- Hydroxychloroquine is a less toxic version of chloroquine; it is also used by lupus and arthritis patients. It is currently being studied as a treatment against COVID-19 but nothing has been proven yet.
- Hydroxychloroquine and its analog, chloroquine, are derived from quinine.
- It first came from Peru as the Quechua used it as a muscle relaxant. The Quechuas would mix the ground bark of cinchona trees with sweetened water to offset the bark's bitter taste, thus producing something similar to tonic water.
- In 1934, German scientists created synthetic chloroquine as part of a class of antimalarials. Hydroxychloroquine is the less-toxic version of chloroquine.
With the little evidence of it working the Trump administration is still pushing the import of the malaria drug from India. This sudden jump to source medicine which hasn’t been proven to be an actual treatment has sparked disagreement between politicians and medical researchers/doctors. Even if the drug works, the doctors don’t yet know the right dosage, this comes with thorough research. Hydroxychloroquine has many side effects. In Detroit, 3,000 patients at a hospital will be part of a trial whose results will be tracked in a formal study which can then prove whether this drug works or not.