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'Female
viagra' could be approved soon
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Next week, the FDA will vote on whether the
female libido enhancing drug Flibanserin should be voted in or out.
If in, it could mean a business of 2 million dollars in US markets alone.
The Food and Drug Administration will vote on what’s being called ‘female viagra’,
a drug that could be a boon to many women suffering from low sex drives across
the globe but is still ensnared by controversy.
The pill is designed to treat a condition identified in an estimated 10 percent
to 30 percent of women as hypoactive sexual desire disorder or HSDD –
characterised by lack of sexual desire or fantasies, causing emotional distress,
a rather vague diagnosis.
The pill, however, comes with side effects, which include insomnia, nausea and
dizziness. As always, women will need to decide whether the risks versus the
benefits compared to other treatment alternatives are worth it for them.
"What we don’t know is what’s normal versus what’s not normal. You can’t label
someone who has a low sex drive necessarily as abnormal," CBS News quoted Dr.
Bruce Levine of Phoenix OBGYN Associates as saying.
Critics are hammering the drug, saying that customers are being tempted into
buying something they don’t need and can solve by other inexpensive methods.
"We call that disease mongering, creating a disease when there is no disease in
order to sell an expensive product," said Leonore Tiefer of New York
University’s School of Medicine.
"There are a lot of inexpensive products like a glass of wine or a massage."
"I would say it’s definitely improved," said Alicia, who signed for the clinical
trial of the drug after being miserable for a long time.
"I find myself initiating things more when I feel like I’m ready to have sex."
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ANI / Times of India
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