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by stevebmark
1962 days ago
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Makes sense, I always appreciate healthcare companies that capitalize on bad laws saying that ideally they wouldn't exist and they're trying to work within the existing framework. Cross-border drug buying works well in the EU, where any European country can buy drugs from any other European country, so whoever has the lowest price usually wins the market. As a private company, your incentive is to maximize profit for shareholders. Since all you have to do is undercut high drug prices a little, what will stop you from the same price gouging that all other US drug companies perform? |
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On the technical level, we incorporated as a public benefit corporation, so we are judged not only on how profitable we are for shareholders, but how well be maintain our social mission. That is actually in our charter documents and is a legal requirement.
On a practical level, Mark Cuban is our lead investor and his interest is very much focused on helping people and fixing system issues in healthcare. We also did some screening to ensure our other investors are socially minded and prioritize social benefit as well as profits.
My mindset is that we need to be profitable to be sustainable and grow enough to help the overall system, but we won't be extortionate.