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Exactly…and especially here.As it is with life, such things are never as simple as they first appear.
I would not necessarily say the FDA is the problem. There is a lot of good in having the pharmaceutical and medical device industry subject to regulations that help guarantee the safety of the patient. However, the FDA does need to recognize that while it needs to maintain a semi-adversarial relationship with the companies they regulate for the sake of enforcing quality standards, they also need to understand they are a partner in the industry because they should have an interest in making safe drugs and medical devices available to the public.So this begs the question: Is the FDA the problem?
Often people who die from a lack of drugs is not the fault of the FDA…there are several considerations.People can die from lack of drugs the same as from a bad drug so it’d be interesting to know if the FDA is better at saving or killing people.
I’ve participated in one study that was cancelled. It was in phase 3, for at least two different diseases. So all that time and money to get it that far. Then it was dropped. Why? Because it didn’t work well enough to bring to market.Remember that profit, while good for us and bad for them, is what motivates advancement in medical science. I have participated in four clinical trials now, hoping in part to advance cancer treatment.
In exchange for the skin I have in the game, I have received millions of dollars in developmental drugs at no cost over the last 10 years. Was there risk? Of course! That’s how progress is made. At least one of the drugs is now approved and in use by cancer patients.
As it is with life, such things are never as simple as they first appear.
Actually, many were in the 50s and 60s. There was no caution known for its use in pregnant women, and I attended school with a “Thalidomide baby”And the FDA is vital in my opinion. No Americans were exposed to Thalidimide due to the FDA.