Ivermectin: Can a Drug Be “Right-Wing”?

Authored by Matt Taibbi via TK News

On December 31st of last year, an 80 year-old Buffalo-area woman named Judith Smentkiewicz fell ill with Covid-19. She was rushed by ambulance to Millard Fillmore Suburban Hospital in Williamsville, New York, where she was put on a ventilator. Her son Michael and his wife flew up from Georgia, and were given grim news. Judith, doctors said, had a 20% chance at survival, and even if she made it, she’d be on a ventilator for a month.

As December passed into the New Year, Judith’s health declined. Her family members, increasingly desperate, had been doing what people in the Internet age do, Googling in search of potential treatments. They saw stories about the anti-parasitic drug ivermectin, learning among other things that a pulmonologist named Pierre Kory had just testified before the Senate that the drug had a “miraculous” impact on Covid-19 patients. The family pressured doctors at the hospital to give Judith the drug. The hospital initially complied, administering one dose on January 2nd. According to her family’s court testimony, a dramatic change in her condition ensued.

“In less than 48 hours, my mother was taken off the ventilator, transferred out of the Intensive Care Unit, sitting up on her own and communicating,” the patient’s daughter Michelle Kulbacki told a court.

After the reported change in Judith’s condition, the hospital backtracked and refused to administer more. Frustrated, the family turned on January 7th to a local lawyer named Ralph Lorigo. A commercial litigator and head of what he calls a “typical suburban practice,” with seven lawyers engaged in everything from matrimonial to estate work, Lorigo assigned one of his attorneys to review materials given to them by the family, which included Kory’s Senate testimony. The associate showed Lorigo himself the the material next morning.

“I was so convinced by what Dr. Kory was saying,” Lorigo says. “I saw the passion and the belief.”

Lorigo immediately sued the hospital, filing to State Supreme Court to force the facility to treat according to the family’s wishes. Judge Henry J. Nowak sided with the Smentkiewiczes, signing an order that Lorigo and one of his attorneys served themselves, and after a series of quasi-absurd dramas that included the hospital refusing to let the Smentkiewicz family physician phone in the prescription — “the doctor actually had to drive to the hospital,” Lorigo says — Judith went back on ivermectin.

“She was out of that hospital in six days,” Lorigo says. After a month of rehab, his octogenarian client went back to her life, which involved working five days a week (she still cleans houses). Her story, complete with photo, was told in the Buffalo News, causing Lorigo’s phone to begin ringing off the hook. Doppleganger cases soon began dotting the map all over the country.

One of the first was in nearby Rochester, New York, where the family of Glenna Dickinson went through an almost exactly similar narrative to the Smentkiewiczes: they read about ivermectin, got a family doctor to prescribe it, saw improvement, only to later have the hospital refuse treatment. Again Lorigo intervened, again a judge ordered the hospital to treat, again the patient recovered and was discharged.

Hospitals fought hard, hiring expensive law firms, at times going to extraordinary lengths to refuse treatment even with dying patients who’d exhausted all other options. At Edward-Elmhurst hospital in Chicago, a 68 year-old named Nurije Fype was admitted, put on a ventilator, and again, as all other treatments failed, her family got a judge to order the use of ivermectin. Lorigo claims the hospital initially refused to obey the court order, which led to the filing of a contempt motion, which in turn led to a pair of counter-motions and another confrontation before another befuddled Judge named James Orel.

“Why wouldn’t this be tried if she’s not improving?” the Chicago Tribune quoted Orel as saying. “Why does the hospital object to providing this medication?”

“He basically said, ‘What do you have left?’” Lorigo recounts. “No one would administer the ivermectin. It’s as safe as aspirin, for Christ’s sake. It’s been given out 3.7 billion times. I couldn’t understand it.”

Stories like these aren’t proof the drug works. They don’t even really rise to the level of evidence. People recover from diseases all the time, and it doesn’t mean any particular treatment was responsible. Short of the gold standard of randomized controlled trials, there’s no proof.

However, anecdotes have a power all their own, and in the Internet age, ones like these spread quickly. Lorigo estimates he now gets “10, 15, 20” calls and emails a day. At this level, at the bedside of a single Covid-19 patient who’s already received the full official treatment protocol and is failing anyway, the decision to administer a drug like ivermectin, or fluvoxamine, or hydroxychloroquine, or any of a dozen other experimental treatments, seems like a no-brainer. Nothing else has worked, the patient is dying, why not?

Telescope out a little further, however, and the ivermectin debate becomes more complicated, reaching into a series of thorny controversies, some ridiculous, some quite serious.

The ridiculous side involves the front end of Lorigo’s story, the same story detailed on this site last week: the censorship of ivermectin news that, no matter what one thinks about the evidence for or against, is clearly in the public interest.

Anyone running a basic internet search on the topic will get a jumble of confusing results. YouTube’s policies are beyond uneven. It’s been aggressive in taking down videos containing interviews with people like Kory and doling out strikes to independent media figures like Bret Weinstein, but an interview with Lorigo on TrialSite News containing basically all of the same information is still up, as are clips from a just-taped episode of the Joe Rogan Experience that feature both Weinstein and Kory. Moreover, all sorts of statements at least as provocative as Kory’s “miraculous” formulation in the Senate still litter the Internet, many in reputable research journals. Take, for instance, this passage from the March issue of the Japanese Journal of Antibiotics:

When the effectiveness of ivermectin for the COVID-19 pandemic is confirmed with the cooperation of researchers around the world and its clinical use is achieved on a global scale, it could prove to be of great benefit to humanity. It may even turn out to be comparable to the benefits achieved from the discovery of penicillin…

There clearly is not evidence that ivermectin is the next penicillin, at least as far as its effects on Covid-19. As is noted in nearly every mainstream story about the subject, the WHO has advised against its use pending further study, there have been randomized studies showing it to be ineffective in speeding recovery, and the drug’s original manufacturer, Merck, has said there’s no “meaningful evidence” of efficacy for Covid-19 patients. However, it’s also patently untrue, as is frequently asserted, that there’s no evidence that the drug might be effective.

This past week, for instance, Oxford University announced it was launching a large-scale clinical trial. The study has already recruited more than 5,000 volunteers, and its announcement says what little is known to be true: that “small pilot studies show that early administration with ivermectin can reduce viral load and the duration of symptoms in some patients with mild COVID-19,” that it’s “a well-known medicine with a good safety profile,” and “because of the early promising results in some studies, it is already being widely used to treat COVID-19 in several countries.”

The Oxford text also says “there is little evidence from large-scale randomized controlled trials to demonstrate that it can speed up recovery from the illness or reduce hospital admission.” But to a person who might have a family member suffering from the disease, just the information about “early promising results” would probably be enough to inspire demands for a prescription, which might be the problem, of course. Unless someone was looking for that information, they likely wouldn’t find it, as mainstream news even of the Oxford study has been effectively limited to a pair of Bloomberg and Forbes stories.

Ivermectin has suffered the same fate as thousands of other news topics since Donald Trump first announced his run for the presidency nearly six years ago, cleaved in two to inhabit separate factual universes for left and right audiences. Repurposed drugs generally have had a hard time being taken seriously since Trump announced he was on hydroxychloroquine last year, and ivermectin clearly also suffers from its association with Republican Senators like Ron Johnson. Still, the drug’s publicity issues go beyond the taint of “conservative” news.

The drug has become a test case for a controversy that’s long been building in health care, about how much input patients should have in their own treatment. Well before Covid-19, the medical profession was thrust into a revolution in patient information, inspired by a combination of Google and new patients’ rights laws.

Should people on their deathbeds be allowed to try anything to save themselves? That seems like an easy question to answer. Should the entire world be allowed to practice self-care on a grand scale? That’s a different issue. Some would say absolutely not, while others would say the corruption of pharmaceutical companies and the medical system unfortunately make it a necessity. The world is increasingly divided along this trust/untrust axis.O

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28 Comments
Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
June 27, 2021 11:41 am

Excellent anecdotal evidence and I myself have a store of HCQ, compliments of Mark here on TBP. There is no question that enough evidence is all around to prove the effectiveness of these drugs. What I can’t get over is the arrogance of hospitals and the medical profession in general. Can it all be a conspiracy theory? Can it be the influence of Big Pharma big money? There clearly is a reason why these drugs are not in general use and that reason may be very dark.

On the other hand, here in UK, in all my experience, doctors hate to be told what’s wrong with me, which I discern from the internet beforehand, with appropriate caution of course. Maybe then it is merely the intransigence of medics in general after spending a long time studying and practicing – can this be negated by easily gathered self diagnosis from the internet? Rather makes all their devotion pretty worthless and demotes them to mere testers and drug pushers doesn’t it? The handmaidens of Big Pharma?

Ken32
Ken32
  Austrian Peter
June 27, 2021 11:48 am

I have enough education that crosses over to medicine that I probe these idiots in hospitals all the time and find them far more ignorant than you would expect. They swallow a lot of dogma and edicts from authority they trust, and they confuse that for knowledge.

Even good doctors have their blind spots for whatever reason. I think Dr. McCollough explained that well in his 2 hour interview. He summarized when he said ‘95% of doctors either lack the clinical/academic expertise or courage or both, to challenge these things.’

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
  Ken32
June 27, 2021 12:11 pm

A good explanation Ken and thank you for reminding me about Dr McCullough – he’s clearly right – no conspiracy then?

WestcoastDeplorable
WestcoastDeplorable
  Ken32
June 27, 2021 6:49 pm

Dr. McCullough is a gift to mankind.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Austrian Peter
June 27, 2021 2:04 pm

Can it all be a conspiracy theory? Can it be the influence of Big Pharma big money?

Oh, it’s not Big Pharma money. It’s taxpayer money fed to hospitals for Covid diagnoses and ventilator placements.

Of course, government doling out taxpayer money is just the front(or rear) end of the conspiracy that does roll around again to Big Pharma, but encompasses people, organizations and agendas not limited strictly to financial profit.

Richo
Richo
June 27, 2021 11:45 am

Get it on Alibaba

m
m
June 27, 2021 11:47 am

Admin, you forgot a critical part at the end of that article:

[…] is increasingly divided along this trust/untrust axis.

This is an excerpt from today’s subscriber-only post. To read the entire article and get full access to the archives, you can subscribe for $5 a month or $50 a year. [at Taibbi’s Substack]

Now let’s compare:
– Bret Weinstein puts up two podcasts about Ivermectin on his (free) youtube channel, and accepts the risk to have his whole channel deleted by Goolag.
– Joe Rogan does his (first ever?) Emergency Podcast #1671 about Ivermectin. I don’t know exactly if you need to pay to get access to spotify and JRE podcasts, but one can search and find at least free audio-only versions of JRE #1671.
– Matt Taibbi sees this primarily as an opportunity to make money for himself, it seems.

Machinist
Machinist
June 27, 2021 11:55 am

I’ve been called a “horse’s ass” more than a handful of times so, I guess I’ll just stick with the paste.

Ghost
Ghost
  Machinist
June 27, 2021 12:02 pm

I use the topical liquid for cattle myself.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
  Ghost
June 27, 2021 12:16 pm

I’ve used Radiol B-R Bone Embrocation for Horses (bone Spavin) as a great treatment for lumps and bumps – much better than the weak stuff you get in Chemists.

Ghost
Ghost
  Austrian Peter
June 27, 2021 12:30 pm

Nothing works to reduce the irritation from getting scratched by rabbits like a good tube of Wound Paste for horses and dogs.

Reminds me that I need to get a new tube next trip to the Farm and Ranch store.

LOL.

comment image

I don’t know why it helps reduce the pain in these scratches, but I love the stuff. It also keeps the bugs away, I think. I rarely get ticks. My husband, who won’t use the horse wound paste unless I make him, is a tick magnet.

Anecdotal evidence, but I seem to have bought a lot of all of these things last March at the Farm store on a bit of a whim. We haven’t had so much as a sniffle.

Just these damned rabbit scratches and a few bumps and bruises from being old and clumsy.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
  Ghost
June 27, 2021 12:50 pm

I know the feeling!

Machinist
Machinist
  Ghost
June 27, 2021 12:35 pm

How much liquid Ivermectin? Just rub a certain amount on your arms and legs?

ragman
ragman
  Machinist
June 27, 2021 1:19 pm

I ordered the tablets in April off the interweb. Took a chance on losing $100 but WTF! Three weeks later my tabs arrived, 20 12mg tabs made in India with an expiration date in’24. Three fuckin’ years from now! We had considered going to Rural King or Tractor Supply and getting the paste but I decided to try my luck on the ‘net. These “doctors” and “hospitals” can all eat shit and die! Money is the only thing that matters to them, certainly not saving the lives of their patients. Side note, recently Mrs RM went to drs for a checkup. She axed the very nice PA for a prescription of Ivermectin, response was “What’s that”? No one is coming to save you and yours. We must use all possible resources and take care of ourselves and family/friends!

B.S. in V.C.
B.S. in V.C.
June 27, 2021 12:48 pm

They knew these drugs worked, but they had to have the death numbers. Remember when Democrat governors were banning the hospitals from using these drugs. They didn’t care if nana and papa had to die they are going to shove this NWO down our throats

Anonymous
Anonymous
  B.S. in V.C.
June 27, 2021 2:09 pm

EULA wouldn’t have been allowed if there were effective treatments, so knowledge of the effectiveness of treatments like Iver. & HCQ had to be memory-holed.

GMH
GMH
  B.S. in V.C.
August 15, 2021 11:35 am

The Dems were desperate to remove Trump from the White House but all their presidential candidates were hapless idiots. They needed something big to blame on Trump, and mere illness was not enough – they needed deaths. And their bedmates in Big Pharma did not want to wait a year or 2 to begin raking in billions, and a therapeutic would have derailed the EUA. Thousands of lives were sacrificed for Dem politics and Big Pharma greed.

Machinist
Machinist
June 27, 2021 1:19 pm

I used to chuckle to myself while listening to older folks when I happened to be in places like the grocery or post-office. I would look at an item or find some label or piece of mail to read and listen to see how long it took for the conversation to turn to the latest ailment or doctor visit.
Well, I don’t chuckle anymore. Something like a stiff back would disappear after a decent night’s sleep. Not so much anymore. I’ve noticed that I cannot stack square bales as quickly as a 28 YO anymore either.
Have copied and pasted many of the remedies I have found here on TBP (thanks to J.Q. for this site). I’ve used some of the ideas I’ve found here and also, thanks to those who’ve shared these ideas. It has benefited me greatly and has given me some peace of mind and body.
Just this past week, I chipped a tooth. My old dentist has now retard… er, retired and the tooth was abrading my tongue. I ground on it a bit with a stone I used to use in the machine shop. It worked like a champ and gives me time to have it fixed properly. (NO mercury amalgam for me.)

With all that said… I wonder if there could be a weekly round-up of herbs, potions,remedies, liniments, etc. all geared towards health?

I am at the point that I’d sooner trust a veterinarian than an MD. Not kidding.

mark
mark
  Machinist
June 27, 2021 9:00 pm

Machinist,

Here are two links I have posted in other threads related to your comment.

I have a stash of HCQ, Ivermectin, and a range of natural immune system boosters on hand.

We have been sipping Pine Needle and Fennel Tea whenever exposed to someone who has taken the jab. I am not taking any chances, and these teas are available and inexpensive.

First and foremost we feed our immune systems every day.

I have stopped exposing myself to the FUXXED, but have been exposed unknowningly to them twice.

PREVENTING/TREATING COVID

COVID-19
How can I cure thee? Let me count the ways.
Commentary by Thomas E. Levy, MD, JD

http://www.orthomolecular.org/resources/omns/v16n37.shtml

PREVENTING/TREATING SHEDDING (AKA TRANSMISSION OF THE SPIKE PROTEIN)

3 FOODS THAT CONTAIN SHIKIMIC ACID TO HALT SPIKE PROTEIN TRANSMISSION

Post Modified: Jun 27, 2021 · Published: Jun 13, 2021 By Jacqueline 74 Comments

3 Foods That Contain Shikimic Acid to Halt Spike Protein Transmission

Machinist
Machinist
  mark
June 27, 2021 10:01 pm

Thanks mark,
Those remedies and treatments are exactly what I was referring to. These are the kinds of ideas that you will probably never hear from an MD.
My grandfather used ‘bone set tea’ when he got the flu. My grandmother would pick ‘yellow root’ from creek banks for head and tooth aches… etc.
Seems my mom had no use for these kinds of medicine/dietary supplements, I supposed it was trained out of her in nursing school.
Your supplied comment and links have become part of my little book. This blank-paged book contains a written collection that I refer to when needed for such info. I don’t believe the book will blow up or need electricity as some of my previous hard drives and flash ‘thumbs’.

Alice Krautgartner
Alice Krautgartner
  Machinist
June 28, 2021 3:44 am

Alice in Austria
I have never posted before so I don’t really know how to thus I am just replying.
I have a cure for warts and veruccas from my Austrian mother in law born in 1925 and now deceased. It worked great for me, my children and friends for years. I tried many other official methods that caused great pain and suffering for veruccas, took 6 months and did not work.

In the morning cut a couple of slices of onion and steep them in 7.5 % apple vinegar for about 10-12 hours. Take the onion slices and bind them to the wart covering with gauze and a final layer of plastic and held in place by elastoplast. Go to bed and have a good nights sleep. You will feel it draw and the skin will be white and pasty in the morning. Repeat for several nights running. Forget about it for a while and you will find the verucca or wart has disapeared with time.
best of luck also works with those tiny cluster pin prick warts that children get.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 27, 2021 1:29 pm

Alternative treatments known to work and have been used multiple times with astounding results does not fit the narrative of the NIH , CDC , WHO or BIG PHARMA & BIG GOVERNMENT !
This is about control of who lives who dies where and when !
War is declared on the world population by the DAVOS Oligarchs !
Who lives who dies who breads where and when who eats who starves etc …

Guest
Guest
June 27, 2021 8:08 pm

We had a cancer area nurse recently visit and they had never heard of ivermectin. We said never mind (for various reasons).
I went through frontline drs for the ivermectin and they (the online dr- not them) were very stingy about it. Im getting horse paste. This is just ‘in case’ stuff. However it seems ordering from India is illegal- true or not?

Guest
Guest
  Guest
June 27, 2021 8:17 pm

See this. I’ve read this before. What are you guys doing about people who have taken the experimental injection? Seriously.
We’ve pretty much decided to be some what careful and rely on God. However even a few airlines are thinking about leaving out injected people because of blood clots.
*the study part

THE ELITE HAVE ALREADY FFED OFF TO THEIR HIDEOUTS, THEY HAVE RELEASED THE GENOCIDE READ IT AND WEEP, WE ARE EFFED

Abbie4155
Abbie4155
  Guest
June 27, 2021 9:25 pm

I, as an RN for over 40 years was also unfamiliar with Veterinary medications until Covid started.

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Abbie4155
June 28, 2021 12:19 am

Ivermectin isn’t just for animals. Scabies, lice and other parasitic infestations in humans are treated with ivermectin.

Several years ago I had what is referred to as ‘ground itch’ which is a feline hookworm infestation. The worm can’t do its thing in a human so all it does is burrow under the skin until it finally dies. Before it dies the burrowing is extremely painful, like being burned with a cigarette. It took awhile but I finally found a dermatologist who knew what she was doing, she took one look and prescribed ivermectin. I didn’t know what she’d prescribed, I just picked up the prescription, twenty dollars for five little tablets. The little girl behind the county didn’t have a clue when I said I could get five tubes of horse paste for that price.

The crud cleared up almost overnight. I’ve been familiar with ivermectin for many years, I’ve treated a dog with demodex mange with the cattle/swine injectables and I’ve dosed horses and cattle with it as well. Heartworm meds for dogs is mostly ivermectin.

*Never go barefoot in the Texas countryside, ditto for sandals and flip flops. Cover those feet.

Guest
Guest
  Abbie4155
June 28, 2021 8:42 am

Yes me either except for horses. I meant I don’t think he knows anything about what’s swirling around about covid these days.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 28, 2021 1:51 pm

“Should the entire world be allowed to practice self-care on a grand scale?”

Should the entire world be allowed? Did I miss the part where somebody is in charge of the entire world and gets to decide what everybody else gets to say and do?