Ivermectin Story Bungled; 'Useless' Test Results; Further Strain on Hospitals

— This past week in healthcare investigations

Welcome to the latest edition of Investigative Roundup, highlighting some of the best investigative reporting on healthcare each week.

Reuters Corrects Article on Ivermectin Efficacy

However, that original statement was incorrect.

One thread read in part that Reuters corrected its story "after damage was already done," and that "the uncorrected version will live on, including on Covid conspiracy sites."

Of the misstatement, a spokesperson for Reuters said the following in a statement provided to ishonest: "The original Reuters story misstated that ivermectin was 'effective' against Omicron in Phase III clinical trials, which are conducted in humans. We corrected this to clarify it had an 'antiviral effect' against Omicron and it was shown in joint non-clinical research. After being made aware of the error, we corrected our story immediately."

Nursing Homes Struggle with Long Waits for Test Results

As nursing homes are challenged with an Omicron surge that can be more severe for seniors, an increasing percentage of facilities are waiting longer for COVID-19 test results when it comes to their residents and staff, KHN reported, citing federal data.

"The double whammy of slower turnaround times for lab-based PCR tests and a shortage of rapid antigen tests has strained facilities where quickly identifying infections is crucial for keeping a highly vulnerable population safe," KHN wrote.

Longer waits can render COVID-19 tests all but "useless," Alex Kiefer, president at Lutheran Life Villages in Fort Wayne, Indiana, told KHN.

"If we send somebody off to get a PCR test, sometimes it takes two days for them to get an appointment," Kiefer told KHN. "And then it takes two, three, four days to get a read."

KHN noted that a survey this month by LeadingAge, an organization that lobbies for nonprofit nursing homes and other aging care providers, found that 76% of nursing homes had adequate testing supplies, but that restocking was becoming more difficult. KHN further reported that the American Health Care Association has asked the Biden administration to increase the sector's testing supplies, estimating that 5 million tests per week are needed.

Further Strain on Hospitals: Shortage of COVID-19 Treatments

As many hospitals continue to feel the strain from an onslaught of new COVID-19 patients, their latest stumbling block is a shortage in treatments that could help keep patients out of their beds, the Wall Street Journal reported.

"States say they are getting a fraction of [antiviral pills and effective antibody drugs] to meet demand for treatments that can prevent the disease from progressing to the point of hospitalization," WSJ wrote. "That is a concern for some hospitals that are dealing with staffing shortages and a daily crush of sick patients, even as the wave of cases driven by the Omicron wave recedes elsewhere."

The U.S. government ships pills and antibody drugs to states, but it's then up to states to determine where to distribute them, WSJ reported. That includes decisions on which patients are at the highest risk from infection, and having some clinics and other healthcare providers cut off from supplies because hospitals are first in line.

Antiviral manufacturers, such as Pfizer, are ramping up production to meet demand, WSJ reported. And current antibody treatments that work against Omicron have been limited.

In the meantime, distribution of limited treatments continues to draw criticism.

Doug White, MD, a University of Pittsburgh doctor and ethicist, told WSJ that individuals who lack access to regular medical care or the necessary time or money can be at a disadvantage when it comes to getting to a doctor or pharmacy.

"The people who will get [treatment] are the people who have the means to get there quickly," White told WSJ.

As for hospitals that do have some treatments, the challenge remains determining how to give them to the sickest patients, Tina Tan, MD, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, told WSJ.

Researcher Eviscerates Supplements, Then Profits off Industry

An investigation by Science alleges that a high-profile botanist may have committed research fraud that ultimately helped him profit from the supplement industry.

Newmaster allegedly leveraged the paper into a profitable business, where supplement makers would hire his companies to certify their products, the report states.

The Science investigation says the possible fraud goes beyond the three papers — into fabrication, data manipulation, and plagiarism in Newmaster’s speeches, teaching materials, biographies, and scholarly writing.

Both the university and Newmaster declined to comment for the article, but in a defense to UG, Newmaster denied all the charges against him.

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