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Service to mankind or medicine for profit
(China Daily)
Updated: 2008-04-23 09:44

Service to mankind or medicine for profit

People pay medical bills at a cashier's counter in a Beijing hospital in this file photo. Some patients in the country, suffering from chronic and infectious diseases but unable to afford high medical costs, reportedly turn to clinical trials for free treatment. Foreign drug firms are said to be attracted to China because of low costs and a rich pool of patients.[China Daily]

Are multinational pharmaceutical companies doing mankind a favor by conducting clinical trials (on humans) or are they using Chinese people as guinea pigs to make more money? The question came to the fore again with a court hearing on a medical dispute in Beijing last week.

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Ouyang Lidong, 36, of Hunan province, was admitted to Beijing You'an Hospital in 2006. Doctors diagnosed he had complicated liver problems and only a liver transplant could save his life. Since a donor liver was not immediately available, the hospital doctors recommended on Dec 5, 2006, that he be put on extracorporeal liver assist device (ELAD), or an artificial liver. Developed and manufactured by Vital Therapies Inc., California, the ELAD is designed to help liver failure patients survive till a donor liver is available or another mode of treatment is found, says the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) website. The device, however, has not been approved for use in the US.

Ouyang was part of a free trial program, and his wife He Binying accepted the offer in a desperate bid to save his life. But he soon developed complications, including rising blood sugar levels, breathing problems and hemoptysis (coughing up of blood from the respiratory tract that indicates a severe infection of the bronchi or lungs), which proved fatal.

But before that - in fact, as soon as he developed the new complications - his wife requested the doctors to put him off the ELAD. Her requests went unheeded till Dec 7. And by the time the therapy was stopped, Ouyang's condition had deteriorated. He was transferred to the intensive care unit (ICU) later, and died on Dec 27, 2006.

A few days after his death, He Binying filed a lawsuit against the hospital, alleging that its doctors' negligence had caused the death of her husband. "Before we signed the paper giving consent for the use of the ELAD, the hospital authorities had promised to stop the therapy as soon as any adverse effect or discomfort was detected. They had insisted it was very safe, too," she says.

"They made the wrong recommendation for the ELAD trial, which is more suitable for acute liver failure, whereas my husband had been suffering from hepatitis B for 12 years." Worse, they broke their promise and continued the trial despite his worsening condition, she says.

The hospital lawyer, on the other hand, argued in court last week that the couple had signed the consent form before the trial, and knew full well the efficacy of and potential risks associated with the ELAD. "That should be enough to exempt the hospital from any legal liability," he said.


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