From Yahoo/NYT:
“How COVID Misinformation
Created a Run on Animal Medicine”
Emerson Animal Hospital was down
to its last 10 milliliters of ivermectin. For months, the veterinary center in
West Point, Mississippi, had watched its supplies of the drug dwindle. Dr.
Karen Emerson, the veterinarian who owns the hospital, started the year with
one 500-milliliter bottle of ivermectin, which she uses to kill parasites in
dogs, chickens and other patients. But as the bottle emptied and her staff
tried to find more, they were able to obtain only a 50-milliliter vial.
Everyone else told them: None available. So Emerson began rationing the
medicine to give to snakes and other exotic animals for which she had no other
deworming treatment. She told dog owners to pay for a more available
replacement drug that can cost seven times as much. Emerson was surprised by
ivermectin’s scarcity because it had always been plentiful. But she put two and
two together after people started streaming into her clinic to ask about using
the drug to treat COVID-19. “I really think that’s why we have a shortage,
because so many people are using it,” she said.
For more than a year,
misinformation that ivermectin is effective at treating or preventing the
coronavirus has run rampant across social media, podcasts and talk radio. Even
as the Food and Drug Administration has said the drug is not approved to cure
COVID and has warned people against taking it, media personalities who have
cast doubt on coronavirus vaccines, such as podcaster Joe Rogan, have promoted
ivermectin for that very purpose. The inaccuracies have led to some people
overdosing on certain formulations of the drug, which has then stretched
doctors and hospitals. But at the very tail end of the misinformation trail are
people, like Emerson, who regularly use the medicine for the animal treatments
that it was approved for.
While certain versions of
ivermectin can treat head lice and other ailments in people, other formulations
— which come in forms such as liquid and paste — are common across the equine
and livestock industries as ways to get rid of worms and parasites. People are
increasingly trying to obtain those animal products to ward off or battle the
coronavirus, farmers, ranchers and suppliers said. The demand has strained the
equine and livestock world. Jeffers, a national retailer of animal supplies,
recently raised the price of ivermectin paste to $6.99 a tube from $2.99.
Overwhelmed by orders, one farm supply store in Las Vegas started selling the
medicine only to customers who could prove they had a horse. In California, a
rancher was told the backlog of orders was so large that she was 600th in line
for the next batch.
The dearth has led some farm
owners, ranchers and veterinarians to switch to generic or more expensive
alternatives for their animals. Others have turned to expired ivermectin or
quietly stockpiled the drug when they could. Many were alarmed. “I’m pretty
worried,” said Marc Filion, the owner of Keegan-Filion Farm in Walterboro,
South Carolina, which uses the drug for his 400 pigs and 25 cattle. If he
couldn’t treat his pigs with the medicine when they were 5 weeks old, he said,
they could develop diarrhea and might need to be killed. These experiences
underscore the real-world effects of misinformation and how far the fallout can
spread, said Kolina Koltai, a researcher at the University of Washington who
studies online conspiracy theories. “It doesn’t just affect the communities
that believe in misinformation,” she said. “This is something that’s affecting
even people who don’t have a stake in the vaccine — it’s affecting horses.”
Last month, prescriptions for
human formulations of ivermectin jumped to more than 88,000 a week, up from a
pre-pandemic baseline of 3,600, according to the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Data on people buying animal ivermectin was not available. In a
statement, the FDA said it had not received reports of ivermectin shortages but
“recognizes that access to animal ivermectin is important for ranchers, farmers
and horse owners to maintain herd and animal health.” The agency posted on
Twitter last month that people should not use the drug for COVID, writing:
“Seriously, y’all. Stop it.”
Misinformation about ivermectin
as a potential COVID cure began proliferating just weeks after the pandemic
hit. In April 2020, scientists at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia,
published preliminary findings showing that the medicine, when used in a lab
setting, could kill the coronavirus within 48 hours. Monash University
cautioned that the results were early and that the research was continuing. “Do
NOT self-medicate with Ivermectin and do NOT use Ivermectin intended for
animals,” it said on its website. A week later, the FDA issued a warning
against using the animal formulations for COVID. No matter. The findings spread
rapidly online, fed by other studies that showed beneficial effects from the
drug in coronavirus patients. At least one study has been retracted.
Inaccurate information has since
flourished on social media sites such as Reddit and Facebook. In one Facebook
group, Ivermectin COVID-19 Testimonials, 4,200 members swap advice on what side
effects to expect from taking the drug and how to calculate dosages of paste
meant for horses. The discussions are often echoed on podcasts and elsewhere. “Ivermectin
paste do you take orally or rub into skin?” read one recent post in the
Facebook group. “Put it on a cracker with a dab of peanut butter on same
cracker,” a commenter responded. Facebook said it removed content on potential
ivermectin transactions, as well as any claims that the drug is a guaranteed
cure. Reddit said it encouraged open discussion as long as the discussions did
not violate its policies. As the medicine’s popularity increased, some
veterinarians prepared for a shortage. Last year, Dr. Juliana Sorem, a
veterinarian at WildCare, an urban research center in San Rafael, California,
that treats injured wildlife, bought two years’ supply of the drug. Her
director told her to act as soon as they heard that people were using it
against COVID. “We were trying to be proactive,” Sorem said. WildCare now has
six precious bottles stored away. Others didn’t move as quickly — and regretted
it. Judi Martin, the manager of Skyline Ranch, an equestrian center in Oakland,
California, said her brother warned her early this year to stock up on
ivermectin after he took it to prevent COVID. Martin said she didn’t take him
seriously. Nine months later, Martin’s provider had sold out. She said the
supplier called the drug “liquid gold” and told her that she was 600th in line
for its next shipment.
Some distributors have made
adjustments to deal with the soaring demand. The news spread rapidly last month
that V&V Tack & Feed, an animal supply store in Las Vegas, had put up a
sign saying customers must show a picture of themselves with their horse to buy
ivermectin. “I’m keeping it for my horse people, because they need it,” said
Shelly Smith, the store associate who put up the sign. “That’s who I’m
protecting.” Ruth Jeffers, who owns Jeffers, the animal supplies retailer, said
she had sold out of ivermectin paste on her website this year. After she
restocked with more expensive versions, those tubes sold out, too. So this
spring, she limited new customers to five tubes. Partly driven by the demand,
she raised prices for Jeffers-branded ivermectin, her cheapest option, to $4.99
a tube from $2.99 — and then to $6.99. “It’s hard having your No. 1 product
turn into a circus,” Jeffers said.
At the Horsey Haven Retirement
Home in Newcastle, California, a boarding stable for retired horses, the lack
of affordable ivermectin recently caused a debate about costs. Laura Beeman,
Horsey Haven’s owner, said she had long used the drug to kill worms in the
stable’s 28 horses. The treatments take place four times a year, at no cost to
the horses’ owners. But with the medicine’s prices rising, Beeman wasn’t sure
she could keep offering the service free. She said she might start charging the
owners for the now $7.99 tubes of paste, which previously cost $1.99. “At this
point, I have none left,” she said. Emerson said her animal hospital usually
went through two 500-milliliter bottles of ivermectin a year. Since opening her
3,500-square-foot hospital seven years ago, she added, she had “never” had
difficulties getting the drug. Her first clue that something had changed came
two months ago when pet owners started asking about the medicine to treat the
coronavirus. Last month, her housekeeper said her sister was drinking
ivermectin in her coffee. Emerson had been trying to restock the drug, but
found only the 50-milliliter bottle. Now she said she understood why. She has
since done her best to slow the use of the drug in her community, she said. In
an August interview with a local TV station, she warned people about the
dangers of taking ivermectin and the impact that shortages could have on
animals. When people come in to ask about the drug, she said, she also explains
the hazards of off-label use. With just 10 milliliters left, Emerson estimated
that she would run out in the next month. “If I have another flock of chickens
with leg mites, I’m not going to be able to help them,” she said. “And then I
don’t know what we’re going to do.”
^ It’s sad that Vets and animals
have to fight and suffer because of dumb people taking things they shouldn’t. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/covid-misinformation-created-run-animal-114502518.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.