With the governor’s signature Colorado is now the first
state to
allow terminally ill patients to have access to medication that is not
approved by the government.
Gov John Hickenlooper |
Gov. John Hickenlooper stated he doesn’t want patients to
die knowing there may have been a drug in existence to help them that they
couldn’t have.
Ron Patterson is a former engineer who never imagined he
could become one of the 600,000 people who die each year from cancer.
“They did blood work, and when he got the results he called
me and said, you better get into Poudre Valley Hospital right now. You got
something really bad,” said Patterson.
His only option was chemotherapy but Hickenlooper’s signing
of the nation’s first “Right To Try” bill into law will provide Patterson with
more options.
“Patients should be able to try a treatment even though it
hasn’t been approved if it’s an attempt to save their life if they’re in a terminal
situation,” said Hickenlooper.
Right now there are over 20,000 safe medications making
their way through the Food and Drug Administration approval process but only 3
percent of the sickest patients are eligible for clinical trials.
Grace Taylor with Poudre Valley Hospital says the law could
open new doors for terminally ill patients.
“It is frustrating, at times there is regulation that we do
have to go through with reason, so hopefully this new bill will help navigate
that path a little bit more cleaner, and a little bit more proactively now
going forward,” said Taylor.
“It will definitely give people a sense of hope.”
At this point Patterson says he has nothing more to lose in
order to gain a fighting chance.
“It just gives me another tool in the war chest to try,”
said Patterson.
Hickenlooper also passed another bill into law that educates
people on how to take their prescription medications safely.
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