(no title)
durzagott | 7 years ago
No-one know why Ms Giese survived, but the Milwaukee protocol does not seem to have been the reason. Or if it was, it is not repeatable on other patients.
[1] https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/canadian-journal-of-...
vorpalhex|7 years ago
An NCBI article claims 13: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4947331/
NeedMoreTea|7 years ago
It also notes the deaths of at least two of the "known survivors", that others received the PEP vaccine either completely or partially, and that one survivor likely didn't have rabies at all due to no anti-bodies being found.
That leaves just the original case in 2004 where someone survived without vaccine and received the MP.
p49k|7 years ago
vidarh|7 years ago
It's a difficult trade-off for a lot of high risk medical interventions to judge the relative worth of the potential chance of survival vs. that last remaining time, and it's certainly not a choice we can objectively make on behalf of other people.
In this case it's not certain the protocol have helped any patients. If it did help, then the success rate is so low that there are ethical issues with overselling the potential vs. giving people that extra time together.
If a patient wants to try, I'd be all for giving them that choice. But there's a big gap from letting a patient ask for something and promoting it as the recommended course of action without evidence of any efficacy.
david-gpu|7 years ago
exolymph|7 years ago
Brockenstein|7 years ago