Final Post:
The Curious Fact That Many Americans Have Been Willing to
Ignore Science During the Covid Pandemic and Grasp at Horsefeathers Instead
Gary Wedgewood
Final Presentation
Bioethics, PHIL 3345, Spring 2022
The largest study to date of the efficacy of the drug
Ivermectin in treating COVID has come to what should be an unsurprising
conclusion: A drug designed to rid horses of parasitic nematodes does nothing
for people afflicted by the coronavirus.
Yet many of our political leaders are offering legislation
to help their constituents get Ivermectin more easily and even over the
counter. Ivermectin is by far the
favored drug for treating Covid at a time when a highly effective anti-Covid
pill (Paxlovid) is barely being used.
How can this be true?
How has such delusional thinking come to dominate the Covid
response? Compared to monoclonal
antibodies this antiviral drug is an affordable regimen of five pills over five
days taken at home.
It has been shown to be 90% effective in preventing
hospitalization and death. It is
available in local pharmacies. Yet at
the peak of the Omicron surge half of the available Paxlovid sat in pharmacies
unused. Ivermectin remains a popular
choice.
On several occasions the FDA has urged people to avoid using
Ivermectin to treat or prevent Covid.
Yet lawmakers, political operatives, pundits, and others seeking to
profit somehow continue to urge legislation to enable more access to
Ivermectin.
The disinformation machine has even gone so far as to
suggest that Paxlovid (which works on Covid) is actually a disguised version of
Ivermectin. The United States appears to
be better at spreading disinformation than Russia or Brazil.
Read more at: https://www.sacbee.com/opinion/article259699615.html#storylink=cpy
Quotes from our reading:
“I would never provide public comments that contradict science. (Who would want
a top doctor in the city who goes against science?) My answer, maybe one-third of Americans?”
Leana Wen, Lifelines, p. 140
No matter how much you prepare, there will be some
emergencies for which there is no guidebook.Wen, Leana. Lifelines (p. 146).
Henry Holt and Co.. Kindle Edition.
Nearly every initiative was met with resistance on many
fronts.Wen, Leana. Lifelines (p. 150). Henry Holt and Co.. Kindle Edition.
Public health’s moral imperative is to see the people that
society prefers not to see and media choose not to portray. While everyone
focused on the “rioting youth,” the police in military gear, and the state’s
attorney’s press conferences, we turned our attention to the people who
couldn’t get their basic health needs met.Wen, Leana. Lifelines (pp. 151-152).
Henry Holt and Co.. Kindle Edition.
Discussion Questions:
1. What has led to such a high level of mistrust of our scientific and medical
community in the USA?
2. The profit motive has distorted our health care system. How has this same factor worked in the
marketing of alternative/herbal medicines?
3. How have politicians “profited” from promoting and
legislating misinformation about Covid treatments?
4. Why do you suppose that Dr. Fauci and Dr. Leana Wen have been the targets of
extreme criticism at times?
Follow up article from The Tennessean newspaper:
Ivermectin on its way to becoming
available without prescription in Tennessee
By Tosin
Fakile
Published: Apr.
8, 2022 at 7:22 PM CDT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV)
-Ivermectin will soon be available for the treatment of COVID-19 without a
prescription in Tennessee.
The state’s Senate and House
leaders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the bill the final approval on the
bill SB2188/HB2746.
The bill will allow a
pharmacist to provide Ivermectin tablets to a patient in accordance with a
collaborative pharmacy practice agreement containing a non-patient-specific
prescriptive order, developed and executed by one or more authorized
prescribers.
News 4′s Tosin Fakile talked
to Hetal Patel, Pharmacist and Owner of Lebanon Family Pharmacy, who said once
she can, she plans to make Ivermectin available at her pharmacy.
She says and the process with
pharmacies will involve a number of steps.
“There’s going to be more
steps involved in it. The Tennessee Board of Pharmacy is basically going to
make the access like naloxone. It’s going to have a standing order protocol.
You’ll have to counsel the patient,” said Patel. “It is going to be over the
counter but it’s going to have a little more rules and regulations that are
going to apply to it,” she added.
The Ivermectin bill will
require the Board of Pharmacy (Board) to establish procedures for providing
patients with a screening risk assessment tool, providing a standardized
factsheet, and providing either ivermectin or a referral to a pharmacy that
dispenses ivermectin.
Patel said she understands
the move by state legislators.
“Which in one way is good
because I’d rather have somebody come and talk to me about their medication
than go and buy it at like a co-op store where they have no idea the kind of
dosing you have to take,” Patel said.
Studies including one
released in March 2022 by the New England Journal of Medicine showed it was
unclear how effective ivermectin is when it comes to Covid19.
“As of yet, the amount of data
that we have. It does feel like that the data is inconclusive and so we’re not
able to say that ivermectin for sure helps in the treatment of covid-19,” said
Dr. Parul Goyal, an Assistant professor in the Dept of Internal Medicine and
Public Health at Vanderbilt.
Vanderbilt is conducting an
ivermectin treatment of covid 19 trial.
“So our trial is funded
through the National Institutes of Health, in which we are aiming to study some
of the repurposed medications for the treatment of outpatient COVID-19. The
name of the trial is called active six, and we are essentially studying three
medications. ivermectin, Fluticasone and fluvoxamine,” Dr. Goyal said.
The trial started enrolling
patients in September of 2021.
“We’ve actually had great
success in patient enrollment, and we’ve been able to complete two study arms
in which the patient improvement was completed. However, we added another arm
to the trial, in which we added ivermectin high dose to this study arm. So we
have two arms that are still open and actively enrolling patients,” Dr. Goyal
said
Giyal said ivermectin has
been around for several years and is sold at places like tractor supply stores,
usually meant for farm animals to treat them against parasitic infections. She
said Ivermectin is available in other countries and is used o treat against
parasitic infections in humans.
“The doses of Ivermectin are
very different,” Goyal said.
Goyal said taking Ivermectin
without supervision can be dangerous.
“There are lots of side
effects of Ivermectin that are out there for patients who’ve taken them without
supervision such as nausea, diarrhea, itching, eczema, swollen lymph glands, it
stuff all of these side effects,” Dr. Goyal said.
“The reason why this [Ivermectin Bill] is okay
to pass is because it comes to patient safety and people regardless of what
they hear regardless of the studies that are in front of them, they’re not
ready to believe that,” Patel said. “Where people will believe what they want
to believe in. So instead of having people take whatever dose that they want
to,” she added.
News 4 asked Dr. Goyal what
her advice is to people as Ivermectin is on its way to not needing a
prescription.
“Since the data on Ivermectin
from our trial, is still pending you know, I would say that until we get
scientific data to support the usage of Ivermectin for the treatment of
COVID-19. I would be hesitant for anyone to take it without proper
supervision,” Dr. Goyal said.
Goyal is also reminding
people that there is approved medication for treating COVID-19 that is
available.
The state legislature
provides some protections for pharmacists. The bill says, “a pharmacist
or prescriber acting in good faith is immune from disciplinary actions or civil
liability.”
Copyright 2022 WSMV. All
rights reserved.
Joe Rogan mocked CNN for thinking he took horse dewormer when he took the formulation of Ivermectin made for humans, then stated "If you're taking vaccine advice from me, is that really my fault? what d*mb sh*t were you about to do when my stupid idea sounded better?,,, If you want my advice, don't take my advice"
ReplyDeletePaxlovid prescriptions to treat Covid increased tenfold in U.S. since late February, Pfizer says
ReplyDeletePUBLISHED TUE, MAY 3 20222:00 PM EDTUPDATED TUE, MAY 3 20226:48 PM EDT
Spencer Kimball@SPENCEKIMBALL
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/05/03/pfizer-paxlovid-prescriptions-to-treat-covid-increased-tenfold-in-us-since-late-february.html