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by ALittleLight
1833 days ago
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I think that makes the case for balls to the wall experimentation. Let whoever is interested and can afford it try this drug. If they have good results, lets cover it with medicaid. If not, try something else. If we cut out regulations and trials and requirements and so on for what medical treatments people can try, then a bunch of stuff will be tried. Most of it will be bad, but some may show effect and we can iterate on that and get better medicines. I don't advocate this style for every possible treatment. If we already have good treatments or if the illness isn't too bad, then we definitely should not risk things on trials. However, in this case, it is a disease that kills old people and we don't have any good treatments for it. Why not let people who want to experiment aggressively. |
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So you’d be giving greenlight to tons of fraudsters, exposing people to potentially way more suffering than their baseline disease causes, AND not learning anything from doing so.