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by mumblemumble
1837 days ago
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It's worrisome because this sort of thinking - "We don't have proof that it treats the actual disease, but it does seem to treat with this thing that we think might be (but have yet to prove actually is) a cause of the disease, so let's forge ahead anyway." - has led to so many instructive case studies in purported cures that ended up being worse than the disease. It's a complete abdication of what should be basic scientific and medical principles to decide that an un- or ill-evaluated hypothesis is good and run with it, on no firmer ground than the fact that you happen to be quite fond of this particular hypothesis. |
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Of course, if the marketability restrictions truly worked the way I’m talking about, then the drug would have zero sales until that real-world problem matching its niche use-case came along. Which means there’d be no point in manufacturing it until then. But it’d be nice that it’d be “on the books” as being allowed to be produced and sold, such that it could be later rushed to market if the problem it solves was ever realized as a necessary problem to solve.