found.
The users also seem to be crowding into weird assets. Robinhood was a part of the GameStonk mass meme, and also made almost $30 million on Dogecoin in the first quarter, a frankly astounding amount of money to make on a shitcoin. It is especially astonishing, as Bloombergs Matt Levine points out, that Robinhood made that much money in the quarter before Dogecoin peaked. Robinhood is the brokerage for fun gambling on meme stocks and meme cryptocurrencies, Levine writes. And that is great for Robinhoods customers, including Citadel Securities!
Okay, but what are the users getting out of it? Levine thinks fun gambling, and that might be right, given the age bracket. Take the meme stocks in June, The New York Times wrote of them that when stock prices are divorced from fundamentals, it cements the public perception that markets can be manipulated by a small group of insiders or a large group of determined traders and therefore cant be trusted. This is exactly backwards. That ship sailed a decade ago for everyone with student loan debt who couldnt get a job because of the 2008 financial crisis, a result of Wall Streets wild betting on the housing market. Oh, and the adults who were supposed to protect us by evaluating risk? Why, they were telling each other that those deals models didnt adequately capture the real risks. But it didnt matter the deals could even be structured by cows and we would rate them.
Are there any people under the age of 40 who have ever thought markets were something besides a casino? Meme trades arent the cause of widespread distrust, theyre the symptoms of it. And those people under 40 who think finance is for gambling? Theyre the lucrative part of Robinhoods user base. Legal issues aside, it seems like Robinhood has a good business model for monetizing financial nihilism which is the kind of thing investors might get excited about. Whether thats good for Robinhoods users or the financial system at large isnt a question the S-1 is designed to answer.
You know who Robinhood might be good for, though? Tenev and his co-founder, Baiju Bhatt, who stand to get stock awards worth an estimated $1.4 billion as executive compensation if Robinhoods shares trade high enough.
Correction July 13, 1:40PM ET: A previous version of this story said that Citadel was one of Robinhoods clients. Citadel is a hedge fund and Citadel Securities Robinhoods actual client is a market maker. We regret the error.
Go here to read the rest:
Robinhood has figured out how to monetize financial nihilism - The Verge
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on Robinhood has figured out how to monetize financial nihilism – The Verge
Is nihilism compatible with the moral life? – The Minefield – ABC News
Posted: at 1:30 pm
In moral philosophy and mass culture alike, nihilism has a bad name. And little wonder. It is most often associated with meaninglessness, pessimism, and amoralism. In its more extreme forms, nihilism calls to mind a figure like The Joker, with his raucous rejection of every criterion of value and human progress or ambition. It frequently suggests a certain existential despair, stemming from the pointlessness and futility of human endeavours. Or, in its more everyday variety, we tend to think of the languid unsentimentality, or the air of perpetual half-disappointment and total self-absorption, displayed by characters on Seinfeld.
But nihilism is a complex phenomenon. Karen Carr (in her book The Banalization of Nihilism) has produced a kind of taxonomy of kinds of nihilism, each related, in some way, to the other:
Taken together, nihilism suggests a world without independent or transcendental guarantee; a world in which progress is not assured and there is no immutable rule against which human actions are judged; and a world without purpose, but only in the sense that there is no appointed telos deriving from an overarching meaning (or providence; just think of Martin Luther Kings notion of the arc of the universe).
The question is: is such a view of reality corrosive to a robust conception of the moral life? Or are there defensible ways of thinking about moral obligation, as well as moral progress, that dont rely on transcendental guarantees? Can meaning itself give rise to forms of corrosive egotism, which undermine the possibilities of both moral community and moral growth?
You can read more from our guest, Tracy Llanera, on the nihilism and the moral life on ABC Religion & Ethics.
Excerpt from:
Is nihilism compatible with the moral life? - The Minefield - ABC News
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on Is nihilism compatible with the moral life? – The Minefield – ABC News
Op-Ed: Nihilism won’t save Gen Z, or this planet – The Texas Signal
Posted: at 1:30 pm
As a member of Generation Z, aka Zoomer, I feel I am in a unique position to discuss the future my generation has to live with. Generation Z, or those born between 1995 and 2010 are some of the youngest members of our society. Weve grown up in a world full of war, economic disaster, and climate disasters. These collective experiences have shaped us in a way many older adults could never truly understand.
The issues our society is currently facing have a direct influence on young people like me. We see economic collapse as a recurring problem, we see wars as unnecessary human violence, and climate change as a prime example of humanitys utter failure to protect Mother Earth. We understand that climate change is not the fault of workers or consumers, but the fault of the capitalists who have proven time and time again that they will stop at nothing to pursue profit.
These problems have convinced many in my generation that the future is not only bleak, but that life itself is meaningless, since this rock we live on is dying. We may never be able to own homes, retire by 65, or even survive into our 70s or 80s. This is a potential future we have to deal with, that older generations can conveniently ignore. Having to live with these realities is not easy on our mental health either. According to Western Governors University, only 45 percent of Zoomers report that their mental health is good or excellent. Which is significantly lower than previous generations.
This mental health crisis, caused by the impending collapse of human civilization, is personified by our generations enjoyment of dark entertainment. For example, one of the most popular adult animated shows at the moment is Rick and Morty, an adventure show about a scientist that touches on dark themes such as nihilism and existentialism. This type of entertainment has even reached TikTok. If you spend 10 minutes on the video social media app, youll see many young people engage in not only dark humor but bleak and dark content in general. Take for example, the latest TikTok trending sound, a cover of a song by Matt Maltese titled, As The World Caves In, sung by Sarah Cothran. This song at its surface level is about a protagonist and their lover, spending their final moments together as nuclear war is about to annihilate all life on Earth. While not exactly a fairy tale love story, this song has captured the ears of a generation. Garnering over 30 million views on YouTube and over 20 million streams on Spotify, its safe to say this type of content resonates with young people.
Us young people face an uncertain future and many of us have found different ways to cope with this trauma, but Im here to tell you that our future isnt predetermined. I understand how easy it can be to succumb to nihilism and pessimism. However, doing so leaves us feeling helpless when the truth is, we have the ability to change the world we live in and our collective future, but only if we have the guts to stand up and fight. To save our planet and future, we need to begin a new era of human civilization, built around community and environmentalism, not profit and destruction.
Continue reading here:
Op-Ed: Nihilism won't save Gen Z, or this planet - The Texas Signal
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on Op-Ed: Nihilism won’t save Gen Z, or this planet – The Texas Signal







