Certainly, I'd support what has been said. I think at the core of this is the decision we make every day as health care practitioners, how do we balance the benefit against the risks? We and patients always accept some degree of risk in order to derive the benefit. The challenge going forward is finding ways to enhance that ratio and make that ratio as good as we can.
We can't lose sight of the good that these drugs have done. Any solution that we come up with can't sacrifice the good that has been done. It can't erase or reverse that good that has been done. At the same time we must acknowledge the harm that has come as well.
At the individual practitioner level, it's going to be putting tools in their hands that allow them to make decisions with their patients, confidently, that this is a risk worth taking, the benefits are what we're expecting, and we have an ongoing plan for follow-up to make sure that what we are expecting to happen, will happen.