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The Right to Try

How the Federal Government Prevents Americans from Getting the Lifesaving Treatments They Need

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Why should you need the government’s permission to save your own life?

Jenn McNary’s two sons, Max and Austin, were diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy—a fatal disorder that leads to muscle degeneration and eventually death. In a cruel and unnecessary twist, Max received access to a clinical trial; Austin didn’t. As a result, Max was able to get out of his wheelchair and play on his school soccer team while Austin continued to deteriorate until he could not even feed himself.

The FDA takes as long as fifteen years to approve a new drug, demanding near-absolute proof of effectiveness before allowing commercial distribution. But this ignores the urgent plight of millions of terminally ill Americans who have run out of approved options—and are running out of time. These patients are not looking for a 100 percent guarantee that a treatment will work for them. They are looking for a fighting chance.

Why can’t they have that chance? Why don’t they have the right to try . . . the right to save their own lives?

Author and activist Darcy Olsen, president of the Goldwater Institute, tells the remarkable story behind the Right to Try movement, the national campaign to give dying Americans access to cutting-edge treatments that are under study but still years away from receiving the FDA’s green light. The men, women, and children featured in these pages are our own family members, friends, and neighbors. Their heartbreaking, triumphant, and inspirational stories prove the necessity for Right to Try laws. Because everyone deserves the Right to Try.

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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2015
      The president and CEO of the Goldwater Institute makes a convincing case that the slow pace of the Federal Drug Administration's development and approval process for new medications is needlessly costing lives. Throughout this forceful book, Olsen cites troubling statistics that underscore the depth of what she claims is a worsening problem. "The FDA," she writes, "takes as long as 15 years to bring a new medicine to market and Americans are now waiting 60 percent longer for the FDA to approve life-saving medical devices-such as stents and valves-than they did just seven years ago." This is particularly disturbing in the case of patients with serious illnesses who are denied access to promising new treatments. According to the author, one cause of the problem is asymmetry in the approval process. The FDA is incentivized to be overcautious. If someone dies after undergoing a new treatment approved by the agency, there is a scandal; however, there is insufficient attention paid to deaths attributable to delayed approval. "Instead of speeding medical innovation," writes Olsen, "the FDA is slowing it down-demanding more data, more tests, and more procedures on more subjects before it will approve a drug." In some cases, of course, more data and more tests are warranted. But though "American patients used to be the first to benefit from their country's enormous investments in basic medical research," that is no longer the case. The author presents case histories of patients fortunate enough to be enrolled in FDA-approved trials, many of whom experienced remarkable cures. For terminally ill patients, the odds that an experimental drug will help, though as low as 20 percent, may still be attractive. Olsen's organization is leading a bipartisan campaign to pass Right to Try legislation allowing patients and their doctors to bypass FDA regulations in deciding whether or not to try experimental treatments and for drug companies to make them available on a compassionate basis. High-quality advocacy certain to stir debate.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2015
      Should people suffering from incurable diseases be allowed to decide (along with their doctor) whether to undergo treatment with experimental drugs that have been proven safe? Or is it prudent for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), through its regulatory process, to exert authority over that choice? Olsen, who is affiliated with a conservative policy and legal organization, advocates a Right to Try law allowing terminally ill Americans access to potentially life-saving new medications stuck in FDA limbo. Already, such legislation has been passed in more than 20 states. Olsen shares the tragic and heroic struggles of patients and families understandably desperate to obtain FDA-unapproved investigational treatments, including a boy with osteosarcoma who must move to England to receive immune therapy, a man with ALS getting stem cell injections, a middle-aged woman with multiple myeloma treated with measles virus, and brothers with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. All medical treatments require balancing risk and reward. Olsen makes a compelling case that patients with fatal illnesses have a moral and should have the legal right to choose their courses of medical action.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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