Farrag practices in southern Alabama and is affiliated with an online pharmacy. She had to find someone to administer it. State Rep. Dawn Keefer, a Dillsburg Republican, put her in touch with a husband and wife doctor team, who, in turn, put her in touch with a registered nurse who could administer the drug.
On Saturday, Dec. His lungs were improving, but his kidneys and liver were failing. He was on blood thinners that caused some bleeding in his esophagus. His feeding tube had been turned off when he had a CT scan and ultrasound examination.
She needed to know whether his internal bleeding had stopped, whether the feeding tube had been restored and whether he was scheduled for dialysis. Everything fell into place, and Saturday afternoon, Darla called the RN to come to the hospital to administer the drug.
She stayed on the phone with the nurse as she entered the hospital, fearing that she would meet resistance. The nurse was waved in, and while she was making her way to the ICU, Darla got a call from the hospital's vice president of medical affairs.
She advised the administrator to contact her attorney. What followed was about six or seven hours of phone calls. After a while, the West Manchester Township police showed up. She declined and the police officers, after reading the court order, determined that it was a civil matter, not a criminal one, and left, Darla said. The hospital told her that Farrag had to be involved in administering the drug, but Farrag could not be found, Darla said. Meanwhile, Keith had dialysis treatment. I thought God had abandoned me, that God had abandoned Keith.
She learned about the protest from Keefer. She had had only two hours of sleep, and she needed to get some work done.
She works in sales for a company that manufactures electrostatic sprayers used to dispense disinfectant. Darla went to the hospital to be with the protesters. UPMC was asking Farrag to fill out a slew of paperwork, Darla said, among which was a waiver that placed all liability for anything that may go wrong on his shoulders.
The protest at the hospital ended at dark, and Darla went into the hospital to visit her husband. The hospital staff allowed her to sit in the lobby to warm up while she called her lawyer. Finally, after Farrag and the new doctor participated in a conference call with his lawyer and hospital personnel, including the head of infectious diseases, UPMC relented. The nurse would be allowed to administer ivermectin to her husband. Tarik Farrag.
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