A doctor treating clients in a Hasidic village in upstate New York said in an interview on Tuesday that none of the roughly 500 people he has treated for coronavirus symptoms has required hospitalization. He said he has been using an experimental treatment based around a drug touted by President Trump, and Sean Hannity has discussed his work on the Fox News Channel.
Dr. Vladimir Zelenko, a board-certified family practitioner who runs a family clinic near the village of Kiryas Joel, acknowledged that his regiment was new and untested, and it was too soon to assess its long-term effectiveness. But he said he thinks the rewards of implementing his treatment method are much greater than the risks of waiting to verify its efficacy, and he insisted that he is seeing only positive results from using hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug, in combination with two other drugs, on an outpatient basis for patients at higher risk of dying from the virus.
Im not claiming any miracle cures, he said by telephone Tuesday morning. Im creative, and I think out of the box. We have an unprecedented health crisis it requires unique thinking.
President Donald Trump has been pushing for broader use of hydroxychloroquine, and mentioned it in his briefing on Sunday, saying it would be a gift from heaven, this would be a gift from God if it works.
But the experimental use of the drug goes against public-health officials more cautious approach. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White Houses top infectious-disease expert, has called evidence of the drugs usefulness in protecting against infection by the novel coronavirus anecdotal, and suggested that he would only make the drug available under the auspices of a controlled clinical trial.
On Monday evening, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo released an executive order that effectively ended pharmacists ability to prescribe hydroxychloroquine for use in treating Covid-19, and prohibited any experimental use of the drug outside of state-approved clinical trials.
Zelenko, a Russian immigrant who became Hasidic as a young adult, said that he has been using a cocktail of drugs: hydroxychloroquine, in combination with azithromycin an antibiotic to treat secondary infections and zinc sulfate, which studies have suggested slows down virus replication in the body. He said he had been administering the cocktail to patients with shortness of breath of any age, and those over 60 years old or who are immunocompromised and exhibiting milder symptoms. He said he is not treating asymptomatic people under 60 who are healthy or low risk.
Kiryas Joel, a village in Orange County, N.Y., is home to about 26,000 people, according to Census records, nearly all of them followers of Satmar Hasidism. Their spiritual leader, Rabbi Aharon Teitelbaum, has been diagnosed with the virus. Zelenko declined to say whether he was treating Teitelbaum with the regimen, but said that he could confirm that there was a high number of infections among the religious and spiritual leadership of the town.
Zelenko said that about 350 of the roughly 500 patients he has treated for coronavirus symptoms are from Kiryas Joel, while the other 150 live in the Monsey area, where his second clinic is located. He said he has largely not had his patients tested for coronavirus, because he worried that waiting for test results to begin treatment would compromise the treatments effectiveness.
Zelenko lives in Englewood, N.J., and has been directing his medical staff from quarantine in his home, because he is at high risk of contracting the coronavirus: he had his right lung removed last year during treatment for lung cancer. He said he is taking a low dose of hydroxychloroquine himself, prophylactically.
Shlomo Polachek, the patient representative for Hatzalah, the Orthodox paramedic service, in Monroe, N.Y., which borders Kiryas Joel, said that the Hasidic community there has seen three hospital admissions: two on Monday afternoon and one on Saturday who was released within 24 hours.
Here in Monroe, it seems to be an indication that it works for the people, Polachek said of Zelenkos experimental treatment. Its hard to say for sure.
Zelenko said the idea behind his approach is to treat the spread of the virus in the body before it damages the lungs beyond repair. Once the lungs of a Covid-19 patient exhibit whats called acute respiratory distress syndrome, according to WHO, the patients likelihood of death is about 50%, according to early estimates.
His method is based on very rough data presented in recent studies. One, from China, found that hydroxychloroquine was effective at stopping the spread of the novel coronavirus in petri dishes. A study from France released last week, based on a sample size of 20 patients, suggested the combination of the drug with azithromycin, a common antibiotic, appeared to be helpful in lowering the amount of coronavirus the body, and therefore buying time to treat the disease.
However neither study was comprehensive or done in a controlled setting, which is why health officials have pushed back against the use of the drug. But Zelenko said that his method, despite being untested, is necessary, as health officials predict more than 1 million deaths across the United States. He said he believes it is safe, because so far he has recorded minimal side effects.
Its a no brainer in the right subset of patients, he said.
Already, public health officials in India and Jordan have authorized use of hydroxychlorquine for treating Covid-19. Some doctors in the U.S. are using the drug to treat the disease as well, as well as using it themselves to stave off infection as they treat coronavirus patients.
Trump has latched onto it as a game changer in fighting coronavirus as he pushes to reopen the American economy sooner than many health experts are advising. He wrongly stated last week that the FDA had approved the drug for treating the coronavirus. FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn said the drug would only be available in the setting of a clinical trial a large, pragmatic clinical trial.
Zelenko said that he felt that hydroxychloroquine was not being taken seriously as a treatment due a combination of factors, including conservativeness on the part of the governments medical establishment in requiring a controlled clinical trial, as well as the fact that Trump himself has been pushing for the use of the drug.
And this is a political year, with a presidential election, and there are forces at play that would prefer to see the economy collapse rather than President Trump to look good, in my opinion, Zelenko said.
Zelenko has already taken his message to Fox News commentator Sean Hannitys news program. On Monday evening, on his cable TV program, Hannity also read from a letter that Zelenko said he sent to Mark Meadows, Trumps chief of staff, and praised Zelenkos methods.
Im just blown away by all this, Hannity said in the radio interview.
STUNNING! NY Doctor Vladimir Zelenko Finds 100% Success Rate in 350 Patients Using Hydroxychloroquine with Z-Paks (VIDEO) https://t.co/Yhhnr5jgXO via @gatewaypundit Bill Mitchell (@mitchellvii) March 24, 2020
Zelenko said that his regimen is also being studied by medical officials in Israel and Brazil.
He said that he has also been contacted by dozens of doctors interested in his regimen. One doctor who called him, Dr. Avery Knapp, a neuroradiologist with a practice in Florida, said that he realizes Zelenkos method is untested, but wants the government to investigate to see if his results are real.
It seems to me to be a very interesting approach, said Knapp, who said he is not involved in treating coronavirus patients. Theres not a lot of US studies, but hes taking basically what a lot of hospitals are doing for inpatient, and hes taking it one step further, which is taking it to higher risk outpatients.
Zelenko said he is aware of Cuomos executive order newly limiting use of the drug, and said he is trying to get in touch with Cuomos office.
Zelenko has already been accused of exaggerating claims about the extent of coronavirus infections in Kiryas Joel. Last week, in a video shared on WhatsApp, he estimated that 90% of the village would become infected, based on receiving nine positive results from 14 tests conducted for the virus.
The video resulted in criticism from the health commissioner for Orange County, who called Zelenkos comments highly irresponsible as well as a harsh rebuke from Kiryas Joels Office of Emergency Management.
In a statement released on social media Tuesday afternoon, the consortium of emergency response teams linked Zelenkos statements to anti-Semitic incidents related to coronavirus. The statement appeared to refer to an incident that occurred near Kiryas Joel Monday, in which a Hasidic man was refused service on his car at a Toyota dealership.
The exploitation of a crisis and a community is unacceptable because it fuels Antisemitism and only exacerbates a problem, making it more difficult to manage, the statement read.
In his interview with the Forward Tuesday morning, Zelenko acknowledged his initial estimate was wrong, but insisted that data from testing sites in Hasidic neighborhoods suggests that the community is seeing an infection rate of over 60%. Gilman did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. Zelenko declines to comment on the statement from the Office of Emergency Management.
Important urgent message pic.twitter.com/f9A4XgRQnk 𝙔𝙤𝙨𝙚𝙛 𝙍𝙖𝙥𝙖𝙥𝙤𝙧𝙩 (@YosefRapaport) March 24, 2020
22 pic.twitter.com/Fqw0KRGakf 𝙔𝙤𝙨𝙚𝙛 𝙍𝙖𝙥𝙖𝙥𝙤𝙧𝙩 (@YosefRapaport) March 24, 2020
Zelenko has been urging people in the ultra-Orthodox world to stay calm, even as he has sounded the alarm about potentially high rates of infection in Hasidic villages and neighborhoods. In a video message shared on WhatsApp, he said that the majority of people infected with the virus will require no treatment.
You gotta relax, he said, speaking from the drivers seat of his car. There is no room for young people to get nervous or cause hysteria, you will all be fine.
Dr Zev Zelenko says that young people need to relax in the face of the Coronavirus pandemic, as even those of them that are affected will likely get better without any treatment. #Coronavirus#COVID19pic.twitter.com/SeHjKA2hJq J News 24 (@JNEWS245) March 22, 2020
Ari Feldman is a staff writer at the Forward.