The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

World Health Organization: "No problem using Edville and ibuprofen, it's all Pike News." Israel today

2020-03-29T14:33:30.783Z


WHO dismissed rumors that drug and ibuprofen aggravate coronary health symptoms


After rumors have spread that the drugs are helping the corona virus and aggravate the symptoms of the disease, the World Health Organization is ordering • Don't believe the rumors online

So is taking painkillers containing the ibuprofen substance, such as Advil, dangerous in the case of the corona virus, and even aggravating the symptoms of the disease? The answer to that is probably not, and that is another rumor that he wanted to network with no factual basis. The World Health Organization wants to make it clear especially during this time - don't believe the rumors that run on the net.

Israel quarantined: Shabbat - Tel Aviv desert desolate // mhkuo: Tel Aviv municipality spokeswoman

Rumors of the common painkiller began after researchers from Basel University and Aristotle University in Thessalonica released a document claiming that a certain enzyme, which helps the corona virus to bind to body cells, shows an increase after taking the major substance in Edville and ibuprofen.

Subsequently, the French health minister himself tweeted the information and recommended that he refrain from taking anti-inflammatory drugs based on ibuprofen or cortisone. Instead of these drugs, the recommendation network has spread to take painkillers based on the acetaminophen, or by the name better known as acetaminophen.

More on:

The number of Korona victims in Israel rose to 14

lack? An Israeli company will sell respirators to the UK

"You need to prepare for a scenario with 5,000 breaths, and all beds in the hospital will have corona patients."

The first problem that has arisen with the spread of the initial information, which seems to be fake, is that paracetamol is a substance that should not be taken by people with liver problems. So regardless of the source of the initial recommendation, the replacement is not necessarily healthy either.

However, it now becomes clear that the source of the information prohibiting the taking of Advil and the ibuprofen material is unclear at all. Michael Barry, director of the Stanford University Innovation and Public Health Center, addressed the publications, saying "there is no backing for these claims."

In the same position also holds Garrett Fitzgerald, from the University of Pennsylvania's Pearlman Medical School. His stance firmly states that "Everything is Pike News, this is the time we live in." The main company that manufactures Edville also released a statement denying the rumors about the issue on its website, and wrote that there was no basis for the allegations against the drug.

At the same time, a World Health Organization position, which in response to a query from The Verge website, replied that "based on the information available to us, there is no basis for banning Advil or ibuprofen drugs." Meanwhile, those who were allegedly cited for ibuprofen research by the University of Greece and the Basel School of Medicine responded to Lancet's medical paper, denying the publications on their behalf, stating that "every patient should consult his or her physician."

Source: israelhayom

All life articles on 2020-03-29

You may like

Life/Entertain 2024-04-04T15:07:15.074Z

Trends 24h

Life/Entertain 2024-04-20T00:04:30.459Z
Life/Entertain 2024-04-19T19:50:44.122Z

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.