| East Georgia Regional Medical Center. Thursday, Sep. 30th. Photo by Lauren Sabia |
R.N. Hazel Reyes staying positive through the pandemic. Photo by Lauren Sabia |
| East Georgia Regional Medical Center. Thursday, Sep. 30th. Photo by Lauren Sabia |
R.N. Hazel Reyes staying positive through the pandemic. Photo by Lauren Sabia |
| Signs around the hospital showing support for their hard-working nurses. Photo by Lauren Sabia |
The medicine is primarily prescribed to treat intestinal strongyloidiasis and onchocerciasis caused by parasitic worms when it is used by humans, according to the Food and Drug Administration’s website.
However, sales of the drug have increased in agriculture stores across the nation as people have turned to Ivermectin made for livestock when medical experts would not prescribe them the drug.
The livestock version of Ivermectin is not the same in formulation or dosage as the drug intended for humans and can lead to dangerous side effects and even hospitalization.
Even when the human version is taken in large amounts, it can still lead to gastrointestinal and neurological issues, according to the FDA.
Though the medicine is given to patients frequently for its intended use, the general medical consensus is that the drug should not be prescribed to prevent or treat COVID-19.
“I have not seen any evidence that led me to believe that Ivermectin would be beneficial toward treating COVID,” said Joshua Woodley, a family nurse practitioner in the emergency department of Memorial Health University Medical Center in Savannah, Georgia. “If someone asked me for it, personally, I would not write a prescription for it.”
With the increased demand for the livestock form of Ivermectin, those who actually own these animals have reported difficulty obtaining the drug from the usual places, and some have expressed disbelief in individuals’ willingness to try such an unorthodox treatment.
“My family has always used Ivermectin to treat our horses whether they had worms or whatever, so I am quite familiar with the drug,” said Ali Barret, who grew up on a farm in Dahlonega, Georgia. “I would have never thought people would even think to start using Ivermectin to treat COVID and I can't imagine how safe it would be to take this method.”
While it is unclear exactly how the misinformation found online about Ivermectin’s link to COVID-19 began, a medical study led by Dr. Ahmed Elgazzar reported that patients who received the anti-parasitic saw improvement in their symptoms faster and had a higher survival rate. Published in November 2020, this study was later retracted in July 2021, according to an article by ABC-affiliate WFAA.
This retraction did nothing to hinder the purchase of the drug, though, as retail pharmacies distributed more than 88,000 prescriptions of Ivermectin from July to mid-August, according to the Centers for Disease Control.
A alert posted next to the ivermectin in Tractor Supply Co.
By: Chase Amoroso, Jocelyn Frazier, Kaz Thomas, and Lauren Sabia Bulloch County community groups are building and combining resources ...