The first sign of trouble came on Wednesday. In a weird online video, featuring the president in unusual makeup, Donald Trump boasted about the amazing medicine he’d taken to treat the coronavirus. “It just made me better,” the Republican said. “I call that a cure.”
Except, he shouldn’t “call that a cure,” because in reality, there is not yet a coronavirus cure — and telling the public otherwise needlessly puts people at risk.
Nevertheless, Trump pushed the same line on Fox News last night, saying in reference to his medications, “I viewed it as a cure. It’s incredible. And we’re going to get it to everybody, free of charge.” He added that “the military” will be delivering the “cure” to hospitals.
This afternoon, the rhetoric was slightly worse.
President Trump is once again touting the antibody treatment he received as a “cure” for the coronavirus. “I’m telling you we have a cure,” Trump told radio host Rush Limbaugh during a “radio rally.”
Because this is so important, it’s worth setting the record straight. As of now, there is no cure for the coronavirus. To say that “we have a cure” is demonstrably wrong.
What’s more, while I’m sure the president is excited to be feeling better, the treatments he’s received have not yet proven to be an effective treatment with a large number of patients.









