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Related: About this forumSpravato: The controversial ketamine-like drug that Trump is pushing on veterans
Source: Center for Public Integrity and the Guardian
The controversial ketamine-like drug that Trump is pushing on veterans
The president has touted the drugs benefits and offered to help a senior Veterans Affairs official negotiate the purchase of the drug
Peter Cary of the Center for Public Integrity
Tue 18 Jun 2019 07.00 BST Last modified on Tue 18 Jun 2019 12.59 BST
Personal interest from Donald Trump appears to have put a controversial anti-depressant on a fast track at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) that shoved aside usual protocols, even though experts inside and outside the government have serious concerns the drug is effective and say it may be dangerous.
Sources inside the Department of Veterans Affairs say staffers were essentially told by a senior official to drop everything in March and accelerate the drugs availability because the president had expressed enthusiasm for the drug, Spravato, as a possible treatment for depressed veterans.
Questions have also been raised about a trio of Trump friends who have been working on veterans issues and interacting with Johnson & Johnson regarding programs for troubled vets.
In the midst of a rapidly convened series of VA meetings early that month, another official said the president wanted the VA to buy truckloads of the drug, according to sources. Trump also touted the drugs benefits to the veterans affairs secretary, Robert Wilkie, in a White House meeting just last week, offering to help negotiate the VAs purchase of the drug, according to Bloomberg.
A key VA panel, the so-called formulary committee, is meeting this week to decide if Spravato, whose formal name is esketamine, will be added to the list of drugs that must be available to VA pharmacies. A vote is expected on Wednesday, though a final decision may take longer. Esketamine is a derivative of ketamine, which has been used to treat depression, and has been abused as a party drug.
-snip-
The president has touted the drugs benefits and offered to help a senior Veterans Affairs official negotiate the purchase of the drug
Peter Cary of the Center for Public Integrity
Tue 18 Jun 2019 07.00 BST Last modified on Tue 18 Jun 2019 12.59 BST
Personal interest from Donald Trump appears to have put a controversial anti-depressant on a fast track at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) that shoved aside usual protocols, even though experts inside and outside the government have serious concerns the drug is effective and say it may be dangerous.
Sources inside the Department of Veterans Affairs say staffers were essentially told by a senior official to drop everything in March and accelerate the drugs availability because the president had expressed enthusiasm for the drug, Spravato, as a possible treatment for depressed veterans.
Questions have also been raised about a trio of Trump friends who have been working on veterans issues and interacting with Johnson & Johnson regarding programs for troubled vets.
In the midst of a rapidly convened series of VA meetings early that month, another official said the president wanted the VA to buy truckloads of the drug, according to sources. Trump also touted the drugs benefits to the veterans affairs secretary, Robert Wilkie, in a White House meeting just last week, offering to help negotiate the VAs purchase of the drug, according to Bloomberg.
A key VA panel, the so-called formulary committee, is meeting this week to decide if Spravato, whose formal name is esketamine, will be added to the list of drugs that must be available to VA pharmacies. A vote is expected on Wednesday, though a final decision may take longer. Esketamine is a derivative of ketamine, which has been used to treat depression, and has been abused as a party drug.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/jun/17/spravato-ketamine-like-drug-that-experts-doubt-and-trump-is-pushing-on-veterans
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See also: Trump's raves put drug for vets on fast track, but experts arent sure it work (Center for Public Integrity)
The anti-depressant drug Spravato is delivered via a nasal inhaler. The drug can produce serious side effects, such as disconnection from surroundings, sedation, dizziness, and high blood pressure, and patients must stay in their doctors office for two hours after treatment. (Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson)
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Spravato: The controversial ketamine-like drug that Trump is pushing on veterans (Original Post)
Eugene
Jun 2019
OP
C_U_L8R
(44,983 posts)1. Must explain the sniffles and the weird behavior.
Trump knows his party drugs. And graft.