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-   -   "Possible sinemet cr shortage in Canada" (https://www.neurotalk.org/parkinson-s-disease/113354-sinemet-cr-shortage-canada.html)

lindylanka 07-09-2010 08:46 AM

Bob,
My suggestion is that anyone OUTSIDE of the UK could help with this campaign by using the general contact at Parkinson's UK to email a brief message of support for the campaign.

I also suggest that it would be useful if a tag line was added to the email perhaps just after your name indicating you are a Parkinsons patient, the years you have had PD, and what country you are from.

I am sure they will be glad of the support.

Lindy

Bob Dawson 09-12-2010 12:46 PM

Notice of new address for this as it moves to the UK
 
A memo to those who are new here and for some reason are clicking on this ancient thread:
(1). This discussion continued in a new thread here:

UK Sinemet Shortage Response
http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread129198.html

AND
(2) When Merck falls apart, a new Merck could emerge. Here is a note from the blog called “The New Merck Review”:

Not Much Real “News” Expected — From Merck — At Morgan Stanley Global Healthcare Conference, Tomorrow
September 12, 2010

QUOTE:… “On the small chance that Whitehouse Station will actually make an important new disclosure tomorrow, I’ll live-log portions of it, starting at 9:05 a.m., EDT tomorrow. Is news of a settlement of the Remicade®/Simponi® “change of control” dispute with J&J’s Centocor unit possible? Nah, not really. But I will listen, just the same — you never know.
Here’s a link to listen in, for yourself — you’ll need to sign in and provide an email address, though.
I should point out that there will likely be some “serious back-scratching” going on at this conference — that is, expect many softball questions,….. QUOTE
“Do go and read the whole thing here:"
http://anewmerckreviewed.wordpress.com/

(3) To you from failing hands
We pass the torch.
Hold it high.

Koala77 05-09-2011 03:30 AM

:bump: BUMP :bump: for Bob.

Bob Dawson 07-07-2011 02:33 PM

Thank you, Merck. Congratulations.
 
Dear Neurotalkers,
Sorry to bump this forward once again, but people are still reading the thread and this post brings at least that chapter to a more peaceful end. Sinemet shortage remains top secret, but top management at Merck have delivered a transparency policy that is a step in the right direction, and a leap ahead of their competitors. Merck just raised the bar.

Letter to:
Michael Rosenblatt, M.D., Merck executive vice president and chief medical officer
And
To Ken Frazier, the relatively new CEO of Merck
From Bob Dawson

I send thanks and gratitude to Merck for their new policy on transparency. This will not help us decipher the ever-mysterious story of the “global sinemet shortage”, as you are bound by a mysterious confidentiality agreement that should never have been signed. For the sinemet story, I remain completely critical.
But for the future, your new policy comes as a very pleasant surprise for all kinds of patients.
Merck just stepped ahead of its competitors in coming to terms with the need for transparency. Merck just raised the bar. Merck just adopted a new policy based entirely on principle. They have chosen a path that is harder for them but better for the human spirit, and better for science, and better for sharing information to speed up research, and better as one item that will help to build trust.

I got this good news from a Merck-critic far more entrenched than me (“a new Merck reviewed”). This is his address: http://anewmerckreviewed.wordpress.c...ency-measures/

I am placing this in that long thread about sinemet at Neurotalk. This does not answer our questions about sinemet, but it answers some questions about the future.

MERCK OPENS UP INFORMATION
Press release from Merck:

. . .Today Merck said the company is strengthening its publications policy as part of its continuing, voluntary commitment to increase transparency about how it conducts business.

Effective July 1, when Merck submits a manuscript on a study of an investigational or an approved medicine or vaccine to a biomedical journal, Merck will include the protocol and statistical analysis plan as part of the submission package. Merck previously supplied this material only upon request. Upon a journal’s acceptance of the manuscript for publication, Merck will provide the journal with the opportunity to post on its web site, at journal’s discretion, the key sections of the protocol, including the objectives and hypotheses, patient inclusion and exclusion criteria, study design and procedures, efficacy and safety measures, the statistical analysis plan, and any amendments relating to those sections.

It’s our responsibility to make available important information about our products and the science on which they are based, and do so in an objective, accurate and balanced way,” said Michael Rosenblatt, M.D., Merck executive vice president and chief medical officer.

“Proactively sharing our study protocols will enhance the exchange of ideas within the scientific and medical community, and ultimately lead to a better understanding of the benefits and risks of our products among health care professionals and patients. . .

And home came Ulysses over the wine-dark ocean, with dolphins leaping, and laurel leaves in his hair…

Thank you, Dr. Michael Rosenblatt
Thank you, Ken Frazier
That was a class act, that last bit, and I am grateful.
Signed,
Bob Dawson
Parkinson’s Underground


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