Hospital Denied Court Orders And Refused To Treat Dying Man With Ivermectin
According to reports, 75-year-old Jermy Carter of New York died after doctors at Rochester General hospital refused to administer the controversial drug, Ivermectin. Carter was previously vaccinated but still caught Covid-19 and was hospitalized shortly after. Doctors allegedly exhausted all efforts to save Mr. Carter so his family searched for alternative options.
Carter's daughter spoke to her father's doctor about taking Ivermectin after reading success stories. Mr. Carter's doctor approved the treatment but the hospital refused to give it to him even after she agreed to sign whatever they needed to relieve their legal obligation.
The family didn't just give up...
Still holding on to hope that they could save Mr. Carter, the family took legal action, and courts sided with them. Rochester General Hospital refused. Rochester Regional Health filed an appeal on Saturday, and a hearing was scheduled for Monday, Lewke’s report said.
Carter died on Sunday, according to DailyWire.
Attorney Ralph Lorigo, who sued Rochester Regional Health on behalf of Carter, told Lewke he’s filed dozens of lawsuits against health systems in western New York alone over the past few months.
“Every case I have is a person in a hospital dying,” he said, “what is the harm if a hospital is done with its protocol?”
Lorigo has already filed three suits against Rochester Regional Health to get them to administer Ivermectin, including Carter’s suit.
“Each of those times we were successful and those people went home. In this situation we sued, we got a court order and the hospital refused to administer the Ivermectin,” the attorney explained.
On Sept. 20, after exhausting all COVID-19 treatments, Carter was transferred to ICU and placed on a ventilator. Carter's daughter, Jill Alvarado started researching other alternative treatments. She found the drug Ivermectin, which is typically used to treat certain infections caused by parasitic worms, head lice, and skin conditions.