Médicos que espalham desinformação médica devem perder suas licenças. Por que não? ❧ Atualidades
Cada uma dessas declarações foi feita durante a pandemia por médicos que continuam licenciados para exercer a medicina.
"Este vírus tem cura. Chama-se hidroxicloroquina, zinco e Zithromax. Sei que vocês querem falar sobre uma máscara. Olá? Você não precisa de máscara. Existe uma cura."
Stella Immanuel, MD licenciada no Texas, julho de 2020
"[As pessoas] há muito suspeitavam que havia algum tipo de interface, ainda a ser definida, uma interface entre o que está sendo injetado nessas fotos e todas as torres 5G."
Sherri Tenpenny, DO licenciada em Ohio, julho de 2021
"Alguém aqui esperando por um pedido de desculpas de Birx, Fauci e Biden e todos os governadores democráticos por seus #Mandatos de Máscaras tirânicos e inconstitucionais? #Máscaras #FaceMasks #MáscarasNãoFuncionam"
Sherri Tenpenny, DO @BusyDrT, 10 de fevereiro de 2023
"Não quero fazer parte desse genocídio em massa que vejo acontecendo [com as vacinas COVID]. ... E, no entanto, tenho uma licença irrestrita para praticar, por 30 anos."
Rashid Buttar, D.O. Licensed in North Carolina, October 2021Note May 22: Rashid Buttar died on May 18 of this year. The text of this article is from our print edition which came out in April, prior to Buttar's death." rel="footnote">1
O teórico da conspiração e apoiador de Trump, Immanuel, que também é pastor, foi um dos médicos da linha de frente da América, de jaleco branco, membros de um grupo político de direita com laços com os Tea Party Patriots. Eles apareceram em um vídeo de julho de 2020 no Capitólio, que o presidente Trump elogiou e ajudou a se tornar viral. O vídeo alcançou 20 milhões de usuários do Facebook em poucas horas. (Donald Trump excluiu seu tweet, e o vídeo foi reconhecido como desinformação e logo retirado por Facebook, Youtube e Twitter. Donald Trump Jr. os fechamentos eram desnecessários e que a hidroxicloroquina "poderia prevenir e curar" o COVID-19. Em apenas um período de dois meses em 2021, a America's Frontline Doctors arrecadou mais de $ 6 milhões em avaliações de telessaúde que incluíam prescrições de hidroxicloroquina e ivermectina, dois medicamentos sensacionalistas (baseados em má ciência) usados para COVID-19 que foram repetidamente considerados ineficazes em tratamento da COVID-19.
Immanuel was recently named the "highest U.S. prescriber of ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine" for the last two years, according to an analysis of prescription data by MedPageToday, a medical news website. Astonishingly, Immanuel's prescribing habits are apparently legal. For its part, the Texas Medical board had made its stance on COVID-related treatments painfully clear. In July of 2020, referencing rumors of an unnamed "cure" for COVID-19, the board said it would not "issue endorsements" of any treatments and that "patients and physicians have a right to decide what treatments may be used for COVID-19." In the fall of 2021, the board released a notice about prescription use of COVID-19 therapies, saying that they wouldn't "endorse or prohibit" any particular therapies for the condition, preserving physician's use of "off-label" therapies. ("Off label" means a medication is being used to treat a condition for which it lacks FDA approval. While off-label prescribing happens commonly, like any privilege left to individual physician discretion, the practice can be abused—as has been the case with both hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin during the pandemic.)NPR and Politico reported that in 2021, poison control centers received increased calls related to ivermectin overdoses." rel="footnote">2
No final das contas, Immanuel foi multado em $ 500 pelo Conselho Médico do Texas em outubro de 2021 e recebeu "ação corretiva" - não por prescrever tratamentos falsos, mas por não documentar adequadamente o consentimento informado para seus tratamentos "off-label" de hidroxicloroquina. A ação do conselho foi não disciplinar. (Em outro caso notável, em 2022, o médico de Houston, Richard Urso, foi inocentado pelo Conselho de acusações de negligência médica pelo uso de hidroxicloroquina para tratar o COVID-19.)
These doctors are just a few of the many who have made news over the years for spreading misinformation2021 article in First Amendment Law Review, Seton Hall Law School Professor Carl H. Coleman writes that medical misinformation has been "defined as ‘information that is contrary to the epistemic consensus of the scientific community regarding a phenomenon.’ These claims can be spread either negligently or with a deliberate intent to deceive. A large percentage of medical misinformation comes from individuals or entities with economic or political incentives to promote untruthful information." For simplicity, I use the term misinformation broadly to include misinformation and disinformation, which are usually distinguished by the absence or presence, respectively, of intent to deceive by the speaker." rel="footnote"3 about medical issues, or who promote outright quackery (by quackery, I mean medical practice based on pseudoscience). A few of the most prominent include Joseph Mercola, D.O. (licensed to practice in Florida and Illinois), described by the New York Times as "the most influential spreader of coronavirus misinformation"; Christiane Northrup, M.D., a former obstetrician-gynecologist (no active license but has a grandfathered board certification in her field from 1981) and "champion of a feminine and intuitive approach to health and well-being" who was once "Oprah's favorite gyno" and is now an anti-vaccine and QAnon conspiracy theorist; and, of course, Mehmet Oz, M.D. (licensed in Pennsylvania), celebrity doctor, wannabe politician, and promoter of hydroxychloroquine, whose The Dr. Oz Show bombarded audiences with 13 seasons of "magic" health cures and helped the former cardiothoracic surgeon amass a net worth of nine figures as of 2022, the year his show ended. Tenpenny, Buttar, Northrup, and Mercola are all featured alongside Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in the Center for Countering Digital Hate's "Disinformation Dozen," a list of anti-vaxxers with large platforms who spread misinformation online. (There are many other prominent physician COVID contrarians and minimizers who would take up an entire article themselves.)/p> The boards’ potential inadequacies are numerous. First, political appointees can be a problem generally, especially when so many officials, particularly Republicans, have shown themselves to be broadly anti-public health during the pandemic.liberals killed masking, as explained on this Death Panel podcast episode." rel="footnote"4 One particularly bad political appointment shows just how far things can go: Florida's Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, M.D. (also of America's Frontline Doctors notoriety) has been extremely hostile to COVID vaccines, masking, or COVID public health interventions in general (which was the reason Governor DeSantis picked him). Politico reported recently that he altered vaccine safety study results to make the vaccines look riskier than they are. In Texas, a recent investigation by KXAN News found that Governor Greg Abbott appointed "top dollar donors" to sit on the state medical board, in addition to people "from telecom, business, real estate and energy sectors, with no obvious patient advocacy or medical experience."/p> The FSMB noted in its 2022 Annual Report that it was alarmed by the amount of medical misinformation that had surfaced during the pandemic. In 2021, they released a statement warning that doctors’ COVID vaccine misinformation could put their license at risk. They noted that their statement had "major impact" because it got 3.4 million views on Twitter and was picked up by CNN and other major news outlets and mentioned in 1,400 news stories. They held two town halls, which medical board members could attend, as well as a webinar. That all sounds….great. But what about discipline?cease and desist warnings to physicians peddling bogus COVID treatments. One doctor, Jennings Ryan Staley, who was selling COVID "miracle cure" kits, was actually convicted of fraud." rel="footnote"5/p> A look at the larger issue of physician autonomy reveals that it seems to be upheld in ways that result in patient and public harm. Consider anti-abortion and anti-trans healthcare bills. We’ve seen that these bills make doctors hesitate to give care to patients, which ultimately threatens patients’ lives. The physician's autonomy, and the patient's health, therefore, are placed second to the law. I’ve written about how this is unethical with abortion (it is, too, with gender-affirming care) and how doctors need to take care of their patients according to appropriate standards of care rather than acquiescing to unjust laws.hospitals in rural areas are closing entire services like labor and delivery. Without facilities in which to practice medicine, doctors cannot fulfill their ethical obligations to patients, and there will be regional disparities ("maternity care deserts") in services, which, of course, is completely unacceptable." rel="footnote"6 In the case of medical misinformation, we simply cannot allow a physician's free speech rights to be upheld when their speech is a threat to public health. At some point, the public's health has to be prioritized over a doctor's speech and healthcare bills by bigoted state legislatures./p> It's past time to reign in these bad physician actors and give them a hefty dose of disciplinary medicine. We need to adequately staff and resource medical boards so that they can do their jobs to discipline doctors whose words (and likely deeds) go against acceptable professional standards, and going forward we ought to consider a national licensing system for doctors.KXAN investigation also found that the Texas Medical Board has allowed doctors with concerning disciplinary histories in other states to obtain licenses to practice medicine in the state." rel="footnote"7 I agree completely with Gorski, who writes the following:/p> The bottom line is that practicing medicine is a privilege, one of the highest privileges society can grant to any human being. It is not a right. Unfortunately, all too often the law treats it more like a right.after the board had begun its pursuit of her, the board renewed her license, anyway. Doh!" rel="footnote"8 … That needs to change, and that change needs to include stopping physicians from abusing the privilege of their profession to spread disinformation that kills, as too many physicians [have done]./p>