Did he, though?
Or did he steer me toward a drug whose manufacturer will send him to Hawaii in December?
I don't know.
Slow that roll boss, for a change I actually have something somewhat informed to add here.
The skirt is a medical liaison in the oncology division for one of the largest pharms in the world and I cannot begin to explain to you how little the greasing of palms happens on that end. There are MASSIVE amounts of regulations that preclude it from happening that dole out not only harsh consequences for the company but also to the medical provider any type of shenanigans like that.
I certainly am not saying that it doesn't happen cause there are always ways to slip a dinner in here and there but by and large it does not because the consequences are way too steep on both sides.
What I do see happen is that different doctors subscribe to different treatment profiles. Some subscribe to the drugs, some subscribe to the chemo and radiation, some subscribe to cell therapy, some subscribe to a combination. It is no different than how people in your own profession will handle a lawsuit. Some are settle a suit cuase your sleepless nights are their sleepless nights, some are gonna go all in till the end, and some are gonna be somewhere in the middle. None of them are necessarily more right or wrong than the other as long as it is what your client is trying to accomplish and what your advice because of experience tell you.
One of the big problems with cancer treatments as you are well aware of is that there is no magic bullet for it at this point. Depending on where it is, when it is caught, and who has it are all variables that make treatment educated guesses at best. Add to this that most of the cancers mutate over time and you have a disease that is infinitely harder to treat much less cure.