Skip to main content

The Ivermectin Muddle

A number of stories on ivermectin, both for and against, have turned out to be false or at least unverifiable.  An Oklahoma hospital wasn't flooded with any patients with complications from ivermectin, Mississippi's poison control center was not inundated with calls from people who'd overdosed on ivermectin, and the "spike" in calls to Kentucky's poison control center consisted of 13 calls. Yes, the first retraction begins, "One Oklahoma hospital denies..." but it can't be that hard for professional journalists to identify which rural hospital had multiple shooting victims AND an ER full of ivermectin overdoses. Even in Indianapolis, multiple shooting victims make the news. It's tempting to blame the gullibility on people who've never set foot in flyover country (except for Chicago), but Kentucky's governor is going on about the "horse dewormer craze" and the Oklahoma TV station that ran the horse-meds-at-the-OK-Corral story still has it up without a retraction. BTW, none of these stories has been marked as misinformation on Twitter. 

As James Randi said, academics and reporters are gullible.

On the other side, we have an ivermectin study whose author has not provided his data upon request from a couple of other scientists. Apparently, it's standard practice for scientists to share data, so this makes the study suspect. We also have other studies being retracted or not published. I have no idea whether the journals doing this are acting appropriately or not. Studies get retracted all the time and much of what's published in journals is false according to a former editor of a medical journal. 

I'm not a medical professional, I don't have any inside information on this research, and I have only a layman's knowledge of viruses. People I'd normally look to for expertise have not, to the best of my knowledge, expressed an opinion on ivermectin. A few people who would be talking up ivermectin if they believed it worked--Sen. Rand Paul (an MD) and Eric Weinstein (brother of Bret Weinstein, who has looked into ivermectin and thinks it works) have said they don't know what to make of it. I don't know what to make of it, either. 

The clinical experience people have described seems promising, but I've seen promising results and enthusiasm before among some very smart people for things that didn't work out:

  • Safe starches. They're still starches and they can still raise your blood sugar and make you store fat.
  • Chronic keto. Not good for your gut bacteria.

In my lifetime, we've had smart, well-intentioned people tell us to take aspirin to prevent heart disease (doesn't work; it can make your stomach bleed); put babies to sleep on their bellies (causes SIDS); and give out supplemental estrogen like candy (harms generally outweigh benefits). I've lived through moral panics, too, which we're in now: we had the Satanic panic in the 80s and the recovered memories sham in the 90s, now debunked, but the recovered memories sham put innocent people in prison. UFOs were a thing, too. In 1980, the CBS affiliate in Denver produced and aired a program called Strange Harvest that blamed cattle mutilations on aliens--the outer space kind, not aliens coming up from Mexico who might have wanted to scare off ranchers and be left alone. Smart people can sincerely believe things that turn out to be absurd.

In ten years, we'll probably know whether ivermectin is a wonder drug for COVID or a placebo.

What I'm doing is using redundancy in case any one tactic doesn't work. 

  • Normalize vitamin D (supplement and test)
  • Eat specially made yogurt and prebiotic fibers
  • Avoid high blood sugar
  • Avoid weight gain--limit carbs, weigh myself daily
  • Avoid indoor crowds, even if people are vaccinated or tested (vaccinated people can spread COVID)
  • Stay off of ships and other petri dishes (which I do anyway)
  • Stay home and rest if I get sick
  • If a doctor prescribed ivermectin, I would take it at the recommended dose
  • Request monoclonal antibodies for a bad case (even though I don't have high risk factors)


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Gym Influencer Doubles Down and Should Have Regretted It

Jennifer Picone isn't the most abusive gym influencer--far from it--but she may be the most annoying. In a video she posted that went viral, she was working out in a gym when another member appeared in the background by the free weights. The member was minding her own business, not looking in Picone's direction, when Picone got up and told her to move. After filming, Picone edited the video with a note about "Gym etiquette lesson #47" and accused the other gym member of "[doing] that 💩 on purpose."  Shaming other gym members has gotten to be such a big genre that Joey Swoll has a YouTube channel, with half a million subscribers, dedicated to calling out these content creators. Just for Picone, he took a break from his vacation to tell her to mind her own business. This may be the first time that Joey Swoll has taken one of his followers to task. The fact that she follows him and still doesn't know better than to treat the gym like her personal studio sh...

Stay in your car!

If there's ever a lunatic outside your vehicle, do not engage. Stay in your vehicle. Drive away or call the police. Drive over the curb, lawn or median if necessary; just avoid putting innocent bystanders at risk.*  Save yourself from lunatics like a boss. Screen grab from video by Fredrik Sørlie on Youtube . That advice might have saved a 69-year-old delivery driver from being attacked by former NFL player Mark Sanchez, who for unknown reasons was in an alley after midnight in downtown Indianapolis and decided to pick a fight over a parking space. I say might have because I haven't seen any video of the attack. But other incidents over the years bear out the safety of staying in your car. A neighbor was assaulted and robbed after she got out of her car after someone followed her home and blocked her driveway. And remember Reginald Denny from the LA riots? The victim maced and stabbed Sanchez, but suffered a bad cut to his face and tongue and looks like he was badly beaten. Bo...

1972: Carole King, M*A*S*H and...Food for 2014?

I feel well enough to try Atkins induction again. The palpitations are gone, even without taking potassium. My energy level is back to normal--no more trucking on the treadmill early in the morning  to burn off nervous energy or emergency meat, cheese and mineral water stops after yoga. It's back to lounging around to Chopin and Debussy in the morning and stopping at the wine bar for pleasure. I'm using the original Atkins book: Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution from 1972. While looking in the book for a way to make gelatin (which is allowed on induction, but Jello(TM) and products like it have questionable ingredients), I felt the earth move under my feet : those recipes from 42 years ago look delicious and they're mostly real food. It makes sense, though: the cooks who wrote the recipes probably didn't have had a palette used to low-fat food full of added sugar or a bag of tricks to make low-fat food edible. Anyone who writes a recipe called "Cottage Cheese and...

No-carb "cider" and Halloween videos you haven't seen

In time for Halloween, here's a recipe for no-carb "cider" to sip while you watch scary (or mildly spooky) videos. Photo from Pixabay . Ingredients: Hot water Constant Comment tea Doctor's Best magnesium powder in sweet peach flavor Steep a bag of Constant Comment tea in hot water for a few minutes and remove the bag. Add one scoop of magnesium powder (sweet peach flavor). The combination tastes surprisingly like hot apple cider, but with zero carbs. Only have one, or at most two, cups at a time--too much magnesium at once will have you running to the bathroom. Constant Comment tea tastes good on its own if you've maxed out your magnesium dose for the day. You can find both the tea and the magnesium powder at Vitacost.com. Kroger and other grocery stores carry Constant Comment tea, but I've never seen the magnesium powder at a grocery store. With a hot cup of ersatz cider, enjoy a video in the spirit of the season. The Amazing Mr. Blunden Family friendly; mild...

The Under-the-Radar Ointment for Hard-to-Heal Wounds

Imagine looking in the mirror one morning and finding the side of your head black and your ear twice its normal size. That's what happened to Brad Burnam, who caught a deadly superbug at the hospital where he worked. Sometime after having emergency surgery--one of 21 surgeries over the next five years--he set out to cure himself.  The result he created was a fusion of PHMB, an antibiotic common in Europe but little known in the US, in a petroleum jelly base (like Vaseline), held together with a stabilizer/emulsifier. It sticks to wounds, keeps them moist, and provides a barrier. It cured his antibiotic resistant superbug. After getting FDA clearance, he formed Turn Therapeutics, and Hexagen is now available by prescription.  Screen shot from https://turntherapeutics.com/about/ Millions of Americans suffer from open wounds--chronic issues like diabetic foot ulcers. Readers probably have their blood sugar under control and avoid this condition, but might have parents, partners o...