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Politics : The Trump Presidency

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To: Lane3 who wrote (164670)5/19/2020 6:53:57 AM
From: combjelly  Read Replies (1) of 361623
 
Long before you get to such a trial, you have to show some sort of results on tissue cultures. If you can show some results and can formulate a mechanism by which it does what you think it does, then you can proceed. The next step is to move to animal trials. Because what works in a tissue culture doesn't necessarily work in a whole animal. If you pass those hurdles, then you have a shot at getting something approved by an ethics panel for prophylactic use. You can skip a step or so if you are dealing with terminal patients who have exhausted all other treatments. In general though, you need to have shown some sort of effectiveness in tissue cultures and have a good idea of why it is doing what you claim. "It just works" won't get you far.

At least in the US. Some other countries aren't quite as skittish as in the US when dealing with humans. Considering i-node claims to know how research is done in this country, he should know this. Heck, even research on some animals like primates needs to be reviewed by an ethics panel. As you note, the ethics of randomly dosing people, even volunteers, is a dicey area.
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