Supply of a malaria treatment that has been tried with some success against the new coronavirus is in short supply as demand surges amid the fast-spreading outbreak, according to independent pharmacies and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP). The ASHP, which maintains a list of drugs in shortage independent of the US Food and Drug Administration’s list, plans to add the generic malaria drug hydroxychloroquine to its list of shortages later on Thursday, according to Erin Fox, senior director of drug information at University of Utah Health, who maintains the shortages list for the ASHP. Visit our dedicated coronavirus site here for all the latest updates. The FDA could not be immediately reached for comment, but hydroxychloroquine is not currently on its list of drugs in shortage. US President Donald Trump on Thursday called on US health regulators to expedite potential therapies aimed at treating COVID-19 for which there is no approved treatments or vaccines. He said the government was looking at hydroxychloroquine and Gilead Sciences Inc’s experimental antiviral drug Remdesivir, which is undergoing clinical trials for the respiratory illness. Read more: Coronavirus: US urges Americans to avoid travel, asks citizens abroad to return US President Trump declares coronavirus national emergency Up to 150 million Americans at risk for coronavirus infection: US prediction اي استفسار أو طلب خاص بخصوص التوظيف يمكنك التواصل مع الابميل التالي – مجير الموقع : alturky28@gmail.com لطلبات التصميم او البرمجة التواصل مع : hamzalaabar@gmail.com The post Pharmacists say Trump’s hyped potential coronavirus treatment already in shortage appeared first on السعودية وطن.
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