South Africa approves Ivermectin for the treatment of coronavirus patients

A medical worker talks to a patient at a coronavirus testing unit in Pretoria.

Photographer: Waldo Swiegers / Bloomberg

South African authorities have approved the use of a drug used to control parasites in humans and animals to treat coronavirus patients.

The drug, known as ivermectin, will be allowed for compassionate use in a controlled access program, South Africa’s head of the health regulator said on Wednesday. Doctors applying to the regulatory authority to use the medicinal product will be considered on a case-by-case basis, Said Boitumelo Semete-Makokotlela.

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Ivermectin has been used for decades to treat animals infested with parasitic worms, while in humans it is used as a local ointment for diseases, including skin infections and inflammation. The World Health Organization has suggested that the drug has encouraging effects on coronavirus, although, like other regulators, it is said that the drug has not been properly evaluated.

The drug will not be limited to patients with known co-morbidities of Covid-19, Semete-Makokotlela said.

The regulator is already seeing widespread use of ivermectin in an emerging black market as South Africa faces a second wave of coronavirus infections that has resulted in in hospital increasing admissions and a deficit of critical care beds. Allowing the controlled use of the medicine will help the regulatory body to monitor its use and will allow the body to collect much needed safety data.

“Despair”

“We absolutely share everyone’s despair right now,” said Helen Rees, chairwoman of the regulator. So the question of ivermectin and self-medication goes back to what everyone in the scientific community is saying. And I mean, we don’t know if it works and we don’t know if it doesn’t work. That’s why we need to get data. ”

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