- Aug 14, 2013
- 2,455
- Tinnitus Since
- Resolved since 2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unknown (medication, head injury)
I'm trying to make up my mind if this is worth the risk or not.
The saying goes: "...but in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes."
If the statement by Benjamin Franklin is true, then everything else in life is assigned a probability between 0 and 1 (strictly speaking: 0 <= x < 1). Where on the "probability scale" the chance (= risk) of a "bad outcome" for the AM101-intervention falls, is something you need to decide for yourself. But the AM101 phase II trial results probably provide a fairly good indication (the trial paper has even interpreted the statistical results on behalf of the reader: "The study drug and I.T. injections were well tolerated").
The human mind has a tendency to "amplify" the probabilities of good and bad events (eg. winning the lottery, catching a disease). The current Ebola "crisis" in the US is a good example. I spoke with my Father a few days ago. He mentioned he had been to Spain with his wife and my younger brother. They - my Father's wife and brother - decided to cut the journey short because of the single Ebola-hospitalized nurse female assistant there (now released). If it wasn't so sad, I would have fallen over laughing - with cramps - because of that kind of decision making. A person going to any modern city in the world would have a greater chance of dying from Salmonella, a car crash, or slipping on a banana peel. But the human mind likes to draw attention to matters of fear: it is a survival instinct (from the past). But the survival instinct can also be(come) an enemy. The brilliant mathematician, Kurt Gödel, died from a fear of food poisoning. More specifically, he died from the fear that the food he was served in hospital would be infested with germs - he knew that all surfaces eg. tables, door knobs, and drinking glasses, and so on, would "automatically" be contaminated with germs. He starved to death because he wouldn't eat. He weighed only 30kg at the time of his death. Logically speaking, if you are going to die from starving, then why not take a chance and eat? After all, the worst thing that can happen is that... you die.
But the human mind is not logical and psychology is a part of any human being. The answer - if you want to call it that - to your original question is probably somewhat different than you had expected. I leave it - as an "intellectual exercise" - to figure out whether I think you should participate in the trial. Or not.