About this episode
<p>Patient power is on the rise. But is it rising too far? Frustrated by the time it takes to develop new drugs, the ethical barriers to obtaining clinical data or the indifference of the medical profession to obscure diseases, patients are setting up their own clinical trials and overturning the norms of clinical research. </p><p>A DIY clinical trial sounds like a joke – and a dangerous one at that. But as Vivienne Parry discovers, it's real and on the rise as greater access to medical data allows more patients to play research scientists and medics at their own game. </p><p>Patients lie at the very heart of clinical research – without them there is none. Yet they come way down the food chain when it comes to transparency about their own health, blinded as they usually are to what pills they are taking and whether they are actually doing them any good. Even after the trial is published they are left with little understanding of whether the treatment could work for them and licensing is usually years away. So it is perhaps hardly surprising that patient networks have sprung up to redress the balance. Much of this current patient led research now takes place through online communities, with activists and the articulate ill demanding more say in their treament. </p><p>Vivienne Parry looks at some examples of patient led research which have challenged the medical establishment. She also asks how far can this go: should patients be prevented from experimenting with proceedures or drugs that might kill them?</p><p>(Photo: Medicinal pills)</p>
Listen to this episode in English to learn English
Podcast episodes are one of the highest-density ways to absorb English at native pace. Patients Doing It for Themselves from Discovery gives you natural dialogue, unscripted speech, and vocabulary that actually appears in real conversations.
In the Clue app, every word in the transcript is tappable. Tap an unknown word, see the translation in your language instantly, and keep listening without breaking flow.
Episodes to Learn English
- The friendly virus Jun 22, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Dean Lomax Jun 15, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Helen Hastie Jun 8, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Seth Berkley Jun 1, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Hiranya Peiris May 25, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Washington Yotto Ochieng May 18, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Lucy Carpenter May 11, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jens Juul Holst May 4, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jim Ashworth-Beaumont Apr 27, 2026
- Inside Universe 25 Apr 20, 2026
- Dark Breath Apr 13, 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance Rising Part 3 Apr 6, 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance rising, part 2 Mar 30, 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance rising, part 1 Mar 23, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jehane Ragai Mar 16, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Tony Juniper Mar 9, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Pierre Friedlingstein Mar 2, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Julia Simner Feb 23, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Caroline Smith Feb 16, 2026
- The Life Scientific: AP De Silva Feb 9, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Eleanor Schofield Feb 2, 2026
- The Life Scientific: Peter Knight Jan 26, 2026
- Frontiers of Earth Science Jan 19, 2026
- Frontiers of Space Science Jan 12, 2026
- What is Quantum? Jan 5, 2026
- The Life Scientific: George Church Dec 29, 2025
- The Life Scientific: Gareth Collett Dec 22, 2025
- The Life Scientific: Sonia Gandhi Dec 15, 2025
- The Life Scientific: Mark O'Shea Dec 8, 2025
- Waking up with a different voice Dec 1, 2025