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How Ivermectin Trials Were Designed To Fail

How Ivermectin Trials Were Designed To Fail

Authored by Yuhong Dong via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19…

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How Ivermectin Trials Were Designed To Fail

Authored by Yuhong Dong via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The use of ivermectin to treat COVID-19 is an ongoing debate. The central conflict is that while many doctors have reported success in using ivermectin, some studies published in major journals suggest it is in fact ineffective.

(eloresnorwood/Shutterstock)

Even as the FDA recently has been removing misinformation it posted about ivermectin, the agency has maintained its original position regarding its effectiveness, namely that there isn’t evidence.

People who trust ivermectin claim the studies showing ineffectiveness are fraudulent, while people who are skeptical of its use for treating COVID-19 view it as an anti-science conspiracy theory.

As a professional with decades of research experience conducting dozens of clinical trials on antiviral drugs, I decided to dive deep into the studies purporting ivermectin’s ineffectiveness. What I found shocked me.

Legacy Media Report Ineffectiveness

Numerous preclinical studies have found that ivermectin has a broad range of effects on COVID-19, spanning from its initial impact on viral infection to the pathological changes the virus causes in our bodies.

Ivermectin inhibits the entire life cycle of SARS-CoV-2 in our cells from attachment, spreading, and replication (1, 2, 3).

Moreover, ivermectin is anti-inflammatory and organ-protective, which can potentially protect against severe COVID-related lung damage and acute respiratory distress syndrome, heart-related complications, and blood clots.

Ivermectin exceeds the approved antiviral effects of other medications, including Paxlovid, molnupiravir and remdesivir, which only target the virus and lack anti-inflammatory and organ-protective effects. Monoclonal antibodies have to be constructed specific to each variant and are very expensive.

In the pharmaceutical industry, clinical trials are commonly used to evaluate the efficacy and safety of drugs once their mechanism is demonstrated. There are two types of clinical trials: observational and interventional.

Observational studies are often conducted by doctors in clinical, hospital, or community settings to analyze the effects of drugs. The data is collected as observed in clinical practice with minimal interference.

Many doctors have observed the positive effects of ivermectin on their patients. An observational study conducted in Brazil with over 88,000 patients showed that ivermectin reduced the rates of infection, mortality, and hospitalization by 49 percent, 92 percent, and 100 percent, respectively, compared to nonusers.

Pharmaceutical companies are required to conduct interventional studies that meet the approval standards set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) are frequently utilized to fulfill these requirements. This type of study is considered the gold standard and involves randomly assigning one group of patients to receive a specific drug while the other group does not receive it, then comparing the outcomes.

Legally and medically, ivermectin can be prescribed off-label to treat COVID-19 since it has already been approved by the FDA for other diseases.

Although many doctors have observed the positive effects of ivermectin in treating their patients, the media has specifically highlighted data from a few selected RCTs that have concluded it is ineffective in treating COVID-19.

However, some critical aspects were overlooked in those RCTs.

Improper Dosing

A drug’s therapeutic effects can only be observed when it reaches the appropriate concentration in the body and remains there for a few days, allowing sufficient time to work.

Improper dosing was a major issue in the RCTs that found ivermectin ineffective.

Recommended Dosage

According to Merck’s package insert for ivermectin (brand name Stromectol), a single oral dose of 0.2 mg/kg was officially recommended for treating parasitic diseases. There is no official dose for COVID-19.

The recommended dosage of ivermectin for treating COVID-19 is based on the clinical experiences of physicians worldwide.

The Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance (FLCCC) guidelines recommend taking 0.4 mg/kg of ivermectin daily, immediately after exposure. Once a cumulative dose in excess of 200 mg is reached, the risk of acquiring COVID-19 has been shown to be nearly zero.

It is common for a drug with multiple indications to have different doses for different diseases.

Moreover, ivermectin should be given with food, as it has a 2.6-fold higher bioavailability when taken with food rather than on an empty stomach. The Merck package insert (revised May 2022) also supports this and states: “Administration of 30 mg ivermectin following a high-fat meal resulted in an approximate 2.5-fold increase in bioavailability relative to administration of 30 mg ivermectin in the fasted state.”

FLCCC guidelines also recommend taking ivermectin “with or just following a meal for greater absorption.”

Yet this important dosing information is not reflected in the commonly used drug prescribing resource known as the Prescribers’ Digital Reference or PDR which states: “Take the number of tablets your doctor has prescribed all at the same time with water on an empty stomach. Do not eat any food within two hours before or after taking the tablets.”

So if a person takes the dose while fasting, they are getting only 40 percent of the recommended dose. For patients with a higher body weight, the effects of underdosing could be even more significant.

RCT Studies Used Inappropriate Dosing

In the most recent PRINCIPLE trial published in March, ivermectin was used at 0.3 mg/kg for only three days. Moreover, it was designed to dose the ivermectin without food: “Participants were advised not to eat two hours before or after taking ivermectin.”

In another RCT ACTIV-6 published in JAMA in October 2022, ivermectin was dosed in a fasting status, as the protocol stated: “Ivermectin should be taken on an empty stomach with water (30 minutes before a meal or 2 hours after a meal).”

Ivermectin was reported as dosed at 0.4 mg/kg for three days—a much shorter time period than it should be. However, in the protocol Table 4 in Appendix 16.3.3, the precise dosing was as low as 0.269 mg/kg, and 0.4 mg/kg is actually only the upper dose limit—not the real dose.

According to the worldwide recognized study guideline ICH Good Clinical Practice, clinical trials must adhere to ethical principles. Failure to do so would be considered study misconduct or fraud and would violate the principle of integrity.

Another JAMA study published in March 2021 repeated the same mistake in mild COVID-19 patients by suggesting they take 0.3 mg/kg for five days on an empty stomach.

An RCT study known as TOGETHER, published in March 2022 in the New England Journal of Medicine, underdosed ivermectin with 0.4 mg/kg for only three days and did not mention dosing with food.

Nevertheless, even at this low dose, the ivermectin still reduced hospitalization rates, death, and the need for mechanical ventilation compared to a placebo.

Clinical Improvement Despite Underdosing

It is inappropriate to conclude that ivermectin was ineffective based on these RCT studies with major design flaws.

Despite the poor study design, ivermectin showed clinical benefits and saved lives.

In the PRINCIPLE study, self-reported recovery was shorter in the ivermectin group than usual care, with a median decrease of 2.06 days. The statistical analysis showed that it met the predefined superiority criteria.

Furthermore, the analysis showed that ivermectin effectively reduced COVID-19-related hospitalizations and deaths. Only 1.6 percent of 2,157 patients in the ivermectin group experienced hospitalizations or deaths, compared to 4.4 percent of 3,256 patients in the usual care group.

Even a low dose of ivermectin has demonstrated the potential to save lives. However, the authors concluded, “Ivermectin for COVID-19 is unlikely to provide clinically meaningful improvement in recovery, hospital admissions, or longer-term outcomes.”

Meanwhile, the report’s appendix includes dozens of recorded clinical benefits in patients treated with ivermectin, such as the time it took to alleviate all symptoms, general unwellness, muscle aches, and headaches. The improvement of symptoms was also sustained, and the severity was reduced. Surprisingly, the source PDF was removed from the website during the writing of this article.

There are additional examples. Although the previously mentioned 2021 JAMA study underdosed patients, treatment with ivermectin reduced recovery time by two days. In the ACTIV-6 study, only one venous blood clot event was reported in 817 ivermectin-treated patients, compared to five events in 774 placebo-treated patients.

Statistical Failures

It is important to note that the definition of treatment effects in an RCT can differ from those discussed in real-life observational studies.

Sometimes, even if the results of a clinical trial demonstrate a clear effect, the conclusion may still be interpreted as ineffective due to the statistical definition of effectiveness.

Interpreting statistics can be challenging as they usually involve complicated mathematical models and numerical data that can be manipulated to support a specific agenda. Nevertheless, for the purpose of this discussion, let’s presume that all research is carried out conscientiously and without manipulative intent.

In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial with mild to moderate COVID-19 patients, none of the 55 patients in the ivermectin group died, whereas four of 57 in the placebo group died. This resulted in a comparison of zero percent versus 7 percent. Moreover, only 1.8 percent of ivermectin-treated patients needed invasive ventilation compared to 8.8 percent in the placebo group.

In other words, ivermectin reduced the risk of death by 100 percent and the need for ventilators by 80 percent.

However, the article did not provide the p-value (probability value) for the death rate comparison or the invasive ventilation of 0.102 (Table 2), which is higher than the 0.05 threshold considered to be a significant statistical difference.

P-values are commonly used to test and measure a “null hypothesis,” which states that no differences exist in the effects being studied between two groups. A finding is considered statistically significant and warrants publication when the p-value is 0.05 or less.

The p-values in this study were deemed insignificant because they were more than 0.05. Accordingly, the authors wrote that this difference was statistically insignificant and concluded that ivermectin “had shown only marginal benefit.”

How could a 100 percent reduction in death or an 80 percent reduction in ventilation be interpreted as “marginal” effects?

In the I-TECH study published in JAMA Internal Medicine in 2022, the patients treated with ivermectin had a lower mortality rate of 1.2 percent compared to 4 percent in the comparator group.

The same conclusion was made as the previous study because the p-value was 0.09 and higher than 0.05.

If the 7 million patients reported to have died from COVID-19 had been treated with ivermectin, an estimated 4.9 million lives could potentially have been saved based on the 70 percent reduced mortality rate from the I-TECH study; or 4.5 million lives could have been saved based on the 64 percent reduction of mortality in the PRINCIPLE study.

The life-saving potential of ivermectin has been hindered by the unnecessary statistical threshold. The problem of statistical significance is widespread and frequently causes confusion among scientists.

A 2016 Nature article raised concerns about the misuse of p-values. A 2019 comment in the same journal stated that “The misuse of statistical significance has done much harm to the scientific community and those who rely on scientific advice.”

The authors called for abandoning the use of statistical significance to draw conclusions regarding the effectiveness of drugs, such as stating that “drug Y does not work,” and cautioned that such conclusions may result in the dismissal of potentially life-saving drugs.

The authors also wrote: “Let’s be clear about what must stop; we should never conclude there is ‘no difference’ or ‘no association’ just because a P value is larger than a threshold such as 0.o5.”

Selection Bias

Many people, including physicians, may not be aware that interventional studies, particularly RCTs, are are prone to numerous biases, with selection bias being one of the most significant. Excluding potentially eligible individuals due to their anticipated group allocation can lead to selection bias.

It’s common knowledge that early treatment of COVID-19 is crucial for effective results. The earlier the treatment starts, the more effective it is. These approved antivirals for COVID-19 are used shortly after COVID-19 infection and usually within a few days after symptom onset.

For example, Paxlovid and molnupiravir registration trials treated patients within only three to five days of symptom onset.

Early treatment is critical for COVID-19. Efficacy declines rapidly with treatment delay. (c19early.com)

However, in the PRINCIPLE trial, ivermectin was used for patients within 14 days of symptom onset, while ACTIV-6 treated patients an average of six days after infection.

Patients with severe kidney disease are normally excluded from phase 3 studies, as they are less likely to respond to antiviral treatment. This approach has been taken by remdesivir (protocol), molnupiravir (protocol), and Paxlovid (protocol). However, such standard exclusion criteria were not taken by the ACTIV-6 or PRINCIPLE study protocols.

Why was ivermectin treated so unfairly in these clinical trials?

It is well known that when an RCT is sponsored by Big Pharma, there is often a financial conflict of interest, as the research institutions are usually hired or funded by the pharmaceutical company. In a world where wealth often competes with ethics, how many can resist financial temptation and stay true to moral principles?

“Hidden agenda bias” occurs when a trial is conducted to demonstrate a desired outcome, rather than to answer a question. In other words, “Don’t do a trial if it won’t show you what you want to find.”

Proven Without a Profit Motive

Conducting an RCT to get a drug approved by the FDA requires money. Every drug must be managed by a professional team composed of doctors, database managers, and assistants. Professionals must secure funding, recruit a lead investigator, and find hospitals to conduct the study. An operational team must perform the study, analyze the data, and gain FDA approval.

Since ivermectin is a generic drug that lacks profitable marketing and a pharmaceutical sponsor, it’s challenging to organize and systematically manage its new application with health authorities, data, and customers.

Nevertheless, doctors worldwide have been using ivermectin to help patients and have collected valuable data.

The website c19ivm.org has compiled data on 102 clinical trials proving ivermectin’s consistent effectiveness in treating COVID-19. Studies with negative conclusions about ivermectin are also included, such as the the four RCTs with recognized design flaws.

Since the beginning of the analysis, ivermectin has consistently shown efficacy. This meta-analysis provides a thorough and transparent real-time analysis of all eligible ivermectin studies.

The trials were conducted by 1,139 doctors or scientists from 29 countries with 142,307 patients. Out of the total studies, 86 have been peer-reviewed with 128,787 patients, and 49 were randomized controlled trials with 16,847 patients.

In the studies with comparative groups, ivermectin was shown to reduce the risk of COVID-19 infection by 81 percent, mortality by 49 percent, ICU admission by 35 percent, ventilation usage by 29 percent, and hospitalization by 34 percent.

In comparison to the control groups, the use of ivermectin as a preventive measure before infection reduced the most severe clinical outcomes of COVID-19 by 85 percent. When used in the early stage of COVID-19, ivermectin decreased the severity of the disease by 62 percent, and when used in late stages, it reduced the clinical severity by 39 percent. Clinical severity is measured by death, ventilation, disease progression, or hospitalization.

Ivermectin treatment effects in COVID-19 patients, based on a meta-analysis of 102 clinical trials. (c19ivm.org)

Considering the Entire Picture

It’s difficult to believe that the designers of these studies were unaware of the dosing of ivermectin. Despite all of the above analyses, the reasoning behind the ivermectin underdosing or unfavorable study design may be linked to factors beyond science.

A new drug or vaccine cannot achieve an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) status if there is an existing viable therapeutic available. This fact alone may have impacted many decisions.

The NIH website lists only those RCTs that I found to have design flaws (or potential fraud) to justify its recommendation against the use of ivermectin in the treatment of COVID-19.

Peer-reviewed studies showing the efficacy of ivermectin in treating COVID-19 have been retracted without explanation, and doctors have been demonized, censored, and doxxed for speaking the truth.

Legacy media, including The New York Times and CNN, reported incomplete and improperly interpreted trials that failed to present an accurate representation of ivermectin’s effects.

It’s important to keep an open mind and consider the entire picture when examining the ivermectin issue, rather than dismissing it as conspiracy or misinformation. This can lead to more informed decisions that could ultimately save lives.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

Tyler Durden Thu, 04/11/2024 - 21:15

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Costco unveils sales smasher, dividend kicker

Analysts weigh in on Costco shares and reset price targets.

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There are a few undeniable certainties. The sun rises in the East, the sky is blue, and seemingly, everyone loves shopping at Costco.

The company's knack for delighting customers with new products and services at cut-rate prices has boosted growth, resulting in a steady string of increasing quarterly sales and profits. 

It appears likely that the winning streak will continue. 

Costco unveiled its latest monthly sales update on April 10, and the results were undeniably good. Management seemed impressed enough by the performance to revamp its stock dividend, leading analysts to reset stock price targets and outlooks.

Customer shopping trends are driving Costco sales higher.

Bloomberg/Getty Images

Inflation takes a toll on consumer spending

Inflation wasn't much of a problem during 2020. The world was mired in the Covid pandemic, and economies were shaken by shutdowns, leading to tepid price increases as demand faltered. U.S. Gross Domestic Product fell by a third in the second quarter of 2020, causing retailers like Costco to become ghost towns.

Related: Costco has an answer for Sam's Club's expansion plan

Since then, the story has been much different. The Federal Reserve embraced a zero-interest rate policy, and Congress enacted broad-based stimulus to re-spark economic growth. 

This one-two punch arguably worked too well.

GDP rebounded in the third quarter of 2020 and stayed strong throughout 2021. The bounceback provided tinder for inflation that got lit when the Ever Given freighter grounded in the Suez Canal, throwing supply chains into disarray.

Inflation quickly spiraled, peaking near 9% in June 2022. It took a toll on budgets, forcing consumers to ratchet back consumer discretionary spending to cover necessities. 

Unfortunately, it hasn't gotten much better for shoppers.

To crimp inflation, the Fed has embarked on the most restrictive policy of rate hikes since Volcker smashed inflation in the early 1980s. This has caused credit card, auto loan, and mortgage rates to surge, further taxing consumers.

Costco rides a consumer cost-cutting wave

Consumers don't spend much time scrutinizing receipts during good times, but they sure do during tough times. Their recent cost-consciousness has hurt many retailers, but it's been a boon for Costco. 

Membership at the warehouse chain has climbed because shoppers want to save money by buying in bulk.

Related: Costco enters a controversial industry with its latest move

In its last fiscal quarter (ending February), revenue improved by 5.7% and profit swelled by 12% to $3.71 per share partly thanks to growth in high-margin membership fees.

For perspective, national retail sales at all retailers grew by 2.1% during that three-month span, according to the U.S. Census Department.

Costco's outperformance is impressive, but retail sales growth can be impacted by new stores (Costco opens over 20 new stores per year, historically) and, in the case of some retailers like Costco, gasoline prices. 

Therefore, a better apples-to-apples measure of its retail strength is comparable (comp) sales growth, which reflects year-over-year sales growth at stores open for at least one year.

Costco's strength on that measure is also notable. Its comp sales increased 5.6% in the February quarter, suggesting new stores aren't the driving force behind its increasing revenue. Instead, it's due to more members spending more money. 

"We ended the second quarter with 73.4 million paid household members, up 7.8% versus last year, and 132.0 million cardholders, up 7.3%," said Costco CFO Richard Galanti on the company's conference call. "Our average transaction or ticket was up three-tenths of a percent worldwide and one-tenth of a percent in the US."

Based on Costco's latest monthly update, its business appears to be strengthening.

Costco's revenue rose 9.4% year-over-year in March, including new stores and gas sales, to nearly $21.5 billion, and its comp store sales were up a very healthy 7.5%. Easter holiday sales boosted comp sales, but only by about a half-percent.

Analysts revamp Costco stock forecasts

Following the March numbers, Wall Street analysts reset their outlooks.

Roth MKM's Bill Kirk noted that March's results accelerated from February, leading him to boost his Costco stock price target to $650 from $601. The increase is sizable, but Kirk's target is still south of Costco's $732 share price on April 11.

Related: Costco makes a huge change to a signature food item

Kirk's downbeat price target stems from thinking Costco is richly-valued. Its shares currently trade at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 45. That's considerably higher than Walmart, owner of Sam's Club, which has a forward P/E ratio of 25, and BJ's Wholesale Club, a pure-play rival warehouse club, which has a forward P/E of 20.

DA Davidson's $680 price target is also below current share prices. However, it said March delivered the best core comp growth since January 2023, excluding the holiday-driven month of December.

Loop Capital's $820 price target is more optimistic. However, that's down from $830 because of worry that sticky inflation could mean this is as good as it gets for comp sales growth.

Evercore ISI called Costco's March numbers "a banner performance," upping its price target by $10 per share to $805 and maintaining an Outperform rating.

More Retail Stocks:

Costco also drew praise from Chris Versace, portfolio manager of TheStreet Pro's real-money portfolio. 

He called the results a "knockout," particularly given that Costco management also announced it is increasing its shareholder dividend by 13.7% to $1.16 per share.

"While there was some benefit because of the Easter holiday, even on an adjusted basis the sales increase confirms consumer wallet share gains," said Versace. "Costco continues to expand its warehouse footprint, which in turn drives its high-margin membership fee revenue stream. Exiting last month, the company had 876 warehouses with 69% in the U.S."

Versace also points out that Costco "doubled the number of warehouse locations in China to six this past March," and its e-commerce revenue continued to shine.

"Arguably the most surprising comp sales figures were for Costco’s e-commerce business, which climbed 28% year over year, on top of a tough double-digit comp of 14.5% a year ago," said Versace. "We expect overall digital shopping figures in the March Retail Sales report to be strong on the back of Amazon’s (AMZN) 'Big Spring Sale' event."

Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024

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Here is why an airline is trolling Sydney Sweeney

Ryanair saw a chance to troll the White Lotus star on its social media platform.

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Launched out of Dublin in 1985, the budget carrier known as Ryanair  (RYAOF)  has grown into the largest airline in Europe with its business model of offering rock-bottom prices that in some cases can be as little as €20 euros for short flights between nearby European cities. 

Now in its fourth decade, the airline has also managed to reach a new generation with its unconventional social media presence and humor that in some cases verges into trolling and making fun of its own clients. When a passenger complained about the service during a flight on social media, an airline representative responded by asking whether she would rather pay “€19.99 or €136,000,000?” for a private jet. In a different video posted to its TikTok account, Ryanair looped a shot of a passenger standing when everyone else is sitting down to poke fun at travelers who get up too early after landing.

Related: A budget airline is wildly popular on TikTok for actually being funny

The latest person to fall victim to Ryanair’s online banter is Sydney Sweeney from the popular HBO show “White Lotus.” Earlier this week, the 26-year-old actress appeared in an IMDB video in which she revealed that Leonardo DiCaprio was her celebrity crush growing up.

A Ryanair plane sits on the ground in Zaventem, Belgium. Photo by Thierry Monasse/Getty Images.

Thierry Monasse/Getty Images

DiCaprio also got dragged into this (here is how)

After a fan site shared this clip from the interview on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, Ryanair reshared it while adding that Sweeney was out of luck because she was “much too old for him.” (The latter is a reference to the long-running internet joke that DiCaprio rarely dates women older than 25 even though the actor is turning 50 later this year. At 26, Sweeney is still almost half his age.)

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The post received more than 12 million views and 182,000 upvotes as a result of quickly going viral as an example of Ryanair’s dark humor — simultaneously trolling two separate people.

‘Booking a ticket on Ryanair after this…’

“Too savage," wrote one of the commenters while another added that he was definitely “booking a ticket on @Ryanair after this.”

Over the last four years and after the pandemic especially, the airline has amassed a significant TikTok and Instagram following with this type of social media strategy. Sometimes it crosses the line into making fun of clients (and leads to some angry comments) but generally travelers are receptive because there are plenty of times when Ryanair is also self-deprecating.

Back in September, founder and CEO Michael O’Leary was pied in the face during a visit to the European Commission Headquarters in Brussels (protesters argued that ultra-low fares like the kind Ryanair offers are a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions because they demotivate people from taking the train). O’Leary was captured wiping the cream off his face and saying “well done” to the protesters before heading off to have his meeting with the European lawmakers.

Ryanair's social media team quickly jumped on the chance to post a video calling it a “warm welcome in Brussels” as well as advertise some new routes it launched for the coming winter season by saying that it has some “tasty low fares.”

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You can get into many national parks for free (here is how)

The start of National Park Week means you can get in without paying the entry fee.

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Every year, National Park Week is organized with the goal of raising awareness around the country’s parks and forests.

While the pandemic has significantly increased the number of people who started traveling locally and made a goal to visit as many National Parks as possible, the aim of education about what treasures the country has and how they need to be conserved remains.

Related: These national parks are the most expensive to visit

Ever year, the National Park Service (NPS) also marks the start of National Park Week by waiving the entry fees that many of the parks charge its visitors. This year, free admission is available on April 20 while various activities are organized for the length of the week. 

Veronika Bondarenko took this photo from New River Gorge National Park.

Veronika Bondarenko

This is when you can get into Yosemite, Teton and other parks for free

“Love national parks?” the NPS writes in its announcement. “There's a holiday for that! Join us for National Park Week, a nine-day celebration of everything ‘parks.’ Not just about more than 400 national parks nationwide of different shapes, sizes, and types.”

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The entry price of each national park varies (some are free entirely while others only charge for things like parking or camping which would not be waived). Parks like Yosemite in California’s Sierra Nevada Mountains and Glacier National Park on the border between Montana and Canada’s British Columbia charge a $35 entry fee per vehicle which will be waived on April 20. 

The fee is lower ($30 per vehicle) in Florida national parks like Everglades and Gulf Islands National Seashore but, regardless of the individual number, will be waived for the day. One will also not have to pay the lower entry fees for those coming by bike or foot.

National Parks are getting crowded and this leads to higher fees

While the waived fee can help some save some money and take advantage of a national park as a large family, visitors have been reporting that parks can get especially crowded during the free days.

As overcrowding has become a persistent issue even during the regular season, many parks across the country have been trying different things to combat it — from raising entry fees to timing when visitors come in.

At the end of March, Mount Rainier National Park in Washington State announced that it will soon start requiring those entering through its Paradise Corridor from the Southeast and Sunrise Corridor from the northeast between May and September to register their visit online. 

Earlier in the year, year, Zion National Park in Utah also raised park entry prices from $20 to $35 per night for those wanting to spend the night camping in its Watchman or South Campgrounds.

“Mount Rainier National Park has experienced an approximate 40% increase in visitation over the last 10 years, leading to overcrowding during the summer and damage to fragile ecosystems," the Washington National Park Service said in a statement on the changes. "In 2024, Mount Rainier National Park will implement a pilot timed entry reservation system to improve the visitor experience to the park by reducing wait times, congestion, and resource impacts on trails caused by overcrowding.”

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