<code id='7D44A23804'></code><style id='7D44A23804'></style>
    • <acronym id='7D44A23804'></acronym>
      <center id='7D44A23804'><center id='7D44A23804'><tfoot id='7D44A23804'></tfoot></center><abbr id='7D44A23804'><dir id='7D44A23804'><tfoot id='7D44A23804'></tfoot><noframes id='7D44A23804'>

    • <optgroup id='7D44A23804'><strike id='7D44A23804'><sup id='7D44A23804'></sup></strike><code id='7D44A23804'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='7D44A23804'><label id='7D44A23804'><select id='7D44A23804'><dt id='7D44A23804'><span id='7D44A23804'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='7D44A23804'></u>
          <i id='7D44A23804'><strike id='7D44A23804'><tt id='7D44A23804'><pre id='7D44A23804'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          comprehensive

          comprehensive

          author:entertainment    Page View:334
          empty test tubes in the hand. -- first opinion coverage from STAT
          Adobe

          The Food and Drug Administration on Friday announced its intention to start regulating tests developed in laboratories — closing the “Theranos loophole” that has allowed inaccurate tests to slip through the cracks.

          Lawmakers came close last year to passing a bill that would have given the FDA this authority, but it was ultimately rejected by Republicans who sympathized with the labs in academic medical centers and hospitals that opposed the provision. FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said at the time that if the bill failed, the agency would take matters into its own hands.

          advertisement

          The proposed rule fulfills that promise, adding lab diagnostics to the list of devices that fall under FDA enforcement — a move that patient groups and non-lab test makers support, and that laboratories are likely to dispute. When the FDA started regulating medical devices in 1976, lab-developed tests were simple and offered mostly to local patient populations. The agency generally allowed labs to use these tests without submitting proof of their efficacy.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          comprehensive

          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families
          Duchenne breakthrough therapy leaves behind pioneering families

          DuchennemusculardystrophyDr.EdwinP.Ewing,Jr./CDCPatFurlongwassittinginherhomeofficeinMiddletown,Ohio

          read more
          Medicare slashes safety net hospital payments by nearly $1 billion
          Medicare slashes safety net hospital payments by nearly $1 billion

          Thefederalgovernmentwillpayhospitalsthattreatpooranduninsuredpatientsalmost$1billionlessnextyear.Ado

          read more
          Indiana Supreme Court upholds abortion ban, says state constitution gives only limited protections
          Indiana Supreme Court upholds abortion ban, says state constitution gives only limited protections

          FILE-Abortion-rightsprotestersfillIndianaStatehousecorridorsandcheeroutsidelegislativechambers,Frida

          read more

          A new drug could help frostbite victims avoid its ravages

          JonCherry/GettyImagesTwodaysafterhisrighthandfroze,HartBeznerrealizedforthefirsttimethathemightlosei