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by replicatorblog 3316 days ago
That's a good hypothesis. How about someone suggests that Harvard, with its $36B endowment, tests it out? Pick a rare disease, ask Harvard, or any similar institution, to tackle it with their world class medical school and research capabilities. Offer them gov't matching funds. Or threaten their tax-exempt status if they don't do it. And let's see how they do.

Maybe a socialized or non-profit R&D program would do better than big biotech companies, but before we legislate this idea, how about we test it? My concern is that a non-profit/gov't drug development program will work as well as the ACA's $2B website.

I get hives whenever someone suggests pharma companies are "too" profitable. My daughter is alive today because these "greedy" pharma companies have developed chemotherapies that beat leukemia 90+% of the time. A 20% margin for these companies that regularly produce miracle drugs seems totally fair. Pharma is the closest thing we have to magic in the modern world.

I'm open to the idea there are better possible systems, but the burden of proof is on your side, not the side that regularly cranks out life-saving medicines like the goose that lays the golden eggs.

1 comments

I take an orphan drug myself to treat cataplexy/narcolepsy. I think the costs are around $60k to $80k per year and I'm of the exact same opinion as you. I have treatment today because we allow them to make a profit, and I'm only willing to try an alternative system when we prove through experimentation that this alternative system will actually produce as many treatments for orphan diseases at a cheaper price that makes the treatment available to more people.

Without the US healthcare system, my treatment simply would not exist. My treatment exists in no other country in the world.

Eventually, those that don't have insurance as good as mine will benefit from these drugs once the patent expires. It sucks that many people won't benefit until that happens, but under the alternative system SJWs are so keen to promote my treatment would never have been developed and I couldn't get this treatment at any price and no one in the future would get it either because their wouldn't be a treatment for a patent to expire on.

At the end of the day, the US is practicing "socialist" healthcare. It's socialist in the sense that it pays for a lot of the R&D that the rest of the world benefits from. 40% of the entire output of medical research globally comes from the US alone.