A Response to Meyerson’s Defence of the American Right to Try: Experimenting with hope

Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 16 (3):463-466 (2019)
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Abstract

This comment responds to a defence of the right to try, a law adopted by the United States and many state governments that seeks to expand access to experimental drugs. In defending the right to try, Meyerson argues that it is part of a broader rights-based approach for patient access to innovation. But a drug that is still part of the experimental process may not be an innovation—indeed, it may be a failure and even harmful or dangerous. Further, this approach does not weigh other rights that may be at stake such as the property rights of the drug maker or the rights of future patients seeking access to cures. Lastly, research has found that many patients often fail to receive recommended treatments and preventive care from their providers, let alone experimental or innovative therapies. These policy problems suggest that there is a need for patients to have a greater involvement and role in their care and in how research funding is made, but the right to try fails to address these problems.

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Right to Try: In response.Denise Meyerson - 2019 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 16 (3):467-468.

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