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#1 |
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: June 24, 2002
Location: aa
Posts: 2,101
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Is this a good or a bad thing looking at medical inventions?
Just to make sure: patents give a temporal monopoly on an invention (!) if the inventor makes his invention public. The idea is that a company can gain back what they invested in research and licenses can be given to anybody who pays enough. As two major advantages there's that information gets public access, thus making more research possible where otherwise companies might keep the inner workings of their inventions secret. The other is that companies might put money into research now they can get their investments back. There are more disadvantages. -A lot depends on the attitude of the patent holder. For example prices of the licenses and the product/method itself. -There could be less research cause the material which has to be researched is patented. -Doctors don't search for a solution but it'll be researcher and company. Now a doctor diagnoses a disease and tries to find out a solution but then there will be a third party that isn't necesarrily out there to help the patient. -Quality control can be really hard when companies outsource certain parts of tests to other countries. -There could be problems with continuing the production when a company stops or goes bankrupt. -In a medical case people most of the time don't have a choice on if they want to go with a product. It's either do or die. -Knowledge on rare or local diseases will be lost, unless non-profit organisations research it. -A commercial company has to make profit. This can be by making things expensive or by producing large quantities. Either way that will give problems in what is researched or on the price. I think I'm against patents on genes because of the monopolies. What's the use of a medicine if it's too expensive? Right now there's a problem in the Netherlands (don't know in other countries) that patients don't get the best medicines because they're too expensive. In a monopoly the concentration of power is way too much on the side of the company. I don't think patents will give much of a boost to invention cause of the licence costs that make people think twice about researching something. I'd rather go for normal concurrention and take disadvatages for granted. Also companies are there to make profit, they don't care for the health of someone if they can't make much profit. Non-profit research organisations have to stay in any case. This also counters the argument that the money is spread more evenly. Though patients pay for what they get, I assume they still pay some of the money for non-profit organisations (via taxes). Also outsourcing doesn't seem like a very good idea to the privacy of people. It could also lead to problems with insurance as you might get insurance companies stopping high-risk people from getting insured. What do you think? |
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#2 | |||||||
Lord Soth
![]() Join Date: July 25, 2002
Location: Melbourne FL
Age: 61
Posts: 1,971
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#3 | |||||||
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: June 24, 2002
Location: aa
Posts: 2,101
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[/QUOTE]For the first you're completely right. Though national influence on quality control will be less. But still that's not really an argument against it cause there's still the international laws. The second one is because if a company has a patent no other company can exploitate the product. Quote:
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Companies with a monopoly position gained by a patent take advantage of the position of a patient who will have to use it. Medicines are not luxury goods. That's when I say leave that to non-profit organisations to research and get the price a bit lower that way. That kind of inventions won't help much if a huge majority of people can't get access to them while they need it. I think it's ethically not right to have medication for people but then make the price so high so that you can make profit. Profit as in more than reasonable salaries and the research costs you made. Even if you put this extra in other projects, the money for some scientific research should be spread evenly and medical inventions should be one of them. Quote:
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[ 03-06-2005, 03:07 PM: Message edited by: philip ] |
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#4 |
Jack Burton
![]() Join Date: March 31, 2001
Location: The zephyr lands beneath the brine.
Age: 41
Posts: 5,459
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I think it's a good thing.
Simply put, if you have to do all the research and testing and then anyone can come along to sell your product for their own profit, you don't have much incentive to start out, do you? We're easily talking millions of dollars, not something you can afford to lose often. Regarding the supposed lack of research, the reason it takes so long to develop much of anything, and the cause of the high cost, -is- the testing. It's often (not always) easy enough to set up a construction line for a product and just feed it to whomever's willing to take a risk, but governments don't allow that anymore. More importantly, the patent is temporary. It does allow for a monopoly but not indefinately. Typically, they last 20 years. The average drug takes 12 years to develop from the point of discovering a useful substance. That means the company has just eight years to earn back the money spent. On top of that there's the problem of getting people to actually use your product instead of someone else's which has been used in treatment up to that point. After the eight years, anyone can make a generic product and sell them at far lower prices as they don't have to earn back nearly as many research and development costs. Also, you have to remember that before this time, there was no such drug available (or a patent wouldn't be granted). Companies are not raising prices to spite the patients (mostly); in fact, there were no low prices to begin with. And everyone's free to keep using the traditional treatments. Of course it doesn't seem to make sense that a potentially succesful cure can't be given to someone yet despite being discovered and produced in small quantities, but really, it does take that long. The other thing to remember is that companies trying to sell their drugs at ridiculous prices, won't sell anything, and won't earn back a thing either. So they won't. It keeps the industry going and invites people to do research without freezing anything forever. The only downside is few people are interested in developing orphan drugs, compounds which cure relatively rare diseases. There's no big market there and only little money to be made. That'll take government funding to set up, which is sometimes being made available. However, you'll have to agree that researching a cure to improve the qualty of millions of lives is more worthwhile than one improving that of a dozen. As for the trouble in Dutch hospitals, not being able to afford top quality drugs for all of their patients because of the high prices, I think that's more a result of severe cuts in government funding than an unusually sharp increase in drug prices. [ 03-06-2005, 03:43 PM: Message edited by: Legolas ] |
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#5 |
40th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: July 11, 2002
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 11,916
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Put into action, patenting genes is dangerous. This is due to the sophistication of the patent applicant vs. that of the patent regulator. When Monsanto patented BT soy and cotton, it wrote its patents broadly to cover any gene splicing or genetic engineering relating to soy or cotton broadly. The USPTO let this get through, so now even if you want to patent soy to do something completely different than what Monsanto patented, you must still treat them as the patent holder. If we are to patent such things, the patent regulators need to be on the cutting edge of the curve, not following.
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#6 |
Galvatron
![]() Join Date: June 24, 2002
Location: aa
Posts: 2,101
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..
Last edited by philip; 06-26-2015 at 03:38 PM. |
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#7 |
Lord Soth
![]() Join Date: July 25, 2002
Location: Melbourne FL
Age: 61
Posts: 1,971
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I think part of the problem is people thinking the cost of a drug is only to pay for the research done to develop that one drug. For every successful pill, how many failures were worked on? Is it a 10:1 ratio? 20:1? Anybody know?
OFF TOPIC -- Welcome back TL!
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#8 |
Jack Burton
![]() Join Date: March 31, 2001
Location: The zephyr lands beneath the brine.
Age: 41
Posts: 5,459
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Typically, a new compound has a chance of 1 in 5000 to 1 in 10000 of actually being sold on the market. About 40% of the cost of creating a new drug is spent on finding such a molecule. On average, a handful will be found and further funding spent on developing those. This is the point where they are patented, and from there it's the average 12 years to completion. By now, out of the 10000 there are maybe 5 to 10 promising compounds. Most of those will fail later on in development for any number of reasons. Say it's a 10 to 1 ratio, but then you're not doing justice to all the work spent on finding those 10 in the first place.
New technologies allow more compounds to be reasearched at once, in less time, and with fewer expenses so that does help. What does not, are the Me-too type compounds, which are basically slightly modified versions of excisting drugs. These will typically do just about the same thing but work longer, or shorter, swifter or delayed, and aren't as hard to find. Since they're not the same molecule, they get a patent of their own. The main challenge there is convincing others that that drug actually offers an advantage over conventional ones. Where a broad patent results in others not being able to work in a field for a good number of years, a narrow one results in a lot of the same. |
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