Dutch court cancels fine for writing ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine prescriptions to treat covid

The Zeeland-West-Brabant District Court has cancelled a fine of 6,375 euros, imposed by the Health Inspectorate (IGJ) on Dutch doctor Niek Rogger. The fine was imposed for prescribing covid treatments, particularly hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin.

On 25 March 2021, the IGJ announced that the off-label prescription of these medicines for covid would incur fines. As the mass covid injection campaign was in full swing in the summer of 2021, the Dutch Minister for Health Welfare and Sport, Hugo de Jonge, wanted the IGJ will track down and fine general practitioners (GPs) who prescribed hydroxychloroquine to coronavirus patients.

As noted by Daniel van der Tuin in a Substack article, an email dated 20 August 2021 showed that De Jonge was not at all satisfied with the IGJ at that time. The Minister wrote: “I want an appointment, I want to know what the inspection does and whether the entire set of instruments is being used to maximum effect.”

De Jonge pointed out that some doctors were undermining the vaccination campaign and putting it at risk. He advocated for the use of all resources when tackling GPs.

A raid on a pharmacist in Venlo in southern Netherlands followed in December 2021; almost 1,000 prescriptions were seized from 17 doctors. In total an amount of more than 90,000 euros worth of fines were issued.

One of the doctors, Niek Rogger, wrote a total of 67 prescriptions and received a penalty notice from the IGJ in August 2022. Despite his submitted opinion, he was fined 6,375 euros in October 2022.

Rogger objected to this fine, but his objection was set aside by de Jonge in February 2023.

The doctor then went to court to appeal against the Minister’s decision. The judge heard Rogger’s appeal in November 2023 and in February 2024 ruled that the appeal was well-founded, the Minister’s decision to impose a fine was revoked and the IGJ had to pay an amount of 2,998 euros in legal costs to the doctor.

The court ruled that the Minister is not authorised to impose such fines on doctors for violation of Section 68 of the Medicines Act, which deals with the off-label prescription of medicines.

It was not the first time that de Jonge had been caught acting inappropriately and outside of his authority.

De Jonge is now Minister of the Interior and Kingdom Relations but during the covid pandemic when he was Minister of Health, he “actively interfered” in a case against a GP who prescribed unproven drugs to his patients, the Central Disciplinary Tribunal for Health Care said. This interference by de Jonge made the board decide to impose a more lenient punishment on the GP.

GP Rob Elens initially received a reprimand for advising people to use ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine during the pandemic.

In addition, the GP was accused of making people sign a statement before receiving a covid vaccination. The Central Disciplinary Court ruled that this fell outside his competence as a general practitioner, but decided to convert the reprimand into a warning, given de Jonge’s interference.

In the verdict of the appeal case, the Board stated that de Jonge was personally involved in the case by urging the Inspectorate to take “disciplinary” action against the GP. He is also said to have asked why the GP “is still allowed to practice, given his behaviour.”

The disciplinary committee wrote:

The Central Disciplinary Tribunal also takes into account that on the basis of a procedure under the Open Government Act (Woo) it has been established that the then Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport (VWS) actively interfered with the policy of the Inspectorate in this case, among other things by urging the Inspectorate to take ‘disciplinary’ action against the GP and by asking the question why the general practitioner ‘may still practise at all, in view of all expressions’.

During the treatment, the Inspectorate was unable to dispel the impression that the then Minister’s wish to discipline the GP had at least contributed to the fact that the Inspectorate acted very decisively against the GP. However, disciplining – in the eyes of a Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport – difficult doctors is not an objective of disciplinary law.”

 

yogaesoteric
March 21, 2024

 

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