Rider wrote:
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> I got to know this place while surfing the Internet by chance, so I'm getting a lot of good information.
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>I'm thinking about wearing a wig, but it was hard to get information before that
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> You can get so much information now. As expected, the Internet is great. ^^
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> I should introduce myself first.
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> He's a man in his early 30s, and he worked for about five years before that
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> Now I'm kind of self-employed.
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> My company is a pharmaceutical company in the world, so when it comes to drugs
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> I know a little. Of course, the weird scammers put forward when they're trying to mislead consumers
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> American companies (mainly multi-level people ^^) are famous, and they are not those companies, but those companies that are sold every year in the world's 500 largest companies by FORTUNE, an American business magazine. When I joined the company, Samsung Group or Samsung Electronics ranked about 300th, and that company ranked about 200th. I was surprised to see here because I saw the news that latanoprost (a treatment for glaucoma) could be used as a hair growth agent. The ratanoprost was developed by the company I worked for, and it was an item I was in charge of in Korea. When I was working at the company, there was no paper on the hair growth effect. A drug called latanoprost has been in clinical trials since the early 1990s.
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> I didn't mean to talk about me for a long time with my student, but to have credibility with what I'm saying. Most of them are foreign pharmaceutical companies in Korea. From 10 to 30? This is because we don't have a sales organization and sell agencies. So, like me, the sales and marketing manager knows some of the company's overall work, drug registration, sales process, and so on.
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> Looking at this bulletin board, many people concluded that the only drugs that have hair growth effects are minoxidil and proscipea (MSD), and the conclusion is correct.
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> But why is that?
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> This is because only the above two products (so the same ingredients as the above two products) were recognized by the U.S. FDA as drugs that have a foot-and-mouth effect.
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> But the U.S. FDA is very difficult to get approval, but it's been approvedIt's a strange guarantee that it's very easy to register around the world, that it's recognized by the United States with the best medicine technology in the world.
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>Easy to think about why Korean KOSDAQ companies are trying so hard to register on the Nasdaq in the United States.
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> But even the world's leading pharmaceutical companies, like MSD (commonly called Merck), have to go through years of clinical records and preparations to get approval for a drug to the FDA.
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> By the way, do you know what kind of company Merck is? I always watch the Fortune 500 every year, and a few years ago, it ranked first in the world in all industries. (This year, it was GM or GE.) There's a lot of data that we need to do over the years, and we need to submit to the FDA.
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> In Korea, the Food and Drug Administration under the Ministry of Health and Welfare (I don't know if the name is right). It's been a few years since I left the industry), and if it's registered by the U.S. FDA, it's relatively easy to register in Korea, but the documents still have to go over a few boxes of ramen boxes.
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> But the problem is, a lot of hair loss products from Korea can't do this. There's a lot of reasons, but there's a lot of reasons that you might fail in clinical trials, you might have years of enrollment, you might have no real effect.
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> So most Korean hair loss products do not register as pharmaceuticals, but as non-medical products or cosmetics. Think of toothpaste easily. Go to the bathroom and take a look at the toothpaste. It should say it's off-the-shelf. Toothpaste is not a medicine. Foreign drugs are mainly viewed as harmless to the human body rather than effective, and it is easier to register than drugs anyway. As far as I know, if you report it, it will be registered. That's not the case with medicines. If there's a side effect, it hurts the public health, so we give them a very, very meticulous permit.
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> So, what else is there in Korea that has been registered as a non-drug or cosmetic industrial product, Dr. Mona, Grovis, and hair power? Anyway, and so on
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> Never!!!! You can't advertise like medicine!!!!!
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> But everyone advertises like medicine in a smart way.
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> Put it simply, even though I can't think of anything!!! You tricked me like I was getting a head.
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> Then the government punishes the fine once and issues an advertisement correction order.
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> Hair loss products, so you all got a shot, right?
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> The problem is, innocent consumers are tricked again just in case.
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> Then, business owners will be fined, and they will be found out that it's not effective
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> They advertise it intensively in the beginning, sell it at a very high price, and take money out of our pockets to the extent that they will be fined later.
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> Those who work in the pharmaceutical field, as you all know, making medicine is never expensive. Development! It costs hundreds of billions of won. How many years does it cost to bring expensive brains and experiment with expensive machines?
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> But once you develop it, the money to print out the drug is really
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> It's new blood. That's why Korean pharmaceutical companies can't create new drugs. Because I only copy and sell the ones that have expired. Those who know the distribution structure of drugs will sympathize. What a bunch of thieves doctors and pharmacists are ^^.
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> Anyway, hair loss products that cost hundreds of thousands of won per bottle are ridiculous.
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> Is it the manufacturer? How much would it be for a bottle?
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> In addition, the U.S. FDA officially approved it as a drug that has a hair growth effect
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> The monthly treatment cost is between 30,000 won and 100,000 won (all imported goods) in the end),
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> Hair loss products that have not been certified as pharmaceuticals by the Korea Food and Drug Administration are paid for a month's treatment
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> To make them spend hundreds of thousands of won is to think that people without brains are stupid, or to feel desperate
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> It can only be seen as a fraud.
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> The reason I'm writing this is because I was reading this bulletin board on this site
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> Because I was so surprised by two things.
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> First, there are a lot of people who are worried about baldness
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> (I'm bald, too, so I'm sure I came to this site ^^)
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> Second, even with enormous treatment costs and efforts, it doesn't work
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> It's because of the surprise that there are too many people who just wasted money.
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> My total cost for hair loss is less than 100,000 won so far
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> (A bottle of Dr. Mo, a bottle of minoxidil, a little bit of elcistin)
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> There were so many people who wasted millions of won on an ineffective hair loss.
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> I'm sure, hair loss products don't work.
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> But for those who have lingering feelings, it's cheaper and certified by FDA in the U.S
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> Apply minoxidil or moxidil. strange crooks who made a bone of money
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> Don't use it to fill your pockets.
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> And to say one more thing, after reading the bulletin board,
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> Hansol CSN has a clinical trial for some of the people here.
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> The bottom line is that they'll give you free clinical care, so you'll never have to do it with Goma
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> I'm saying it's not. Foreign pharmaceutical companies entering Korea, clinical data in Korea to the Korea Food and Drug Administration
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> When I clinical to pay, I pay all the clinical subjects. That's a lot, too.
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> Who's responsible for the side effects? Of course, it's a product classified as a non-medical product
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> It may be different, but I think it's wrong to do it for free, so you have to be grateful for it.
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> I don't know what kind of side effects will happen with rude talk, and I don't know if it's effective or not
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> The precious body I received from my parents, and the waste of going back and forth to the hospital
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> Who compensates for the time?
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> If you are so confident in the hair growth effect, why don't you register it as a drug with the KFDA
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> I don't know. Once it's registered as a drug, it makes more money than Bill Gates
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> You're going to get rich. If you can't register as a drug, and users say it doesn't work
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> Isn't it funny to go wild? It's not about 10,000 won a month. It's hundreds of thousands of won a month
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> While receiving this kind of price.
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> I have a lot more to say, but if it's too long, it's not fun, so I'll do it next time.
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> This article asks questions about the efficacy and performance of hair loss products on the market
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> I hope it helps those who have it, and if you want it on other hair loss sites
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> You can scoop it out. Well, I have to go now
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> Easy Rider..
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