With
Tysabri decision, the FDA declares no drug is too dangerous to
be FDA approved
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the agency that claims to
be responsible for protecting consumers from dangerous food and drug
products, has just surrendered its primary responsibility. Recently,
an FDA advisory panel voted to recommend that a dangerous prescription
drug Tysabri, which was withdrawn from the market a year ago due
to its promoting of a deadly brain disease, should now be put back
on the market.
But here's the really shocking part: The justification for this
decision to reinstate a drug with known deadly side effects is based
on the idea that patients should now weigh the risks of dangerous
drugs and decide for themselves whether the risks outweigh the benefits,
if any.
Stop the music for a minute. Do you realize that with this decision,
the FDA has just rendered itself irrelevant? If patients are going
to be held responsible for making risk vs. benefits decisions on
prescription drugs, then why do we need the FDA at all?
As you may have guessed, there are enormous problems with this new
stance by the FDA. The first is that patients do not have the medical
knowledge to understand and interpret the significance of these side
effects that will no doubt only be mentioned in small print somewhere
on a piece of paper that most patients will probably ignore. How
can the FDA justifiably turn over safety decisions on deadly drugs
to patients?
The second problem with this new stance by the FDA is that it exposes
a wicked double standard: With prescription drugs, patients should
be able to weight benefits vs. risks, even for drugs that may kill
you. But with herbs and nutritional supplements, no such decision
is extended to patients. The FDA merely bans whatever natural substances
it wishes, usually based on reports of very small numbers of people
being harmed be extremely rare overdoses (such as with ephedra).
In those cases, the FDA proudly proclaims it is, "Protecting
everyone from a dangerous herb!"
In other words, the FDA now sees its job as protecting the public
from "dangerous" herbs while shirking safety responsibilities
on truly dangerous prescription drugs. It's up to the public to decide
whether deadly drugs are worth the risk, according to the FDA. But
when one herb which has been safely used for 5,000 years in Chinese
medicine happens to harm 20 people who overdosed in a mad weight
loss frenzy, the FDA bans it "to protect everyone!"
The FDA's position now comes down to simply this: Everyone needs
to be protected from herbs and nutritional supplements, but no one
needs to be protected from prescription drugs.
And this now completes the full reversal of the FDA. The agency
now has both feet squarely in Bizarro world.
In doing this, I wonder if the FDA realizes it has made itself irrelevant.
If the agency is now merely going to pass through drug safety decisions
to doctors and patients, then why do we need the FDA at all? The
agency is no longer a gatekeeper. It is a toll booth, where drug
companies pay a toll on their way to customers. And apparently, the
toll fee is happily accepted regardless of whether the drug in question
helps people or kills them.
I've often said that no drug is too dangerous to meet FDA safety
requirements, and now the FDA has proven it. Even a drug that outright
kills patients with a painful, horrifying death will now be FDA approved.
There is no longer even the concept of safety standards at the FDA.
Now, there is merely avoidance of assessing safety.
The agency that was once tasked with actually regulating the drug
industry has now become its largest marketing department. The concept
of drug "safety" is now history. Any drug, no matter how
dangerous, is now qualified for FDA approval. If thalidomide were
a new drug today, the FDA would no doubt happily approve it for any
use as long as it carried a small-print warning about its side effects.
In fact, we may soon see the FDA (arm-in-arm with Big Pharma marketing
reps) bringing back all sorts of deadly, dangerous drugs over the
next few years. Drugs that were once withdrawn from the market due
to outrageous side effects (such as Vioxx, which reportedly caused
the death of tens of thousands of Americans) will now be re-approved
and dumped onto patients who must now make their own safety assessments
of patented, synthetic chemicals. |