Thank you for being with us today and trying to provide us with more insight on your various mandates and on how to interpret your initiatives.
These days, the average citizen feels that he or she may or may not be safe, given the horror stories we read in the paper about deaths, about products that are harmful to the health and about medications that ought not to be on the market. The impression is that we do not have all the information that we would like about the seriousness of the post-market process and about clinical trials.
Mr. Fontana, you say that public posting of information on clinical trials is intended to increase the transparency of the information posted. I understand your objectives. You continue by saying that the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations has to post the results of all clinical trials and that these should be publicly accessible.
But we are not aware of the adverse events. The public has no access to those. That information seems somehow to be shrouded in mystery.
Research protocols are not published. At very least, these protocols are important in assessing the validity of the trials. Do you not think that they should be submitted to an independent body? This point has often been raised by some observers of the pharmaceutical industry.
Could there be a publication on research that leads to adverse events and on all research protocols?