Researchers Realizing That Hoarding Of Medical Research Harming Results
from the it's-about-time dept
Last year, we wrote about how changes to the patent system concerning basic research 25 years ago had resulted in bio and medical researchers keeping their research secret for as long as possible to make sure they, and only they, could benefit from the lucrative nature of these patents. The obvious problem with that is that medical breakthroughs (despite folklore) often don't come about just because of the brilliant thinking of one individual, but in collaboration among people with many different ideas. Part of the patent system is that it's supposed to help by getting ideas published, but with those patents being so lucrative and everyone keeping quiet it means that the various ideas were being held for as long as possible -- slowing down all sorts of medical advancement. It appears that some medical researchers are finally recognizing this. The Wall Street Journal today has an article noting that only 20 new drugs were approved last year, and researchers are blaming the lack of collaboration for the failure to see any more breakthroughs. However, some are finally changing this practice and looking to share more information, much earlier in the process in order to try to build up more practical ideas more quickly.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Negative Research
If we want true information liberation, then scientific journals ought to publish the overwhelming volume of negative, non-provocative, unexciting findings.
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False Dawns
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Medicine as industry will do that...
Obviously that's totally unfeasible with the state of affairs in the world today, so we're left to trust private companies. Given that they're jobs ARE to create cures and improve health, they obviously aren't going to make up complete BS AIDS cures (unlike those complete naturalist retards at the health food stores that tell you you can cure AIDS and cancer by eating broccoli and taking a fruit juice enema every day for a month).
I've come to expect a certain degree of understatement of side effects from the pharmaceutical companies, but given that they profit more from having a product out there for decades (rather than a quick buck on pure BS, not to mention the PR black eye), I do trust what they release.
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Re: Medicine as industry will do that...
From the looks of things, their primary job it to make their shareholders and themselves a ton of money.
And if someone feels better for it, sop much the better........
Capitalism is a sick sick concept when let go unfettered to the point that humanity suffers so a small group of people can profit...
Examples:
Oil Conglomerates, Drug Companies, The Food Industry, Public Utilites.........
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Re: Medicine as industry will do that...
Have you ever lived under communism ?
I guess not.
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unbelievable
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oh, and...
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Re: oh, and...
For now, we are still in a unigene mentality world, in which we only know about diseases caused by single genes or single chromosomal abnormalities (e.g. albinism, Down's syndrome, etc.) Plenty of diseases have polygene origins (e.g. heart disease, diabetes), but coupled with environmental interactions, plus epistasis, plus expressivity/penetrance issues, it's an undeveloped wilderness right now.
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Re: Medicine as industry will do that...
The free market system's supply and demand cost controls don't work well when whats at stake is your life.
State controlled industries are wasteful, inefficient and incompetent regardless of the system of government.
Ultimately some complicated mixture may resolve some issues... Oh, skip that its being tried (and failing) Medicare's prescription program... OK, no solution will ever work. It is simply against human nature.
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Re: Medicine as industry will do that...
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The INDUSTRY of healthcare...
In the end, unless we're living in fantasy land we know the answer to that. As per more collaboration between medical researchers, until they overcome the problem of making sure that revenue streams by the individual collaborators are secured, I don't think you'll see significant participation from the private sector entities.
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Re: The INDUSTRY of healthcare...
If medical research were done for profit, we would never have invented the polio vaccine. Treatment for polio is extremely expensive, while polio vaccines are extremely cheap.
Pharmaceuticals depend upon the expertise of universities to survive. They haven't done much basic science on their own.
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Re: The INDUSTRY of healthcare...
The beauty of it is that they are in both businesses, because they can't just be in one.
Find a lousy pharmaceutical company that releases buggy vaccines and deploys fixes to these vaccines only on the first Tuesday of every month (and only if they decided it's important enough to fix), and they're not going to last very long.
Odd how it's the only industry where that can happen.
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