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Critical Point Two: The AIDS Epidemic And The Parallel Track

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Critical Point Two: The AIDS Epidemic and the Parallel Track Politically framing the AIDS epidemic as the “black eye” of the FDA in the 1980s and a controversial time in the Reagan Administration is not a new concept from a modern perspective. However, when looking closely at the ramifications of AIDS patient activism on public opinion of regulation and the critical view of the Treatment IND program established to catalyze AIDS research, it is undeniable that the AIDS epidemic was a critical point for Reagan’s deregulation policy and was influential in securing favorability for the wave of neoliberalism in federal policy that drove looser regulations in the agency. In fact, the public health crisis became crucial to the establishment of a period when the FDA was vulnerable to capturing. …show more content…

What some viewed as “overregulation” was criticized for being “unnecessarily cautious and bureaucratic” and there was an increasingly pertinent pressure from the industry and economic conservatives to speed up the new drug review process. Some research showed that throughout this era of regulation, the typical new drug took more than 12 years from initial synthesis to FDA approval and that the FDA review process by itself took 2.6 years. However, because public interest and opinion continued to align with the idea that the FDA should aim to prevent the sale of unsafe or ineffective drugs in the U.S. in hopes to avoid Type I errors in drug approval, the agency was not immediately responsive to this pressure. This alignment, however, shifted in response to the AIDS epidemic and the activism that came with

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