new law for terminally ill: Trump just signed a... - CLL Support

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new law for terminally ill

ikahan profile image
27 Replies

Trump just signed a law giving terminally ill patients access to experimental drugs ! Isn't that great ?

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ikahan profile image
ikahan
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27 Replies
Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero

That's actually been available for some time... need to see how this will extend things, if at all...

fda.gov/ForPatients/Other/d...

We have a somewhat similar mechanism in Canada under the Special Access program. or SAP.

canada.ca/en/health-canada/...

ikahan profile image
ikahan in reply to Cllcanada

It was not a law before ! It's great for Americans.

annmcgowan profile image
annmcgowan

Hi sounds like very good news to me. I don’t know if it applies to the UK? Maybe someone here does?

Thanks for posting this information.

Ann

ikahan profile image
ikahan in reply to annmcgowan

No, unfortunately its only for Americans .

annmcgowan profile image
annmcgowan in reply to ikahan

Hi ikahan thank you for letting me know. I hope we go this way in the future.

Regards

Ann

Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero

Who's paying for these drugs?

bbc.com/news/world-us-canad...

ikahan profile image
ikahan in reply to Cllcanada

Probably the drug company and it's a good law

in reply to ikahan

That is good news. Especially for people who have no other hope. I never could understand why someone couldn't get an experimental drug to help them if nothing else presently available could help. Sensible.

Justasheet1 profile image
Justasheet1

Is it like a “hold harmless” agreement? Do you have any specific verbiage to pass along?

Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero in reply to Justasheet1

Yeah.. thats's what I understand, it removes liability from doctors and drug companies, but does not obligate drug companies to provide drugs at no cost...

I think it will open new avenues and doctors may be more keen to use 'off labels' drugs, since they will have liability protection...

I hope its a positive, but we need to see...

cllady01 profile image
cllady01Former Volunteer in reply to Cllcanada

It is only for terminal patients, considered experimental.

in reply to cllady01

If people are truly terminal, I'm sure some will want to try these experimental drugs since it would be their last hope. At some point all drugs were "experimental", some made it to mainstream, some did not.

Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero

FDA on the topic

fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom...

Newdawn profile image
NewdawnAdministrator

This ‘Right to Try Act’ appears to essentially give people with limited and dwindling options the right to use untried and untested medication within the reality that they have nothing to lose if the drugs don’t prove to have efficacy.

It’s not as far as I can see, the right to be given difficult to obtain meds rather those that are still in experimental stage.

Once the terminal stage is reached (definition in the U.K. is life expectation under 6 months), it sounds eminently sensible to me.

As Chris says, the compassionate route has been available for some time. Not sure how this is massively different except it puts it into legislature.

Newdawn

PlanetaryKim profile image
PlanetaryKim in reply to Newdawn

This is how it differs from the previous compassionate route, according to article link Chris posted:

"The new Right to Try act allows patients with life-threatening diseases to bypass the FDA's application process for "compassionate use" of experimental drugs. Patients seeking access to "investigational drugs" now need only the approval of their physician and the drug manufacturer. The new bill protects doctors and companies from the legal risks of allowing unapproved treatments unless they intentionally harm a patient."

cllady01 profile image
cllady01Former Volunteer

And gives political fodder

ikahan profile image
ikahan

cllady , it's still a good law that can only help people !

PlanetaryKim profile image
PlanetaryKim

It's interesting that the American Cancer Society opposed this bill (according to article link chris posted). I wonder why?

Lbrinks18 profile image
Lbrinks18 in reply to PlanetaryKim

I’m guessing money, but could be I’m just bitter at the moment from our ongoing insurance and cost battles 🙄

Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero in reply to PlanetaryKim

Letter of Concern.

acscan.org/sites/default/fi...

This bill, weakens the FDA and covers drug companies for all liabilities... the impediment frankly, is money, not the compassionate care system...which has worked well is since 2009...

More

medscape.com/viewarticle/89...

~chris

I’m hoping never to need the law, but am grateful we have it. Thanks. Sally

in reply to CLLCalifornia-USA

Exactly!

opal11uk profile image
opal11uk

If it gives people hope then it can't be a bad thing as long as its not false hope.

Tylers_Mom profile image
Tylers_Mom

Not thinking it will change much, if anything...

"the FDA has systems to expand access for very sick patients, which are known as expanded-access or compassionate use programmes.

“Emergency requests for individual patients are usually granted immediately over the phone and non-emergency requests are generally processed within a few days,” Dr Scott Gottlieb, the FDA commissioner, said last year.

A study by FDA researchers concluded that expanded access requests for 9,000 experimental drugs were approved 99 per cent of the time between 2005 and 2014.

What do supporters say?

Supporters say that the new bill gets rid of the application requirements of the FDA’s expanded access program, and that doing so will save patients time.

cll2013 profile image
cll2013

Actually it is not a "law" just an executive order which can be cancelled any time by the same person. Only the US Congress can pass a law.

kathymac52 profile image
kathymac52 in reply to cll2013

Someone knows her Civics!! And this order can be changed by the next President as well......as is seen by the disappearing regulations on the environment.

Cllcanada profile image
CllcanadaTop Poster CURE Hero in reply to cll2013

On March 21, 2018, the House of Representatives passed a right to try bill, sending it to the Senate for consideration.[11]

On May 22nd, the Senate passed the bill, and it was then sent to the President's desk for his signature.[12]

On May 30th, President Trump signed the bill into law.[13]

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rig...

whitehouse.gov/briefings-st...

Looks like a law to me... 👁

~chris

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