The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Time for Ga. medical board to speak up

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Silence can harm. As COVID-19 continues to inflict suffering, harm and death upon humanity, the Georgia Composite Medical Board is silent on the use of the drug ivermectin as a treatment for those infected with the virus.

While other states and respected medical and scientific communitie­s have spoken out about the problems and risks of using the anti-parasite drug on humans suffering from COVID-19, the Georgia medical board has remained mum. What are these risks?

For starters, ivermectin has not been shown with any degree of scientific rigor to be effective against the coronaviru­s.

Ivermectin comes in two forms. One version, approved by the FDA for treatment of parasitic disease in people, comes in tablets. The other form, which is like a paste, is used for deworming animals like cows and horses. It is not only in a different form, but also is more highly concentrat­ed because of the size of the animals.

Certainly, no one should self-administer the veterinary form. And Georgia’s medical board could advise just that.

But prescribin­g even the tablets for people with COVID19 is also contrary to scientific advice.

Ivermectin’s manufactur­er put out this informatio­n in February, stating that there is:

“No scientific basis for a potential therapeuti­c effect against COVID-19 from pre-clinical studies; no meaningful evidence for clinical activity or clinical efficacy in patients with COVID-19 disease; and a concerning lack of safety data in the majority of studies.”

Yet, Georgia’s medical board has no official stance on the medication.

Why?

Silence seems an inappropri­ate, even potentiall­y harmful stance for an organizati­on which posts on its website that “The mission of the Georgia Composite Medical Board is to protect the health of Georgians…” The board’s chair goes on to say that mission includes “providing up-to-date informatio­n regarding the practice of medicine for both consumers and health care profession­als.”

What is not posted on the board’s website, according to a query of its search engine Monday, is a single mention of the word “ivermectin.”

Yet, other entities are forcefully pointing out the potential risks of ivermectin’s use in the COVID-19 fight.

The American Medical Associatio­n, the American Pharmacist­s Associatio­n and the American Society of Health-system Pharmacist­s had this to say about ivermectin and COVID-19 this month:

“We are alarmed by reports that outpatient prescribin­g for and dispensing of ivermectin have increased 24-fold since before the pandemic and increased exponentia­lly over the past few months. As such, we are calling 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.

“In addition, we are urging physicians, pharmacist­s, and other prescriber­s — trusted health care profession­als in their communitie­s — to warn patients against the use of ivermectin outside of FDA-APproved indication­s and guidance … .”

Other states’ medical bodies haven’t remained mute, either.

The Medical Commission in Washington State has warned that it may take action against doctors prescribin­g ivermectin. In Arkansas, the medical board is investigat­ing a doctor who said he has prescribed the drug “thousands” of times, including to inmates in a jail.

These warnings and strong stances around ivermectin use should carry weight with all — and set an example Georgia should emulate.

The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on reported last Friday that, “As demand for the drug skyrockete­d in August, a handful of Georgia physicians have been writing prescripti­ons for those who request it — or even offering it for patients to try, as they scramble for ways to treat COVID-19.”

Thanks to the respected medical authoritie­s that have had the courage to speak out, it can be heard above all the harmful noise that such use of the drug is against the advice of groups in the best position to know the risks — or potential benefits.

Yet, as The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on reported Friday, “pandemic and vaccine skeptics” and an “outcast” group of doctors have trumpeted ivermectin’s use against COVID-19.

This has caused demand for the drug to skyrocket above pre-pandemic levels.

As is to be expected for a drug that legitimate scientific authoritie­s urge not be used as a COVID-19 treatment, the surge in usage has triggered a spike in calls to poisoning centers by people who have overdosed on ivermectin or consumed the veterinary form of the medication.

The CDC has reported hospitaliz­ations in some cases.

And poison control centers cited a small number of calls reporting “death and major effect.”

Medical and science entities do acknowledg­e the use of ivermectin as part of clinical trials to study its efficacy against COVID-19. And such studies are underway.

But research thus far has been shown to be unreliable. Many studies lacked rigorous safeguards, and one rare major study showing significan­t benefits was recently pulled down because of concerns about the data.

In the face of all the confusion, misstateme­nts and even falsehoods dangerousl­y floating around now about COVID19, it is critical that Georgians be able to rely on their medical and scientific leaders for accurate informatio­n about available treatments.

This is, after all, a virus that has claimed the lives of more than 20,500 Georgians.

A present-day version of the Hippocrati­c Oath reads: “I will respect the hard-won scientific gains of those physicians in whose steps I walk, and gladly share such knowledge as is mine with those who are to follow.”

Georgia’s medical board should be a key source of this kind of trustworth­y informatio­n.

No public good can be expected to come from its silence in this regard.

And the risk of harm is real.

 ?? MIKE STEWART/AP FILE ?? Ivermectin is used to deworm horses and other large animals but also has a human-strength version for treating parasites.
MIKE STEWART/AP FILE Ivermectin is used to deworm horses and other large animals but also has a human-strength version for treating parasites.

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