Using Hydroxychloroquine and Other Drugs to Fight Pandemic
Professor Harvey Risch, M.D., Ph.D., is a researcher at the Yale School of Public Health with a specialty in cancer etiology, prevention and early diagnosis,medicine.yale.edu
Don't you read the things you post? That is an interview published by the PR department at Yale Medical, discussing an opinion article Dr. Risch submitted for publication without peer review. The submitted article is based on no original research, but merely summarizes the results of other studies, none of which claim that HCQ alone or in combination with other chemicals is a cure, although there may be some statistically weak beneficial effect.
An abstract of the submitted article with a link to a PDF of the complete article is here --
Early Outpatient Treatment of Symptomatic, High-Risk COVID-19 Patients That Should Be Ramped Up Immediately as Key to the Pandemic Crisis
Abstract. More than 1.6 million Americans have been infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), and more than 10 times that
academic.oup.com
Any doctor who believes HCQ plus whatever will be of benefit to a patient already has an avenue open to him - just declare the patient to be suffering from malaria or arthritis, and hope his malpractice insurance doesn't get canceled.
The old family doctor down the street from where I grew up had a standard response for someone calling in the middle of the night with an unspecified illness - "Take two aspirin and I'll come out in the morning and give you a shot." Aspirin and penicillin cured almost everything then, and there were few known adverse side-effects.