Exactly. The approval is in a way where the EUAs still stand. That said, they could even approve some drugs, like HCQ or Ivermectin, for treating certain aspects of the coof and the EUAs would still be valid, since those therapeutics would arguably be "inadequate" to completely prevent and cure the disease. The law itself is too open-ended. The blame falls on the legislators, in my opinion, for giving such broad discretion to an agency that is extremely vulnerable to regulatory capture. The corruption flows from congress, sorry to say.
Exactly. The approval is in a way where the EUAs still stand. That said, they could even approve some drugs, like HCQ or Ivermectin, for treating certain aspects of the coof and the EUAs would still be valid, since those therapeutics would arguably be "inadequate" to completely prevent and cure the disease. The law itself is too open-ended. The blame falls on the legislators, in my opinion, for giving such broad discretion to an agency that is extremely vulnerable to regulatory capture. The corruption flows from congress, sorry to say.