Pro-ivermectin Kansas doctor-lawmaker under investigation

January 26, 2022 GMT
FILE - Kansas state Sens. Caryn Tyson, left, R-Parker, and Mark Steffen, right, R-Hutchinson, confer, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan., Feb. 4, 2021. Steffen, also is a physician, said Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2022, he's been under investigation by the state medical board for more than a year over his public comments about COVID-19, dating back even to late 2020, before he was in the Legislature. He also said he's written prescriptions for the parasitic worm treatment ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19. (AP Photo/John Hanna, File)
FILE - Kansas state Sens. Caryn Tyson, left, R-Parker, and Mark Steffen, right, R-Hutchinson, confer, at the Statehouse in Topeka, Kan., Feb. 4, 2021. Steffen, also is a physician, said Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2022, he's been under investigation by the state medical board for more than a year over his public comments about COVID-19, dating back even to late 2020, before he was in the Legislature. He also said he's written prescriptions for the parasitic worm treatment ivermectin as a treatment for COVID-19. (AP Photo/John Hanna, File)

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas doctor-lawmaker who has prescribed a parasitic worm treatment for COVID-19 symptoms acknowledged Wednesday that the state medical board has been investigating him since the summer of 2020.

Conservative Republican state Sen. Mark Steffen disclosed the Kansas Board of Healing Arts’ investigation of him during a Senate committee hearing. He was testifying in favor of a bill that would require pharmacists to fill prescriptions for both the anti-worm treatment ivermectin and the anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine for potentially dangerous off-label uses in treating COVID-19.

Steffen said the medical board has been investigating him for 18 months over statements dating back to his brief time as a local county commissioner before he took his Senate seat in January 2021. He said no hearings have been scheduled.

“They’re using it to hold over me, to think they’re going to silence me as I serve as a state senator,” he told the committee. “And obviously, that’s not working out for them.”

During the committee’s two days of hearings, several Kansas doctors reported having trouble getting ivermectin prescriptions filled by pharmacists. Committee Chair Richard Hilderband, a conservative Republican from southeast Kansas, said he expects the bill to win the panel’s approval after it is debated next week.

“That is something between a doctor and a patient, on what their best way forward on care is,” Hilderbrand said.

Steffen is among the Republican-controlled Legislature’s most vocal skeptics of masks and COVID-19 vaccines and critics of the U.S. government’s and Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic. He is an anesthesiologist and pain-management specialist from Hutchinson, a city of 40,000 residents about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of Wichita.

Steffen even suggested that Kelly pushed the board to keep his case “in perpetual limbo” as a threat to him. The governor appoints the medical board’s members, but Kelly said she had “nothing to do with it.”

“I can’t take credit for it,” she told reporters. “This is the first I’ve heard of it.”

While medical groups and health experts have worked to stamp out the use of ivermectin for treating COVID-19, hospitals around the nation have faced lawsuits over their refusal to give it to patients.

Ivermectin is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat infections of lice, roundworms and other tiny parasites in humans. The FDA has tried to debunk claims that animal-strength versions of the drug can help fight COVID-19, warning that large doses can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, seizures, delirium and even death.

And on Wednesday, top officials at two large Kansas health systems, Ascension Via Christi and University of Kansas Health, submitted testimony opposing the bill forcing pharmacists to fill ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine prescriptions, saying it “directly conflicts” with standards for pharmacists and physicians.

“We could not voice stronger opposition to actions such as mandating licensed professionals to act against their professional judgment and against their own licensing standards,” they said.

Susan Gile, the Kansas medical board’s acting executive director, declined to respond to Steffen’s comments, saying that the board does not confirm or deny ongoing investigations. She told the Kansas Senate committee that off-label uses of drugs are “not uncommon,” but a doctor still has a duty to do “what a reasonable physician would have done under the same or similar circumstance.”

Steffen said the investigation does not involve complaints from patients. He said in an interview that he has prescribed ivermectin as a COVID-19 treatment, though he did not provide details.

Asked whether he still writes such prescriptions, he said: “I’d be more than happy to do it for people.”

Steffen is not he only doctor-politician to defy the medical consensus and U.S. government guidance on COVID-19 or promote dubious medical advice. In Maryland, Republican U.S. Rep. Andy Harris, also an anesthesiologist, said on a radio program in September that he wrote an ivermectin prescription but couldn’t get pharmacies to fill it.

And U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall, another conservative Kansas Republican, said during his 2020 campaign that he took regular doses of hydroxychloroquine and last year promoted the unsupported theory that infected people have strong and long-lasting enough natural immunity to not need vaccinations.

Nebraska’s Republican state attorney general said in October that he wouldn’t prosecute doctors for ivermectin prescriptions for treating COVID-19 as long as they had patients’ consent. In Kansas, state Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican running for governor against Kelly this year, said he’s not been asked to render an opinion and hasn’t researched the issue.

“I just haven’t had a reason to look at it,” he told The AP. “Generally, I think that doctors ought to control the care of their patients — I mean, that is my general approach.”

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