Drug companies.
Drug companies, my bad. So you are claiming that people being able to use trial medicine instead of simply dying is a bad thing and you don't support it because. "drug companies"
Drug companies.
The FDA exists for a reason. Bypassing the FDA for patients to seek experimental treatment is dangerous as shit. Also, this bill lets those companies maintain exclusivity over the patent, which means what for consumers and patients?
So lets cut to the chase, you are against the "Right to try bill".
Drug companies, my bad. So you are claiming that people being able to use trial medicine instead of simply dying is a bad thing and you don't support it because. "drug companies"
You know what's more dangerous? death
Someone is dying of a terminal illness, you are agains them trying anything they want?
Oh really?
What if said medicine is administered in trials and it creates a longer, more prolonged side effect of suffering beyond the condition the medicine was supposed to treat?
Would you risk that as a patient?
I think this question is better served not by allowing experimental treatments to commence without FDA approval, but rather allowing patients to decide if they want assisted suicide rather than prolong their suffering?
That doesn't benefit insurance or drug companies, so you know it's probably something worth taking a serious look.
What if what they want is assisted suicide, but are forced into these trials that might serve as a Hail Mary but probably won't do anything more than prolong suffering and pain? That's the conversation we should be having...not "let's let a patient subject themselves to a trial of a drug not approved by the FDA".
I am for assisted suicide.
your what-ifs are a silyl game.
Which then makes your support of non-FDA approved trials that much more confusing.
Your entire position is predicated on a "what if". "What if" the drug was not approved by the FDA but cured patients. Literally, your argument in favor of this stupid thing is a "what if".
"What if" the experimental treatment worked.
Is that not your position?
Why wouldn't you want the FDA to approve clinical trials of an experimental drug or treatment you were convinced would work?
Nope. My position is if a terminally ill person wants to try an experimental medication, it's their right. YOu disagree.
It's not that simple.
Also, because it's not FDA approved, the drug company could just completely lie about the effects of the treatment, bilking the insurance company and patient out of money on a treatment they knew wouldn't work.
You're basically cool with letting drug companies lie to patients about the benefits of these experimental treatments for the sole reason that they will make money off it.
If you can't get past the emotion and see this for what it is, then that's your problem.
Your mom is dying of cancer, it's terminal and there is no hope. Except there is this medication that is in trials, experimental, but shows huge promise, she wants to take it. Would you fight against it?
How would it show huge promise if it's not been tested yet, nor has it met the testing guidelines in order for it to submit and pass an FDA approval? That's just the drug company telling you what you want to hear. That, my friend, is far more dangerous than anything we're talking about relating to a patient's terminal illness.
And didn't you just excoriate me a post ago for entering in a "what if"? Come on, dude.
If something is too good to be true, it probably is.
Also, you'll have to forgive me if I'm skeptical of what drug companies say about their products.
Have you ever had a dying friend or relative that wanted to undergo experimental treatment because they bought into propaganda? And then watching that experimental treatment not work, and your friend/loved one suffering and dying on top of being bilked out of money to pay for the treatment that didn't work?
I have.
It's pretty much the worst fucking thing in the world; to give someone false hope so they'll spend more money with you. That's what this shitty bill does.
A better approach would be to ditch false hope and instead, talk assisted suicide. Dying with dignity vs. dying from prolonged suffering after false hope.
I need a simple yes or no here.
Why? I'm not going to accommodate that, so try a different tactic.
If my mother was dying and thought this experimental illness would save her, my first question would be "who told you that this treatment would save you?"
If the answer is "a drug company", then I'd explain to her that drug company isn't interested in treating her, just billing her for the treatment, and that she's going to squander money that could be used to make her final days more comfortable.
Your question is super manipulative.
Maybe that's your point; to manipulate people's emotions so they'll be OK with getting false hope as long as it results in profits for the drug company.
False hope is the worst thing you can give to a terminally ill patient and/or their families. That's what this bill does...it should be called The False Hope Bill.
Not false hope, a hail mary
your mom false under this, would you tell her no?
Apply to the FDA, if the drug company agrees to supply the drug. Your doctor should refer to Expanded Access: Information for Physicians on the FDA site for complete information.
Same. Fucking. Thing.
A "Hail Mary" that isn't even approved by the FDA. And BTW - the FDA already has an extremely low bar when it comes to approving drugs and treatments. So if a particular treatment or drug isn't approved by the FDA, it's likely snake oil.
Maybe you missed the part of the link where it says it has to go through the FDA:
So if the FDA doesn't approve the drug, why would that be? Why would the FDA not approve an experimental drug or treatment? What could be the reason?
Not false hope, a hail mary.
https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/treatment/drugs/access-experimental
your mom false under this, would you tell her no?
so under no circumstances would you support a terminal family member from getting an experimental drug. lets just cut to the chase here.
Why? I'm not going to accommodate that, so try a different tactic.
If my mother was dying and thought this experimental treatment would save her, my first question would be "who told you that this treatment would save you?"
If the answer is "a drug company", then I'd explain to her that drug company isn't interested in treating her, just billing her for the treatment, and that she's going to squander money that could be used to make her final days more comfortable.
Your question is super manipulative.
Maybe that's your point; to manipulate people's emotions so they'll be OK with getting false hope as long as it results in profits for the drug company.
False hope is the worst thing you can give to a terminally ill patient and/or their families. That's what this bill does...it should be called The False Hope Bill.
Not under the circumstances of the False Hope Bill you're here supporting on record.
I'm totally OK with them seeking treatment so long as it's FDA approved, but that's not the emotional manipulation you're trying to do here. You're trying to show you're somehow bipartisan because you agree with Trump on the False Hope Bill, and that you think by agreeing with Trump on something -something you're not even 100% clear on yourself- that means you have credibility.
Tell me I'm wrong.