âRight To Tryâ experimental drug program saved âthousands and thousands of livesâ
Former President Donald Trump on Aug. 30

Former President Donald Trump has boasted in recent months about âRight To Try,â a law he signed in 2018. Itâs aimed at boosting terminally ill patientsâ access to potentially lifesaving medications not yet approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
âWe have things to fight off diseases that will not be approved for another five or six years that people that are very sick, terminally ill, should be able to use. But there was no mechanism for doing it,â Trump , speaking in Washington, D.C., to supporters of the conservative parental rights advocacy group Moms for Liberty.
He also said that because of Right To Try, âwe have saved thousands and thousands of lives.â
Trump similarly praised the program during an in Pennsylvania, in a with a conservative commentator, and during his Republican National Convention : âRight To Try is a big deal,â Trump said then.
Medical experts whoâve studied the experimental treatment program, however, say thereâs no evidence to support Trumpâs claims. These experts say Right To Try weakened regulations intended to protect patients.
What Is Right To Try?
The , aka Right To Try, passed Congress on a bipartisan basis and was signed into law in 2018. It sought to streamline the process for getting potentially lifesaving drugs that werenât yet FDA-approved to terminally ill patients. The speed matters; industry groups say it takes on average for a new medicine to reach pharmacy shelves.
However, a similar FDA program, the pipeline, sometimes called âcompassionate use,â has existed , and became law in 1987.
And that is the root of many criticisms of Right To Try.
âRight To Try is basically âexpanded access light,ââ said Alison Bateman-House, a medical ethicist who researches access to investigational medical products at New York Universityâs Grossman School of Medicine.
Right To Try caters to fewer patients than expanded access and offers them fewer treatments, Bateman-House said.
Easing Access or Erasing Safeguards?
Patients must meet specific, but different, criteria to qualify for either experimental medication program.
To qualify for expanded use, patients must have a âserious or immediately life-threatening disease or conditionâ for which there is no âcomparable or satisfactory alternative therapy available to diagnose, monitor, or treat the disease or condition,â according to . Clinical trials must be infeasible for the patients, and the use of these drugs must not interfere with any in-progress studies. Also, the potential benefits must justify the risks, according to the prescribing physicians.
Then, after identifying a treatment, the patientâs doctor must receive approval from its manufacturer, the FDA, and the institutional review board overseeing the medicationâs clinical trials.
The FDA said these steps exist so the agency can âfairly weigh the risks and benefitsâ of the medication and protect the patientâs safety. The agency also collects data about the drugsâ clinical impact on the patient and any adverse effects to inform the wider approval process for the drug.
Right To Try sought to hasten this approval process. Under the new program, for instance, a doctor must merely identify an experimental medication and receive authorization to use it from the manufacturer. In most cases, the FDA has no authority to approve or deny the application, and thereâs no review board process to navigate.
But, because of the Right To Try programâs definitions, fewer patients and fewer medicines qualify.
Under Right To Try, patients must have a âlife-threateningâ disease or condition, not just âserious,â as with expanded access. Experimental medications are available only after theyâve completed Phase 1 clinical trials; treatments accessed through the expanded access program can be administered during a Phase 1 study.
Right To Try, which includes liability protections for manufacturers and prescribing physicians, also weakens requirements that govern how doctors disclose experimental medicationsâ risks to patients, leaving informed consent undefined. And it prevents the FDA from using information about how patients tolerate the drugs to âdelay or adversely affect the review or approval of such drug(s),â unless top officials justify the benefit to public health in writing.
Supporters say Right To Try is an example of successful deregulation and claim that its more efficient approval process saved lives. But critics see this as a key reason for concern, because it âopens up the opportunity of exploiting desperate patients,â said Holly Fernandez Lynch, a bioethicist who studies pharmaceutical policy at the University of Pennsylvaniaâs Perelman School of Medicine.
Government data shows regulatory agencies werenât the main hurdle patients faced when seeking experimental drugs. The FDA almost always approved expanded access applications, and quickly by government standards.
According to a 2018 FDA report on the expanded access program, the FDA authorized 99% of the roughly 9,000 requests it received in the previous five years, approving emergency requests for experimental medications in less than one day on average. More shows that approval trend has continued, even as the number of applications has grown each year.
In rare cases in which the FDA didnât automatically approve requests, regulators often didnât deny them, but recommended tweaks to the requested dosage to address safety and effectiveness concerns.
Right To Try by the Numbers
The FDA does not share detailed information about the number of doses provided or patients treated under Right To Try. Instead, it posts only an showing how many drugs have been approved under the program. The agency says that since Right To Try began in 2018 it has approved 16 treatments: 12 from 2018 to 2022 and four last year.
The FDA declined to provide additional information about the number of Right To Try requests or approvals.
Although the 16 medications approved through Right To Try were possibly provided to more than one patient each, experts said itâs extremely unlikely thousands of patients were involved, as Trump said.
Trumpâs claim represents an âegregious overestimate of the number of people who are using Right To Try,â said Fernandez Lynch, noting she believes the real numbers are âvery, very low.â
The Trump campaign did not respond to multiple inquiries about the source of the former presidentâs statistics. Karoline Leavitt, the campaignâs national press secretary, told Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News that in a second term âPresident Trump will of course remain open to other pathways to expand âRight to Tryâ to save more American lives.â
It remains unclear how Trump might expand the program, though the conservative Goldwater Institute is advocating for â,â which it claims will let patients receive individualized therapeutics.
Experts noted such drugs are already accessible through the expanded access program.
Meanwhile, evidence shows that the high price of experimental treatments, which are sometimes available through certain drug company programs but not typically covered by insurance, is a greater hurdle to patients than regulatory guardrails are.
âI don't think that people are having a problem with the FDA blocking access to individualized therapeutics,â Bateman-House said. âI think the problem is that individualized therapeutics are incredibly expensive, and there's only a very small number of researchers in the country who know how to make them.â
Our Ruling
Trump has claimed throughout the campaign that his Right To Try program is novel and has saved thousands of lives. But a similar program has existed for decades, and there is no evidence Right To Try has had anywhere close to the impact Trump said it has had.
Neither the Trump campaign nor Right To Try advocates provided evidence to back claims of widespread benefit. And government data shows only 16 medications have been approved under the program in its first six years, with no accounting of how many patients used those medications or their clinical outcomes.
Moreover, public health experts have said Right To Try weakens patient protections and fails to address the true barriers to experimental medications.
We rate Trumpâs claim False.
our sources:
Congressional Research Service, â,â March 16, 2021
Food and Drug Administration, â,â Feb. 28, 2024
Food and Drug Administration, â,â May 2, 2024
Food and Drug Administration, â,â May 2018
Food and Drug Administration, â,â November 2022
Food and Drug Administration, â,â accessed Sept. 29, 2024
Food and Drug Administration, â,â Jan. 23, 2023
Food and Drug Administration, â,â June 6, 2024
Goldwater Institute, â,â accessed Sept. 29, 2024
Goldwater Institute, â,â accessed Sept. 29, 2024
Goldwater Institute, â,â Oct. 5, 2014
Goldwater Institute, ââ accessed Sept. 29, 2024
Los Angeles Times, , June 14, 2019
Phone interview with Alison Bateman-House, assistant professor at New York Universityâs Grossman School of Medicine, Sept. 24, 2024
Phone interview with Holly Fernandez Lynch, associate professor of medical ethics and law at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Sept. 17, 2024
PhRMA, â,â accessed Sept. 29, 2024
Roll Call, â,â Aug. 17, 2024
The Singju Post, â,â Aug. 31, 2024
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