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  • 2021-01-27 (xsd:date)
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  • Is Oklahoma Trying To Return $2M Worth of Hydroxychloroquine? (en)
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  • On March 19, 2020, former U.S. President Donald Trump first promoted a commonly used antimalarial drug named hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 in the White House briefing room, mentioning it at least 17 times in subsequent public appearances, according to an April 2020 Associated Press report. Limited studies presented at that time had suggested that the drug could potentially act as either a preventative measure against COVID-19 or as a treatment to reduce severity of infection, but further research did not demonstrate the ability for the drug to do either. The efficacy of the drug ultimately became a partisan battle uninformed by science and promoted aggressively by Trump surrogates like Rudy Giuliani. For a brief period of time from March to June 2020, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an emergency use authorization allowing — based on threadbare scientific evidence — hospitalized COVID-19 patients to be treated with hydroxychloroquine. Early on in this window of time, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt authorized the purchase of $2 million worth of hydroxychloroquine from a California-based drug wholesaler named FFF Enterprises to build a state stockpile of the drug. On April 28, 2020, following warnings from the FDA about using hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19, Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter requested that State Auditor Cindy Byrd carry out an investigative audit on Stitt’s and the Oklahoma State Health Department’s spending. Responding to that news, Gov. Stitt argued that the drug was still useful for any number of ailments ... and so that money will not have gone to waste in any respect. On June 15, the FDA revoked the emergency authorization for hydroxychloroquine. Reports first emerged in July that Oklahoma was trying to unload its stockpile of the drug. These efforts have not yet borne fruit, evidently. On Jan. 26, 2021, the Oklahoma-based newspaper Frontier first reported that the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office had been tasked with attempting to return the $2 million stockpile to the wholesaler from whom they purchased it. Nearly a year later the state is trying to offload the drug back to its original supplier, the newspaper reported, adding that It’s unclear yet how much of the initial $2 million investment in the hydroxychloroquine the state could recoup. Because Oklahoma has been trying, unsuccessfully, to get rid of its stockpile of hydroxychloroquine since at least July 2020, the claim is True. (en)
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