Drudge Retort: Red Meat for Yellow Dogs

The Food and Drug Administration has allowed drugs for cancer and other diseases to stay on the market even when follow-up studies showed they didn't extend patients' lives, say congressional investigators. A report due out Monday from the Government Accountability Office also shows that the FDA has never pulled a drug off the market due to a lack of required follow-up about its actual benefits even when such information is more than a decade overdue.

Liberal Blog Advertising Network

Menu

Subscriptions

Author Info

iraqibukkake

MORE STORIES

Special Features

Comments

Admin's note: Participants in the discussion of this weblog entry should note the site's moderation policy.

FDA has never pulled a drug off the market due to a lack of required follow-up about its actual benefits even when such information is more than a decade overdue.

Boy that kinda shoots a hole in the "FDA is not a worthless agency, they just don't have the right people in charge" argument that government lovers like to throw around.

Ehhh aren't you expecting too much out of an agency with a piddly $3.2 billion budget?

Lets give them $20 Billion and we should really start seeing results.

...and doesn't most of their budget come from private companies? ...companies wanting their product fast-track approved so they can get it on the shelves? Interesting.

Anyone want to come in here and defend the FDA? Like under a democrat it operates COMPLETELY different from a republican president?

it IS different...they have good intentions now

Lets give them $20 Billion and we should really start seeing results.

#2 | Posted by andyuhenet at 2009-10-26 10:17 AM | Reply | Flag
Yes thats it throw more money at them, what a fuckin retard comment...

Yes thats it throw more money at them, what a fuckin retard comment...

He was being sarcastic bro...

He was being sarcastic bro...

#7 | Posted by IraqiBukkake at 2009-10-27 02:19 PM
Ok sorry

This is good news the GAO is after this. The FDA does not have the authority to enforce phase 4 studies (studies that must be completed after drug approval) Some of these drugs get fast tracked so that they may save lives but then the FDA can't go back after them without data showing the drug is dangerous or violating good manufacturing practices. It's about time the FDA recieves this authority.

You can never tell when a pro big business shill is being sarcastic or not. I took it as sarcasm, but there is many in the industry that think this is exactly the way to keep the FDA in the drug companies pocket.

Of course there is no drugs being pulled from the market. These companies paid a small fortune in bribes (otherwise know as lobbyist fees) to get the worthless drugs approved anyway. After all, what's the risk of lawsuit? The patients all died anyway.

The question here is, can you sue a drug company for not curing you with their snake oil? Of course not. Consumers in America can only sue if the drugs don't kill you.

It's about time the FDA recieves this authority.
#9 | Posted by Novastiv

Do ya think?

Apparently our lawmakers don't

Apparently our lawmakers don't
#13 | Posted by Novastiv

What a surprise.

It is no surprise, the H1N1 flu shot has never been proven safe by the FDA and they have railroaded it and force fed the population not knowing the long term results.
There are documented cases of nurses inoculated by the H1N1 flue shot that have died within a few days after inoculation...

There are documented cases of nurses inoculated by the H1N1 flue shot that have died within a few days after inoculation...

We all know what they call that in Russia.

The FDA as all regulatory agencies has been systematically neutered. It's researchers have lost 50% of their manning since 2001. It will take them 1-2 years just to get back to previous manning levels, more like 3-4 years.

Another benefit bought to you by corporate USA.

Post a comment
Comments are closed for this entry.
Drudge Retort

Home | News | Comments | User Blogs | Nooner | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | Copyright 2009 World Readable