This is a strategy of the libertarian right that supports Trump. #RightToTry was never about speeding cures to the terminally ill. It was an first step in a long term plan to weaken the @US_FDA and lower the standards for drug approval. 1/https://twitter.com/SarahKarlin/status/1245063883800432640 …
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I now fear we will never really know if chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine have clinically meaningful activity vs.
#COVID19 because the RCTs will likely never be completed. We'll never know which patients might benefit the most (if they work), what the optimal dose is, etc. 10/Show this thread -
A whole lot of people will be placed at risk for serious cardiac arrhythmia, though. Actually, that's happening now, for no known benefit. 11/
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Trump doesn't care, though. His libertarian anti-regulation, anti-FDA backers don't care. They've notched a "victory" against the deep state, the regulatory state. They've set a precedent. 12/
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Next step: Get the FDA to super fast track drugs that aren't currently approved and approve them for
#COVID19 with inadequate testing. Anyone who's been paying attention knew that this would be their next move, all in the name of "saving patients." 13/Show this thread -
We'll pay a price for this in the future, when drugs are approved based on much lower evidence standards and less rigorous safety testing. Don't worry though. The free market will decide. That's what the anti-regulation right always says. 14/14
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End of conversation
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Very true! In France because of the HCQ circus, investigators struggle to recruit patients for any trial. Many patients refuse to be enrolled in a RCT. They point out to the investigators that HCQ + AZ works, no reason to be enrolled in a trial
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