China News Agency, The Hague, October 17. The Dutch authorities reported on the 17th that 16 doctors in the country were punished for prescribing drugs indiscriminately to treat patients with new crowns. One of them was even more severely fined nearly 13,000 euros for prescribing drugs about 150 times. .

  According to an announcement issued by the Netherlands Health Care and Youth Inspectorate on the same day, the drugs involved were hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin.

Hydroxychloroquine is an immunosuppressive and antiparasitic drug for the prevention and treatment of malaria, lupus and arthritis; Ivermectin is an antiparasitic drug for the treatment of head lice, scabies caused by scabies mites, river blindness and lymphatic filaments Insect disease.

  According to the announcement, according to regulations, doctors in the Netherlands are not allowed to use drugs beyond the instructions unless the relevant drug catalogues or industry standards have been released. At present, the Dutch authorities have even banned the prescribing of hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin to treat patients with new crowns.

  However, 16 doctors committed crimes against the wind, ignoring the regulations and prescribing hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin to treat patients with new crowns. One of the doctors prescribed the drugs about 150 times.

From July to October this year, the Dutch authorities issued "fines" to them, and the doctors who prescribed drugs indiscriminately about 150 times were fined nearly 13,000 euros.

  After the outbreak of the new crown pneumonia, hydroxychloroquine was once a "hot drug" for the treatment of patients with the new crown due to the praise of the then US President Trump. rate has no substantial effect and may increase the risk of adverse reactions in patients.

  As for ivermectin, a paper published by an international research team in the New England Journal of Medicine in March this year pointed out that ivermectin cannot effectively reduce the possibility of patients with new crowns going to the hospital for medical treatment due to their deterioration, urging scientists and doctors to focus on Efforts to develop other more promising new crown treatments.

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