Peter Attia· MD
no they'd be different i think 10 years might be aggressive for this to be the standard of care but i think 10 years would be the time when it's going to be out of clinical trials and something that's going to be available at least to some my guess is unfortunately in 10 years i mean again i'm just making this up it might not be something that is covered by insurance which would then immediately limit to a fraction of the population that people that could get this but it's going to have to get some traction beyond clinical trials and there might be a period of time before this is covered again i could be wrong it could go straight from very successful clinical trials directly to something that medicare reimburses for but that's what has to happen right i mean unless medicare and medicaid reimburse for this type of treatment it could never be widespread regardless of how successful it is