Guest guest Posted November 10, 2005 Report Share Posted November 10, 2005 Ah, the complexity of life… Internet could change clinical research Researchers have begun using the Internet to recruit eligible participants for clinical trials from all over the country in a shortened period of time, reducing the nine to 18 months usually needed to find clinical trial participants to a mere eight weeks for one study. Internet-based trials also reduce skewed results by ensuring allocation concealment, but some researchers remain concerned that the participants in Internet studies are not representative of the population as a whole, possibly leading to different treatment from the FDA due to data quality or integrity. FasterCures urges passage of " Save America's Biotechnology Innovation Research " Act FasterCures yesterday joined 60 other disease advocacy groups and state biotech associations in urging the congressional leadership to eliminate a regulatory barrier that is impeding innovative research. The bipartisan legislation would restore eligibility for Small Business Innovation Research grants to majority venture capital-backed biotech and medical device companies. " We need to reward companies making high-risk, high gain investments in medical research, " said FasterCures President Greg Simon. " Instead, we're punishing small companies that are doing important and innovative research simply because of the way they are funded.” Survey: Research watchdogs alienate researchers U.S. experiments that involve human subjects must be reviewed by institutional review boards, but many researchers are increasingly frustrated with the boards' demands and respond by breaking research rules, like beginning data collection before approval. One-third of respondents in a survey conducted by the NIH reported engaging in one of 10 types of misconduct in the past three years, and misconduct rates were highest for researchers who also reported being unfairly treated by governing bodies such as IRBs. *** Yup…it’s a mess out there. http://www.fastercures.org/sec/why_necessary Why haven't we made more progress against a broad range of diseases? Why, 40 years after President Nixon declared war on cancer, do we still not have a cure for a disease that kills more than 1,500 Americans every day? Why hasn't the amazing advance of computer power since the invention of the microchip done more to accelerate better treatments and cures? FasterCures intends to answer these questions - and challenge the notion [are you listening, Lee?] that medical research can advance only at a stately pace. Think about what a difference a year's acceleration in finding medical solutions would make in people's lives. Finding a cure for Type 1 diabetes just one year sooner could save hundreds of thousands from blindness, amputation of limbs, or premature death. Accelerating a cure for breast cancer by one year would not only prevent some half a million deaths worldwide, but it would save millions of women from painful and disfiguring treatments. It's not that progress has ground to a halt. Advancing medical science continues to amaze us. But there is no systematic effort to address the tangle of regulation, misplaced priorities and conflicting incentives that slow progress in an era in which the cure for so many diseases is tantalizingly close. FasterCures will not fund research or try to reform the delivery of healthcare. While those tasks are vital, others are working hard on them. What we will do is devise ways to increase the productivity of the sprawling apparatus dedicated to advancing medical solutions. Our goal is to ensure that this crucial sector of our society is functioning as effectively as possible. *** FasterCures is not a “conspiracy theorist” organization. FasterCures is governed by a board of directors that includes Nobel laureates in medicine and economics: Baltimore, Ph.D. is President of the California Institute of Technology and 1975 recipient of the Nobel Prize for his work in virology. " Engineering Immunity: A Proposal, " Baltimore, M.D., Great Essays for Change series. PDF version: HTML version. Ernest Bates, M.D. is a board-certified neurosurgeon, Chairman and CEO of the American Shared Hospital Services, and member of the Board of Trustees of s Hopkins University. " What is Slowing the Search for Cures? " Ernest Bates, M.D., Great Essays for Change series. PDF version: HTML version. Becker, Ph.D. is a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago and a 1992 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences. " Power to the Patients, " Becker, Ph.D., Great Essays for Change series. PDF version: HTML version. B. Brewer, is the Managing Partner of Crest Asset Management. G. Brinker is the former U.S. Ambassador to Hungary and Founder of the G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. L. Klowden is President and CEO of the Milken Institute. Gerald Levey, M.D. is Provost and Dean of the University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine. " Personalized Genetic Medicine: In Theory and In Practice, " Gerald Levey, M.D., Great Essays for Change series. PDF version: HTML version. Shmuel Meitar is Director of the Aurec Group and Vice Chairman of Aurec Ltd. Merkin, M.D. is CEO and Founder of the Heritage Provider Network. " A Vision of the Future? " Merkin, M.D., Great Essays for Change series. PDF version: HTML version. Milken is Chairman of the Milken Institute and Chairman of FasterCures / The Center for Accelerating Medical Solutions. " A Constant Advocate for Medical Progess, " Milken, Letter to the Editor, The Wall Street Journal, December 16, 2003. " American Science, American Lives, " Milken, The Wall Street Journal, July 14, 2003. (PDF) " Rethinking the War on Cancer: Moving from a War of Attrition to a Plan of Attack, " Milken, National Cancer Summit, November 14, 1995 A. Steinberg is chairman and CEO of InPhonic and a member of the board of directors for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. 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