Trump gave patients a 'right to try.' It hasn't helped them
Trump gave patients a 'right to try.' It hasn't helped them

www.statnews.com
Trump gave patients a 'right to try.' It hasn't helped them

Trump gave patients a 'right to try.' It hasn't helped them
Trump gave patients a 'right to try.' It hasn't helped them
I thought this was a good thing trump did
We already had the Expanded Access Program (thank you ACT UP) and we don't want a repeat of thalidomide babies like we had before there were strong protections on how drugs get tested.
So now we have Expanded Access (EAP) with FDA oversite and Right to Try (RTT) without that oversight. Having both is confusing for everyone and most people don't know which covers what. From Journal of Law and the Biosciences (they only sampled 17 neuro-oncologists from 15 different academic medical centers):
I’m unfamiliar with the details of these programs. I thought the point of right to try was if you were going to die anyway, being allowed to try an experimental treatment as long as you had exhausted all other options where as the existing program (assuming EAP) still prevented people accessing some experimental treatments?
It wasn’t bad, just wasn’t really much
it was nothing--it was worse than nothing.
it was a sham to remove oversight and accountability from something that already existed. slap the trump name on it, maybe collect some 'contributions' from the few companies or their investors that profited.