Storm of misinformation Why some are seeking ivermectin to treat COVID-19
Last week, two patients referred to Dr. Michael Chatenay in Edmonton tested positive for COVID-19.
When his team broke the news to them, he said, they asked whether they could be prescribed ivermectin to help treat the virus.
The medication â" used to treat parasitic infections â" is being touted by some as a treatment or preventative measure for COVID-19.
Itâs not, according to a slew of public health agencies, study reviews, and doctors like Chatenay, who works as a general and breast cancer surgeon at Edmontonâs Grey Nuns Hospital.
Read more: Health Canada issues warning against using ivermectin dewormer to treat COVID-19
âI told them the same thing I tell everybody when theyâre asking about unproven therapies,â he said.
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âThere may be some studies out there that show a benefit, but those studies are flawed. And that if you really look at this carefully, there really is no evidence that this provides benefit. And thereâs actually quite a bit of evidence that it may, in fact, harm you, especially if youâre taking a veterinary supply that people are seeking [from] veterinary supply stores. So until there is evidence that this works, we canât in good conscience prescribe it.â
Despite the lack of evidence, some people are buying ivermectin from pharmacies and if they canât get it there, turning to veterinary preparations meant for horses or cattle, with unfortunate results. And experts point to misinformation as the culprit.
Read more: FDA warns Americans to stop taking horse dewormer for COVID-19: âYou are not a horseâ
Health Canada issued a warning Tuesday about ivermectin, saying that itâs not authorized to prevent or treat COVID-19 and could lead to dangerous side effects.
BCâs Drug and Poison Information Centre told Global News that they have had nine cases related to people taking veterinary-grade ivermectin to prevent or treat COVID-19 in the last six months, when they had received zero calls about the drug over the last two years. None of these calls ended in a serious adverse outcome, the agency said.
âIvermectin toxicity can lead to abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headache, dizziness, low blood pressure, seizures, coma, respiratory failure, and death,â the agency wrote in a statement. âGetting vaccinated with two doses of COVID-19 vaccine is the best way to protect yourself from COVID-19.â
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Read more: Calgary feed shop forced to hide Ivermectin livestock dewormer being touted as COVID-19 cure
Feed stores in Calgary have also told Global News that theyâre getting calls about the drug.
âWe were probably getting four to five phone calls a week,â said Lance Olson, manager at Lone Star Tack and Feed.
âThis is not something people should be buying and putting in their orange juice or coffee. Itâs not safe,â he said. His store has since pulled it off the shelf and now only sells to people with a valid Premises Identification Program (PID) number, which is given out to livestock operations.
Rejecting medical advice
Thereâs a bit of cognitive dissonance going on when someone eschews a well-studied pharmaceutical, like the COVID-19 vaccine in favour of an unproven drug, said Tim Caulfield, Canada research chair in health law and policy at the University of Alberta.
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âTheyâre against this vaccine, which one could argue is the most studied vaccine in human history,â he said. âThey reject that. Meantime, theyâre accepting an unproven drug that in fact, that the paper that was supporting it the most has recently been retracted.â
âI think itâs because of ideology and itâs because what this drug represents: If you are part of this community, you are to believe that this drug is effective and you believe the other narratives around it, that people are suppressing information and studies about this drug.â
These are the FACTS about Ivermectin:
âªï¸it's a drug used to treat/prevent parasites in animals
âªï¸it's not approved in #Sask for use in treating or preventing COVID-19 in humans
âªï¸it's not an anti-viral (anti-virals treat viruses, COVID-19 is a virus)
âªï¸large doses can cause harm pic.twitter.com/HS1mTpEC7f
â" Saskatchewan Health Authority (@SaskHealth) August 26, 2021
Gordon Pennycook, a behavioural psychologist at the University of Regina, isnât sure that people are really thinking through their decision to take ivermectin.
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People donât always have access to the basic science, and when they do, they donât necessarily understand how to interpret a study, he said, âand so people listen to the people who they trust.â
1:06 Coronavirus: US COVID-19 testing czar says âevidence just doesnât showâ hydroxychloroquine is effective Coronavirus: US COVID-19 testing czar says âevidence just doesnât showâ hydroxychloroquine is effective â" Aug 2, 2020When former U.S. president Donald Trump pushed hydroxychloroquine, another drug with unproven benefits for COVID-19 earlier in the pandemic, people started buying it, he said. Now, as ivermectin gets promoted online or by Fox News hosts, according to a report by NBC News, Pennycook thinks weâre seeing a similar phenomenon.
âIt becomes a kind of counter-alternative. And then once some people see that this is now the recommended alternative, then they donât want to take a vaccine, so they pick up on the alternative,â he said.
It comes down to who you see as a credible source, he says.
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âYou trust what youâre familiar with. You trust what people around you trust,â he said. âA lot of science communication and public health is about trying to convince people to trust the right people.â
2:02 U.S. FDA warns Americans not to use livestock drug as COVID-19 remedy U.S. FDA warns Americans not to use livestock drug as COVID-19 remedyCaulfield believes that in order to counteract the narrative around an unproven treatment, you need people within that community to speak out about what the science says, in hopes of introducing this information.
âThe best-case scenario, you try to destabilize the misinformation before it takes on this ideological balance,â he said. âUnfortunately, that train has left the station.â
Because theyâre scared and trying to deal with a pandemic, Chatenay believes that âpeople are picking and choosing what they want to believe.
âAnd so rather than taking a proven vaccine, theyâre latching onto this miracle cure pill. And itâs a perfect storm of misinformation, lies and group mentality where people can find other people that feel the same way about it and sort of latch onto it and give each other moral support.â
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There are some ongoing studies still examining ivermectin and COVID-19, he said.
âUntil those studies are available, I would beg everybody not to poison themselves with this drug because as it stands right now, there is no proven benefit.â
â" with files from Jacqueline Wilson, Global News
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