Democracy Dies in Darkness

Trump calls the FDA ‘slow and burdensome,’ but it’s faster than ever

March 2, 2017 at 6:01 p.m. EST
The Food and Drug Administration campus is in Silver Spring, Md. (Andrew Harnik/AP)

Two days before Christmas, the Food and Drug Administration gave Thomas Crawford an unexpected gift: approval of the first treatment ever for a devastating genetic disease that causes muscle wasting in babies and often results in death at an early age.

The drug “is nothing short of oh-my-God amazing” when given to infants who have not yet had symptoms, said Crawford, a Johns Hopkins pediatric neurologist who was involved in the clinical trials for the drug for spinal muscular atrophy.