Mississippi fire chief dies hours after legal win allowing use of Ivermectin to treat COVID

Authored by wlox.com and submitted by borderbox
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COLUMBUS, Miss. (WTVA) — A procession of emergency responders escorted the body of a local fire chief Tuesday night to a funeral home in Columbus after his battle with COVID-19 and a court hearing over his treatment for the virus.

Wayne Doyle died Tuesday afternoon at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. He served as a volunteer firefighter for 40 years and was the chief of the Lowndes County District 3 Volunteer Fire Department at his passing.

Earlier in the day, his family got a judge to allow him to be moved out of the hospital so he could be given Ivermectin, but Doyle died before that could happen.

The drug has been at the center of attention during the pandemic. Some used it for COVID-19 treatment, even buying it at farm supply stores.

While the federal government approved it to treat parasites in humans and animals, it is not approved to treat the virus.

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Snerak on February 10th, 2022 at 17:01 UTC »

Serious question, why didn't he just check out of the hospital, against medical advice (AMA), go home and take the Ivermectin on his own? He wanted to be in charge of his own care, right?

Kard8 on February 10th, 2022 at 14:40 UTC »

It's not really clear here, did he refuse other treatments because he was waiting on the approval?

Edit: I found another article. The family wanted to treat with Ivermectin but the hospital refused, and he was going to be moved to another hospital that would administer it.

Edit 2: To further clarify, he was already being treated as best they could and had been on a ventilator for two weeks.

Ohjay1982 on February 10th, 2022 at 14:23 UTC »

To be fair, if he died only a couple hours later it probably didn’t matter what he took at that point.

Then again, leaving the hospital probably wasn’t the smartest idea.