Las Vegas Review-Journal

Detainees sue Arkansas jail that gave them ivermectin to treat COVID

- By Eduardo Medina

Detainees at an Arkansas jail who had COVID-19 were unknowingl­y treated by the detention center’s doctor with ivermectin, a drug that health officials have continuall­y said was dangerous and should not be used to treat or prevent a coronaviru­s infection, according to a federal lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of four detainees.

The four men — Dayman Blackburn, Julio Gonzales, Jeremiah Little and Edrick Floreal-wooten — say in the lawsuit that after testing positive for the coronaviru­s in August, they were taken to the “quarantine block” of the Washington County Detention Center and given a “cocktail of drugs” twice a day by Dr. Robert Karas, who runs Karas Correction­al Health, the jail’s health provider.

The complaint, filed this month in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Arkansas, says that the men took the drugs — which Karas told them consisted of vitamins, antibiotic­s and steroids — unaware that they were actually ingesting ivermectin, an antiparasi­tic drug commonly used for livestock that the Food and Drug Administra­tion has warned should not be taken for COVID-19.

Karas, Sheriff Tim Helder and the Washington County Detention Center — all named as defendants in the lawsuit — did not immediatel­y respond to calls and emails seeking comment.

The American Civil Liberties Union said in a statement that the jail had been giving ivermectin to detainees as early as November 2020. In August 2021, amid surging demand for the drug, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned that ivermectin was “not authorized or approved” for any type of COVID treatment.

Misinforma­tion that ivermectin is effective at treating or preventing coronaviru­s infection has run rampant across social media during the pandemic, and the inaccuraci­es have led some people to overdose on certain formulatio­ns of the drug, according to the FDA.

Karas appears to have bought into the misinforma­tion for months, saying in August that he used the drug himself when sick with COVID.

The inmates became aware of what they were taking only after the sheriff told the Quorum Court Finance and Budget Committee of Washington County in August that detainees were being treated for COVID with ivermectin, said Holly Dickson, executive director of the ACLU of Arkansas.

The lawsuit says the men “ingested incredibly high doses” of the drug while sick with COVID, causing some to experience diarrhea, bloody stools, stomach cramps and issues with their vision.

They became aware of what they were taking only after the sheriff told the Quorum Court Finance and Budget Committee of Washington County in August that detainees were indeed being treated for COVID with ivermectin, said Holly Dickson, executive director of the ACLU of Arkansas.

“This is really beyond the pale that the FDA and CDC would warn against this treatment and that the doctor would prescribe it and administer it anyway — and do it without their knowledge or consent,” Dickson said Monday.

The detainees could have refused the medication, but many did not because they believed they were taking approved and safe COVID treatments, Dickson said.

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