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As Alzheimer’s drug developers give up on today’s patients, where is the outrage?

No experimental Alzheimer’s drugs are being tested in late-stage clinical trials to treat moderate to severe Alzheimer’s. Where's the outrage?
Demonstrators block the street in front of the New York Stock Exchange in 1989 to protest the high cost of the first AIDS drug. There has been much less outrage over the lack of drugs to treat Alzheimer's.

When virologists and drug developers were too slow in finding ways to save the lives of people with HIV/AIDS and refused to give patients access to experimental drugs 30 years ago, activists chained themselves to a balcony on the New York Stock Exchange, held demonstrations where scores were arrested, and effectively shut down the Food and Drug Administration for a day.

The lack of progress against Alzheimer’s disease has brought somewhat less outrage. Although the latest analysis of experimental Alzheimer’s drugs finds that literally zero are being tested in late-stage clinical trials to treat moderate to severe Alzheimer’s, no patient advocacy groups uttered a peep in protest.

“We need a Larry Kramer,” said Dr. Sam Gandy, a neurologist and Alzheimer’s expert at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, referring to the AIDS activist. Instead, he said, patients and their families adopt the fatalistic

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