• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    First step is testing safety. Then you give it to a much larger group to establish the level of effectiveness, since you need a lot of data to establish that. After the effectiveness is established you would declare it safe AND effective.

    SMH. Can’t imagine how that’s not obvious.

    • Gormadt
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      81 year ago

      It seems a lot of people misunderstand that being declared “safe” doesn’t mean it’s effective and being declared “effective” doesn’t mean it’s safe.

      For example: water is safe, but it’s not an effective treatment for a heart attack. And dying is an effective treatment for heartburn (it’ll stop it) but it sure as hell ain’t safe.

      It’s important to have both.

      • @WhiteHawk
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        61 year ago

        It’s important to have both.

        Heartburn and a heart attack?

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I accidentally inhaled maybe half a teaspoon of water the other day. Was coughing up mucus and even a little foam for like three days. I googled “am I in danger if I inhale a little water?” and it was like “you gon die muthafucka!”

        But if I went to the ER every time google told me I was gonna die I’d be in so much debt.

        Anyway I’m still here for now. I’m still coughing up weird globs of mucus at random moments.

        I fucking hate how expensive medicine is.

        • Gormadt
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          21 year ago

          If it continues it may be cause for concern BTW

          Could turn into some kind of lung infection which would be cause for concern

          Maybe not ER but urgent care maybe?

          IDK I usually go to the urgent care first because I’m a broke MF and the ER is expensive AF.