ComradeDavo said:I would have thought that the drive to cure colon cancer was stronger.
For the scientists, probably so. For the executives, probably not.
ComradeDavo said:I would have thought that the drive to cure colon cancer was stronger.
A major drug company is blocking access to a medicine that is cheaply and effectively saving thousands of people from going blind because it wants to launch a more expensive product on the market.
This unlicensed use of Avastin has spread across continents entirely by word of mouth from one doctor to another. It has now been injected into 7,000 eyes, with considerable success.
Unless Avastin is approved in the UK by the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) it will not be universally available within the NHS.
[...]
Although Nice's role is to look at cost-effectiveness, it says it cannot appraise a drug and pass it for use in the NHS unless the drug is referred to it by the Department of Health. The department says its hands are tied.
"The drug company hasn't applied for it to be licensed for this use. It wouldn't be referred to Nice until they have made the first move," said a Department of Health spokeswoman. "They need to step up and get a licence. If they are not getting it licensed, why aren't they?"
Avastin was first used on human eyes by Philip Rosenfeld, an ophthalmologist in the US, who was aware of animal studies carried out by Genentech that showed potential in eye conditions.
[...]
But although the evidence is good, regulators require randomised controlled trials before they grant licences, which generally only the drug companies can afford to carry out.
Prof Rosenfeld [...] would like to see governments fund clinical trials of drugs such as Avastin in the public interest.
ComradeDavo said:Your first point - many blame the problem of obesity directly on capitalism, due to the advertising power that food companies can have, especially their power to influence children's eating habits.
ComradeDavo said:Your second point is the same old 'the soviet union was bad thus all socialism is' rhetoric that is constantly regurgitated by hardcore capitalists in the face of criticism. I do not adovocate 'socialism vs capitalism', I am for mixed economies and sensiable regulations. I don't care much for 'government control of ecomonomy = endless bureaucracy' arguments.
1 - I'm niot saying that all people are 'mindless sheep'. You didn't really read intyo what I am saying - that eatinh habits are often formed in ones childhood and alot of food companies aim their advertsiing at children.CIVPhilzilla said:Well I'm sorry that you feel people are mindless sheep unable to make up their own minds about what they choose to do and eat. It is possible to simply ignore the advertisements and look towards healthier choices, many people already do this and live very long lives.
The more regulations a government has over an economy the bigger it has to be to enforce those regulations. As time goes on and new problems arise the same answer keeps coming up to enforce more regulation. You can already see the effects in many of the european nations of their move to a mixed economy in the form of slower economic growth and weaker employment rate. Constantly enacting "sensible" regulations usually gets out of hand due to different definitions of what sensible is, and you do get a move towards a more oversized bureaucracy.
ComradeDavo said:1 - I'm niot saying that all people are 'mindless sheep'. You didn't really read intyo what I am saying - that eatinh habits are often formed in ones childhood and alot of food companies aim their advertsiing at children.
ComradeDavo said:2- The fact that you have your political compass score as a signature demonstrates that you are proud of being a capitalist, and this is reflected well in your arguments, the usual 'regulations are bad' logic which ignores the fact that for a succesfull economy you have to be flexiable, to stimulate when needed and to regulate when needed. A wealfare state ultimutely betters its people through education and sharing advancement, whilst in capitalist states progress is always profit driven so ineviatebly not everyone benifits.
ComradeDavo said:In relation to this actual thread topic, medicinal drugs are an area where regulation is needed to ensure that patients get the best deal. personally when it comes to healthcare I go for the standard 'patients above profit' deal, because I feel it immoral to make money out of peoples pain, and that as human beings we should strive to hep each otehr, as we all rely on each other anyways.
rmsharpe said:Fine, criticize the company. They didn't have to develop any drugs, but they did. You socialist knuckleheads don't seem to understand that these companies didn't have to do anything, certainly not to the benefit of people who don't pay for their services.
rmsharpe said:Fine, let's eliminate capitalism and see how many new drugs are made then.
newfangle said:So let's approach this slowly. tomsnowman123, without any government or companies, how are these drugs created? And how is it assured that they are abundant enough so that every person gets all the drugs they want? Does this principle extend to other goods?
Doesn't seem very 'voluntarily simple' to me.
Under capitalism, people should be free to use a drug they buy how they like, and if the company doesn't want to sell it, another company is free to make the drug instead.tomsnowman123 said:Capitalsim is terribly flawed, and this is an example. Greedy companies holding trying to garner large profits for themselves, when they could be saving lives. Greed drives corporations.
But you are assuming that there is a single value you can assign to work.Private owners of capital do not repay laborers the full value of their production. They keep a portion for themselves as profit; this is exploitative. It creates an incredibly unequal distribution of wealth.