Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wisconsin hospital wins ivermectin suit

Conservati­ve-controlled court says doctors can’t be forced to give drug

- HARM VENHUIZEN

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin’s conservati­ve-controlled Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a hospital could not be forced to give a deworming drug to a patient with covid-19, saying a county judge did not cite a legal basis for ordering the facility to administer ivermectin.

Ivermectin became popular among conservati­ves after commentato­rs and even some far-right doctors held up the antiparasi­tic drug as a miracle cure for the coronaviru­s and other illnesses. But the Food and Drug Administra­tion has not approved it for use in treating covid-19 and warns that misusing ivermectin can be harmful, even fatal.

The Wisconsin lawsuit is one of dozens filed across the country seeking to force hospitals to administer ivermectin for covid-19.

The drug is commonly used in cattle and also approved for human use to fight parasites and certain skin conditions. But some members of online alternativ­e medicine groups have reported self-administer­ing highly concentrat­ed, veterinary grade ivermectin to treat illnesses.

The FDA warns that self-administer­ing the drug, especially in doses intended for animals, can be lethal.

In Tuesday’s ruling, the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled 6-1 in favor of Aurora Health Care, with three liberals and three conservati­ves in support and only conservati­ve Justice Rebecca Bradley dissenting.

The decision upholds an appeal court’s ruling against Allen Gahl, who sued Aurora in October 2021 when doctors refused to treat his uncle, John Zingsheim, with ivermectin. Gahl was authorized to make medical decisions for Zingsheim and had researched the drug online after Zingsheim was put on a ventilator to treat covid-19 complicati­ons.

Gahl obtained a prescripti­on for ivermectin from a retired doctor who had never met Zingsheim or his medical team, but hospital staff said the drug did not meet their standards and refused to administer it. None of the informatio­n in the complaint Gahl subsequent­ly filed against the hospital came directly from medical profession­als, according to court documents.

The Waukesha County Circuit Court ordered hospital staff to give Zingsheim the drug but later modified its decision to say Gahl would have to provide the drug himself, as well as a doctor to administer it. An appeals court overturned that decision after Aurora’s attorneys argued a judge could not force a medical provider to give treatment they had determined to be substandar­d.

The Supreme Court heard arguments in the case in January.

“We do not know what viable legal claim the circuit court thought Gahl had presented,” Justice Ann Walsh Bradley said in the court’s opinion.

Gahl was represente­d by the Amos Center for Justice, a conservati­ve Wisconsin law firm that has brought litigation against ballot drop boxes and promotes conspiracy theories about the safety of covid-19 vaccines on its website. His attorney, Karen Mueller, did not immediatel­y return a voicemail Tuesday seeking comment.

 ?? (AP/Ted S. Warren) ?? An IverCare brand package containing a syringe of ivermectin is shown in September 2021 in Olympia, Wash.
(AP/Ted S. Warren) An IverCare brand package containing a syringe of ivermectin is shown in September 2021 in Olympia, Wash.

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