COVID 19 Tech

Inmates sue Arkansas doc, jail after unknowingly taking dangerous doses of ivermectin

Tablets of ivermectin.

Enlarge / Tablets of ivermectin. (credit: Getty | Nurphoto )

Detainees at an Arkansas jail were given ivermectin without their knowledge or consent, a new lawsuit alleges. As early as November 2020, Dr. Robert Karas, the jail’s doctor, told inmates who had contracted COVID that he was giving them the cocktail of vitamins, antibiotics, and steroids when in fact he was administering dangerously high doses associated with the dewormer. Ivermectin is not authorized by the FDA to treat or prevent COVID, and the agency has repeatedly told people not to take it outside its approved use as an anti-parasitic.

“At no point were Plaintiffs informed that the medications they were consuming included Ivermectin, ” the lawsuit says. “Further, Plaintiffs were not knowledgeable of the side effects regarding the drug administered to them or that any results would be used for research purposes. ”

Four detainees are suing Dr. Karas and his company, the Washington County sheriff, and the Washington County Detention Center and 10 of its employees, alleging that they violated the inmates’ rights to informed consent. The ACLU of Arkansas filed the lawsuit on their behalf. The plaintiffs are usually seeking medical evaluations by independent providers and an injunction preventing Dr. Karas from administering ivermectin to COVID patients.

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