There's reason for hope with moniperver in the sense that verologists think it's going to be a difficult one for coronovirus to become immune to. But, you know, just so many people in the middle of a pandemic being treated with these drugs. Potentially, just the number of s for a resistance to arise, it just seems likeit, if it is possible, it likely willand one other concern,. i've read in your story, and didn't really occur to me until i read it. I mean, i want to be really excited about this."
Two new anti-viral pills have been shown to be safe and effective against COVID in clinical trials, according to recent press releases. The drugs, molnupiravir, developed by Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics, and Paxlovid, developed by Pfizer both appear to significantly reduce hospitalisation in people with early COVID. Some researchers are quietly hopeful that these new weapons in the anti-COVID arsenal could have a big impact, in particular in parts of the world where vaccines are still not widely available, but there are a number of caveats. In this episode of Coronapod, we open the pill boxes and pick through the contents - asking how the drugs work, what side effects we might see and how, if at all, they might change the course of the pandemic.
News: COVID antiviral pills: what scientists still want to know
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