Press enter after choosing selection
This item is no longer in AADL's Collection.

The Right to try : : how the Federal Government Prevents Americans From Getting the Life-Saving Treatments They Need

Olsen, Darcy. Book - 2015 None on shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 4 out of 5

Cover image for The right to try : : how the federal government prevents Americans from getting the life-saving treatments they need

Sign in to request

AADL has no copies of this item

Introduction: Meet Lazarus : the first man in medical history to survive Lou Gehrig's Disease -- Sophie's choice : how the FDA let a mother save one son... and left her other son to die -- Five thousand miles for a cure : how one American family moved overseas to save their dying son -- Making medical miracles : the cutting-edge cancer killers you can't get yet -- What Steve Jobs saw : how the FDA stops American doctors from using a proven cancer treatment -- Inside man : how one biotech CEO came to champion Right to Try -- We are the 99 percent : how Right to Try has taken America by storm -- Compassionate use : the mythical unicorn -- Would you use a fifteen-year-old cell phone? : how to get American medicine back on top -- If you have the right to die, you should have the right to try -- Where do I start? : a step-by-step guide to seeking an investigational treatment -- Afterword : Everyone deserves the right to try : an update on Jean McNary, Ted Harada, and Diego Morris.
"The inspiring state-by-state campaign to allow sick Americans access to experimental treatments currently blocked by the government, chronicled by the woman leading the charge. Should you need the government's permission to try to save your own life? Today, the FDA regulates medications available to Americans. But it takes an average of ten years to bring a new drug to market. Every day thousands of Americans die unnecessarily from fatal diseases for which lifesaving treatments that now exist or are being developed are ruled too "dangerous" for commercial distribution. But how does that FDA standard apply to someone in the terminal stages of cancer or ALS? 'Right to Try' is filled with stories of heroism and heartbreak -- of courageous Americans who beat illnesses no one thought could be defeated; parents who won the fight to get their children access to cutting-edge cures; patients who were denied life-saving treatments by the government ostensibly for their own protection; and incredible doctors and researchers pioneering revolutionary cures. Drawing on her experience fighting for patients, Darcy Olsen goes inside the federal bureaucracy that is stopping millions from accessing these lifesaving treatments, lays out the case for expanding access to experimental medicines, and describes the ongoing national campaign to change these laws state-by-state. Cogent and persuasive, this powerful and informative book is clarion call for reform that definitively answers the question: When your mortality hangs in the balance, shouldn't you have the right to try to save your own life?"--Provided by publisher.

REVIEWS & SUMMARIES

Booklist Review
Summary / Annotation
Table of Contents
Fiction Profile

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

No community reviews. Write one below!

Cover image for The right to try : : how the federal government prevents Americans from getting the life-saving treatments they need


PUBLISHED
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2015]
Year Published: 2015
Description: viii, 311 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Language: English
Format: Book

ISBN/STANDARD NUMBER
9780062407528
006240752X

SUBJECTS
United States. -- Food and Drug Administration -- Moral and ethical aspects.
Clinical trials.
Clinical trials -- Government policy.
Medicine, Experimental -- Government policy.
Medical policy.
Patients -- Civil rights.