Public health warnings against using the anti-parasite medication ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19, especially in the large doses meant for livestock, appear to have made little dent in its surging popularity in parts of the United States.
Hospitals and poison control centers across the country are treating a growing number of patients taking the drug, even though every clinical trial so far has failed to show that it helps patients with COVID.
And the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that almost 90,000 prescriptions for ivermectin were being written per week in mid-August, up from a pre-pandemic weekly average of 3,600. Veterinary supply store shelves have been emptied of it.
The CDC reported that one person had an “altered mental status” after apparently taking five ivermectin pills — which he had purchased on the internet — daily for five days. Another person drank an ivermectin formula intended for cattle and was hospitalized for nine days with tremors and hallucinations.
Despite the public health warnings, ivermectin has been promoted by celebrities like podcasting giant Joe Rogan, who listed it this past week among the treatments he was given after contracting the virus. Alex Jones, the conspiracy theorist who has been banned from Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, took out a box of ivermectin pills during one of his trademark rants and popped two tablets live on the show he streams.
Ivermectin was introduced as a veterinary drug in the late 1970s, and it was later approved for use in humans infected with parasites. Since 1987, its U.S. maker, Merck & Co., has donated billions of doses that have spared hundreds of millions of people from river blindness in Africa and other parasitic diseases. Two scientists shared a Nobel Prize in 2015 for their work in developing the drug. But in the United States, it has limited human applications, like treating lice and rosacea, and has been primarily used to deworm horses, cows and pets — until now.
In a statement Wednesday, alarmed health experts from the American Medical Association, the American Pharmacists Association and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists called for “an immediate end to the prescribing, dispensing and use of ivermectin for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 outside of a clinical trial.”This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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