News

The FDA published more than 200 letters that it sent to companies when it rejected their medicines, but the letters came with a caveat.
In a bid to increase transparency, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has begun publishing the complete response letters ...
Investors have long asked the FDA to share its reasons for rejecting drugs, arguing that companies can use the agency’s silence on the matter to mislead the market.
The US Food and Drug Administration has started making rejection letters that pharmaceutical companies traditionally keep ...
The agency disclosed a tranche of more than 200 complete response letters from the past five years, but only those involving ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Thursday published more than 200 of its so-called complete response letters to drugmakers, a significant move to increase transparency of the agency's work.
A viral rejection email accidentally included AI instructions—revealing how some companies really reject job seekers.
“I didn’t expect to be accepted to all of these colleges,” he told The New York Post in April. “However, I did expect to at least be accepted to a couple of the top schools I was applying to.” Instead ...
“I didn’t expect to be accepted to all of these colleges,” he told The New York Post in April. “However, I did expect to at least be accepted to a couple of the top schools I was applying to.” Instead ...
In March, Yadegari revealed that he received rejection letters from all eight Ivy League schools plus MIT, Stanford, Washington University, Duke, USC, the University of Virginia, NYU and Vanderbilt.
Then came the rejections from Stanford, MIT, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Princeton, Duke, Brown, Cornell, and others. In total, 15 rejection letters.