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by Shortness8
261 days ago
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Don't often comment on HN but have to point this out as a med student in the UK: the cost-benefit roughly works out for those in favour of giving the therapy when the alternative is a lifetime of coming to hospital 3 times a week for Factor IX infusions, and the additional cost of stays in hospital for bleeds/haemarthroses and the complications thereof. Of course, this also ignores the human cost, particularly the extra care/stress around avoiding cuts/bruises in every aspect of life. In this respect these gene therapies appear lifechanging for those who suffer from the disease. [1] I will also say I know the team who wrote the guidelines for use of these therapies. I believe they were mostly finished before the infected blood scandal became a big story. Politics didn't come into it. [1]: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4nnn51rdrzo |
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I’m in NZ an our system is closely related to the NHS. The funding is where politics comes in and that’s not usually happening at a clinical level, it’s deeply political.