If a person discovered important medical information pertaining to the treatment of diabetes, how would he or she go about getting that information to doctors, the media, or people in the medical community who might be interested?
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If a person discovered important medical information pertaining to the treatment of diabetes, how would he or she go about getting that information to doctors, the media, or people in the medical community who might be interested?
It depends on how medically sound the important medical information is. I trust you hold the patent - ?
What if it was very medically sound?
My husband died of the effects of Diabetes. I'd be first in line to hear what you discovered BUT I must warn you - you need to protect yourself by getting a patent. I also suspect that without a patent respectable physicians will not talk to you.
If you have a patent on it, and have had it approved by the FDA ( in the US) by doing various studies under the approved rules of the FDA.
After that you write and publish the results in one of the several medical journals.
If it is something that drug and medical companies can not steal from you. ( many will try, since they have millions to spend on attorneys and you don't.
That's sort of what I thought. Thanks.
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