Clinical trials are a crucial step in getting FDA approval for any drug. Without them, how would we know the various side effects or if they are even effective? Most of the time, clinical trials are successful, with few negative outcomes, and the drug receives its approval for use. But then there are some clinical trials that go horribly wrong and people paid for that with their lives.
The University of Minnesota Seroquel Experiment
It may be surprising to find out that universities can conduct clinical trials, but they can take place in many locations. FDA (the Food and Drug Administration) requires five steps for drug clearance. These are Discovery and Development, Pre-clinical Research, Clinical Research, FDA Drug Review, and FDA Post-Market Drug Safety Marketing. No clinical trial can begin without the proper authorizations. The first set of approvals needed would be from governing bodies, and that’s only after showing positive results in laboratory tests and animal studies to test the therapy’s safety and efficacy. The other part of authorization involves the informed consent of the human participants, and that’s where this particular experiment went off the rails.