In tracing the history of evidence-based medicine tonight (for a lecture I have to give on Friday), a found the story of thalidomide on wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalidomide ).
(While I recognize that the information provided on this site is uncorroborated, I also recognize that it has been referenced by Federal Distric Courts in various decisions - see http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/29/technology/29wikipedia.html?ex=1186545600&en=4e6683fb4fac3044&ei=5070 - so I consider it possibility generating rather than evidence corroborating.)
This story is a tragic one of a company with a product to sell (a "treatment looking for an indication" - hmmm...) and its unscrupulous marketing of this product in the absence of evidence of both safety and efficacy.
The story of Thalidomide should serve as a stark and poignant reminder of the potential harmful effects of a marketing campaign, impelled by profiteering, gone awry.
This is discussion forum for physicians, researchers, and other healthcare professionals interested in the epistemology of medical knowledge, the limitations of the evidence, how clinical trials evidence is generated, disseminated, and incorporated into clinical practice, how the evidence should optimally be incorporated into practice, and what the value of the evidence is to science, individual patients, and society.
Showing posts with label phocomelia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phocomelia. Show all posts
Monday, August 6, 2007
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