Is Your Country Attractive for Clinical Trials

In an article recently published in Science, P.V. Padma examines the advantages of conducting clinical trials in India. It reads, initially, like a shiny tourist brochure: India-based trials are inexpensive, the country’s high population holds out the prospect of easy recruitment of subjects, many of the local health personnel speak English, and unlike Africa, Indians are increasingly suffering from the sorts of diseases afflicting Americans and Europeans, such as diabetes and heart disease. Potential study participants in India are also interesting to recruit given that they 'treatment naive' -- for reasons that should be obvious in the light of local per capital expenditures on health care. The list of attractions could be expanded. But why bother: many major drug companies are already sold on India, and have been scrambling to outsource their clinical trials there for the past few years.

Like any tourist brochure, the fine print lies buried somewhere under the glossy images. In this case, it is a lack of adequately trained staff, a regulatory bureaucracy which is slow and is (though the author delicately avoids the issue) prone to corruption, and a recent history of ethical scandals involving the use of unapproved drugs or the use of approved drugs for unapproved purposes. But nothing, the author suggests, that can't be smoothed over with a few IRB workshops, a few short-term benefits for study participants, and the "check is in the mail" notion of future general access to the tested medications.
-Stuart Rennie

contribute a comment

Comments have been closed for this post.

what is this?

A 'Nature Top 50' science blog by the editors, staff and friends of The American Journal of Bioethics. Science writes: "To follow the latest twists in ... science stories with social impact, dive into this Web log"

The original story behind this blog

What people are saying about blog.bioethics.net

recently on blog.bioethics.net

March Issue of AJOB is Now Online!

Trans fat bans, peer recruitment for human subjects research, and the clash of culture versus the rights of physicians are the featured issues in this... (more)

Trans Fats Today. Hot Dogs Tomorrow?

Will banning artificial trans fats today effect your ability to have a hot dog tomorrow? On the The Bioethics Channel, Lorell LaBoube seeks an answer... (more)

Looking for Dr. Right? Get Yours via Speed Date!

Want to find your "Dr. Right"? Now, you can! You can meet your next doctor on a "speed date." Dne Texas hospital is trying its... (more)

End of Life-ology

William King is dying from MS. His two twenty-something sons, Ennis and Malcolm, already lost their mother to cancer 15 years earlier and now must... (more)

If You Are STILL Wondering Why Health Care Reform Is Important...

Check out this statistic from the Chicago Tribune today: "Illinois consumers to pay up to 60% more [for health insurance premiums], data show." When do... (more)

this blog's feed

  • Subscribe
    • XML
    • Google Reader or Homepage
    • Add to My Yahoo!
    • Subscribe with Bloglines
    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • Add to My AOL
    • Convert RSS to PDF
    • Add to Technorati Favorites!
    • Add to your phone
    • Get RSS Buttons

info

archives

tags