Not enough studies to come to your conclusions sir. It helped my friend....which is one person saved .
I'm really happy that your friend was saved, that's great news.
It may or may not have been due to HCQ. This is why we have to test every drug and not assume based on anecdotal evidence. It can be due to a placebo effect. It could be a patient would have improved even if they had not been given it. It could be that HCQ did help in his case. That is why you have to have controlled clinical studies though, to figure that out.
Here's what i know from an analytical standpoint right now. One study shows it has no positive effect compared to a control group (and you could argue the control group was actually a sicker group as it had a higher avg age, higher avg BMI and more comorbidity factors). 2 other studies have been stopped due to side effects.
There are other studies still ongoing (as there should be because one study showing no positive effects is not enough to say it doesn't work).
Some US hospitals have stopped using it because they haven't seen any positive effects from using it (that is not a proof of anything though, just a statement).
I have been pessimistic towards it because its high level of attention came not through good studies and good practices but due to an initial study in France that has been discredited and an initial paper in the US that was a fake written by 2 non-medical people.
I'm an analyst for a living. I believe very strongly in using data to drive decisions. The reason i'm pessimistic is that in the case of HCQ, we don't have any controlled data yet that shows it works any better than a placebo. Not a single non-discredited study has shown it works while we do have some early data results that it does not work and does have serious side effects.
The survey of doctors talking about HCQ ( they were asked about other therapies as well) has some issues as well. First, only 20% of the doctors that had responded had actually treated a COVID19 patient. So most of them were just relaying what they had heard, not what they had actually done. Second, as many doctors responded that it was ineffective as effective (and in the US the ineffective had a higher response rate). One of the other drugs asked about had an effective percentage 1% less than HCQ (and among US doctors actually had a higher effective %) - though like HCQ, that drug had an ineffective % as high as an effective %.
If we start getting studies that shows HCQ works and the side effects can be managed, then i'd be all for using it. But right now there simply isn't any data to say that is going to be a case and if I had to bet whether a large scale future therapy for COVID19 is based on HCQ or some other drug, right now i'd bet on some other drug.
More than anything I just hope we can find something that works in reducing the symptoms and the mortality rate because this thing is a sh*t of a disease. The ICU nurse that lives in my cul-de-sac (who needed 17 days to fight this thing when she got it) says the doctors and nurses are really scared by what they see with this disease. It's nasty and what it does to the body is not pleasant and they don't have many weapons to fight it yet, things like the ventilators and the oxygen don't help you fight it, they just keep your body going longer while it fights it to give it more time to heal itself.