Upon its Jrelease, the film was chosen as the New York Times Pick of the Week, and Rotten Tomatoes indicated that 100% of critics gave the film positive reviews. The film also explores problems with hip replacement devices that can lead to cobalt poisoning and vaginal mesh devices that injured multiple women. The documentary explores the FDA's 510(k) process which allows a medical device to be fast-tracked onto the market with less clinical study and human testing. The film primarily focuses on Bayer's permanent birth control device Essure, highlighting the device's failures that led to pain, discomfort, lost pregnancies, and death for multiple women. The film explores the process of regulating medical devices and the impact felt on impacted patients. Weaving emotionally powerful stories of people whose lives have been irrevocably harmed, it asks: What lifesaving technologies may actually be killing us? According to the director: "Very few people know about the medical device industry and the fact that it is even less regulated than pharmaceuticals". In The Bleeding Edge, Academy Award-nominated investigative filmmakers Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering turn their sights on the $400 billion medical device industry examining lax regulations, corporate cover-ups, and profit-driven incentives that put patients at risk daily. Written and directed by Kirby Dick and produced by Amy Ziering and Amy Herdy, it premiered at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, where it was billed as "the stuff of dystopian nightmares". The Bleeding Edge is a 2018 Netflix original documentary film that investigates the $400 billion medical device industry.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |