About this book

Over fifty million people suffer from some form of autoimmune disease--multiple sclerosis, arthritis, lupus, and other afflictions in which the body attacks itself--none of them with a lasting cure. Susan Quinn has investigated the worlds where new autoimmune drugs are being developed: the research labs, the drug-company boardrooms, and the clinics where patients become "subjects" in the search for new medicines and treatments. Her story is one of real people: fiercely competing scientists, ambitious venture capitalists, and, anxious, sick human beings. She takes the reader inside these otherwise closed worlds, into the lead investigator's diaries, the tense closed-door meetings with investors, and the hopeful or heart-rending encounters in doctor's offices. Hers is the archetypal story of all medical research: the roller-coaster trip from the lab bench to the medicine cabinet, in which only a very few new drugs and treatments survive. Susan Quinn catches the hopes, triumphs, and crushing failures, the greed and the idealism in these dramatic human trials.

Publication Details

Publisher
Hachette Books
Published
2002
Pages
295
ISBN
9780306820915

About Unknown Author

Susan Quinn was born in Manchester but has travelled the world by way of South Africa and Australia. As a child her favourite place was Dymocks Bookstore in Sydney which was where her passion for books started. After becoming a children’s librarian and returning to England, Susan had a number of plays and short stories published. However, her dream was always to be a children’s writer and her first children’s book, ***Little Bear and the Butterflies***, was published by QED in 2014.

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