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I almost put "in the unlikely event Mr. Santorum becomes president" but that didn't seem classy.I'm 21 years old, and have schizoaffective disorder. I'm working part time while going to college, so I only have health insurance through my dad's job thanks to the Affordable Care Act. Basically, on my part time job, I can't afford an iPad, and if I didn't have insurance, I couldn't afford the medicine that makes me capable of functioning like a normal person.
So if Mr. Santorum becomes president and repeals the ACA, can he show off that compassionate conservatism and buy my medicine for me? An iPad would be nice too, but I'm not really that greedy.
Love, Rachel
CorruptUser wrote:On the downside, Santorum is taking voters away from Gingrich, and, huh, not so bad.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
omgryebread wrote:Submitted on Santorum's website.I almost put "in the unlikely event Mr. Santorum becomes president" but that didn't seem classy.I'm 21 years old, and have schizoaffective disorder. I'm working part time while going to college, so I only have health insurance through my dad's job thanks to the Affordable Care Act. Basically, on my part time job, I can't afford an iPad, and if I didn't have insurance, I couldn't afford the medicine that makes me capable of functioning like a normal person.
So if Mr. Santorum becomes president and repeals the ACA, can he show off that compassionate conservatism and buy my medicine for me? An iPad would be nice too, but I'm not really that greedy.
Love, Rachel
That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Vaniver wrote:That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Comparing it to an iPad seems like a mistake, just because it gives people something to focus on besides the fundamental issue without elucidating that issue.
“People have no problem paying $900 for an iPad,” Santorum said, “but paying $900 for a drug they have a problem with — it keeps you alive. Why? Because you’ve been conditioned to think health care is something you can get without having to pay for it.”
I totally agree that I should be living on the street so there can be drugs for future people to not be able to afford. A new antipsychotic isn't going to help anyone but very rich schizophrenics if it's as expensive as current ones are.Vaniver wrote:That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Comparing it to an iPad seems like a mistake, just because it gives people something to focus on besides the fundamental issue without elucidating that issue.
Vaniver wrote:That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Comparing it to an iPad seems like a mistake, just because it gives people something to focus on besides the fundamental issue without elucidating that issue.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
Lucrece wrote:Vaniver wrote:That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Comparing it to an iPad seems like a mistake, just because it gives people something to focus on besides the fundamental issue without elucidating that issue.
He's strawmanning. He's saying that the default position of a woman is that she wishes the company didn't see profit. The woman is just saying the profits are absurd and need regulation given that these companies don't have much in terms of competition and can afford to set prices at whatever level they want because the alternative for people is not voting with their wallet, but rather their life.
It's not like people will go, "Hmm, those prices are ridiculous, so I'm like gonna let my health deteriorate even to the possibility of death to make a point." More than likely it will be, "This will ruin me, but I like being a conscious being more than suffering great cognitive impairment and the likelihood of ceasing to be conscious permanently."
CorruptUser wrote:You are missing another point. If pharmaceutical companies are making obscene profits, many more companies will pop up to try and get their hands on that valuable drug money. Unless the companies only have obscene profits because of regulatory capture and, e.g., the FDA prevents smaller companies from even attempting to enter the market or prevents foreign drugs from entering the market.
Gellert1984 wrote:Also, bomb president CIA al qaeda JFK twin towers jupiter moon martians [s]emtex.
buddy431 wrote:How well are drug companies really doing right now? I know a lot of graduate students in organic chemistry, who say that many companies are cutting back significantly on hiring. There are a number of big drugs coming off patent (Lipitor being the most prominent), and there aren't really any new blockbuster drugs coming up quickly.
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
CorruptUser wrote:While there is a very large barrier to entry, keep in mind that a decent-sized chemistry research lab doesn't cost a billion to create (and grad students are virtually free), and it is theoretically possible to start mass-producing generic drugs in a small facility before adding an R&D department. The biggest hurdle is the FDA and other government regulation.
CorruptUser wrote:Lucrece wrote:Vaniver wrote:That wasn't his reason; his reason was that the primary reason people invest in drug companies (and thus in developing new drugs) is because those drugs are eventually sold and turn a profit. If you get rid of the profit, you get rid of the investment, and more people die in the long run. (R&D spending by pharmaceutical companies is over twice the size of NIH.) Santorum's argument is correct, and I agree with him that future people should be considered about as strongly as current people.
Comparing it to an iPad seems like a mistake, just because it gives people something to focus on besides the fundamental issue without elucidating that issue.
He's strawmanning. He's saying that the default position of a woman is that she wishes the company didn't see profit. The woman is just saying the profits are absurd and need regulation given that these companies don't have much in terms of competition and can afford to set prices at whatever level they want because the alternative for people is not voting with their wallet, but rather their life.
It's not like people will go, "Hmm, those prices are ridiculous, so I'm like gonna let my health deteriorate even to the possibility of death to make a point." More than likely it will be, "This will ruin me, but I like being a conscious being more than suffering great cognitive impairment and the likelihood of ceasing to be conscious permanently."
You are missing another point. If pharmaceutical companies are making obscene profits, many more companies will pop up to try and get their hands on that valuable drug money. Unless the companies only have obscene profits because of regulatory capture and, e.g., the FDA prevents smaller companies from even attempting to enter the market or prevents foreign drugs from entering the market.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
I'm... reading his entire statement before reacting? That's generous?Ghostbear wrote:What? I think you're giving an overly generous interpretation of his remarks:
Santorum's first one is "if you can't afford it, you don't deserve it," and he's applying that both to iPads and life-saving drugs. Whether or not it's insulting doesn't impact whether or not it's true. There are treatments whose benefits aren't worth the costs, and it seems appropriate for that threshold to vary between people.Ghostbear wrote:Only the second point of his has any merit, and the first one is really insulting to everyone that needs drugs to survive or function.
I'm not seeing why you're calling that a strawman- Santorum's argument is exactly the same when talking about reducing profits and eliminating profits. Less profits will mean less investment. It may be that the optimal amount of profit reduction isn't 0%- but it is almost always better to subsidize purchasers than cap prices.Lucrece wrote:He's strawmanning. He's saying that the default position of a woman is that she wishes the company didn't see profit. The woman is just saying the profits are absurd and need regulation given that these companies don't have much in terms of competition and can afford to set prices at whatever level they want because the alternative for people is not voting with their wallet, but rather their life.
I know lots of people who prioritize things above their health, and I suspect they are happier having that control over their life.Lucrece wrote:It's not like people will go, "Hmm, those prices are ridiculous, so I'm like gonna let my health deteriorate even to the possibility of death to make a point." More than likely it will be, "This will ruin me, but I like being a conscious being more than suffering great cognitive impairment and the likelihood of ceasing to be conscious permanently."
Ridiculous? No. The FDA delays treatments needlessly, causing the premature deaths of thousands of Americans a year. It should be burned to the ground and the earth salted, replaced by a many-tiered system of drug safety, giving patients access to untested drugs (and thus testing them), drugs that have been used for years, and everything in between, with an easy way to tell which is which. (If this is the first time you've heard this argument, you should reconsider the strength of your opinions on drug policy.)Ghostbear wrote:Even if the regulations are the major sticking point (which I find a ridiculous notion), how many of them are going to be needlessly onerous?
With pharmaceuticals, small businesses are a source of many drug ideas. (Typically, a professor / scientist will do research for a few years at a university, then form a company to pursue a drug they think could be useful, then get snapped up by a large company once they've done enough work that their drug is a good risk.) The Walmart and Comcast analogies aren't as strong because Walmart has no use for a small store or small distribution center; Pfizer does have use for a small patent.Lucrece wrote:Or, sort of like Walmart, or Comcast, the idea that small businesses stand a chance are heavily outdated in some aspects.
Vaniver wrote:I'm... reading his entire statement before reacting? That's generous?
Vaniver wrote:Santorum's first one is "if you can't afford it, you don't deserve it," and he's applying that both to iPads and life-saving drugs. Whether or not it's insulting doesn't impact whether or not it's true. There are treatments whose benefits aren't worth the costs, and it seems appropriate for that threshold to vary between people.
Vaniver wrote:Ridiculous? No. The FDA delays treatments needlessly, causing the premature deaths of thousands of Americans a year. It should be burned to the ground and the earth salted, replaced by a many-tiered system of drug safety, giving patients access to untested drugs (and thus testing them), drugs that have been used for years, and everything in between, with an easy way to tell which is which. (If this is the first time you've heard this argument, you should reconsider the strength of your opinions on drug policy.)
At the very least, we should return to the pre-1962 regulations, which only required testing for safety, rather than testing for safety and efficacy.
Ghostbear wrote:Considering the price you have to pay for those drugs and the costs borne on societal overall, testing for efficacy seems pretty reasonable to me. Do you have any sources detailing how it is non functional? Just telling me I should reconsider my stance doesn't really do much to make me do so.
That aside, you appear to have missed the point: would the removal of those regulations be sufficient to make the pharmaceutical business not have a significant barrier to entry? I'm very doubtful.
Gellert1984 wrote:Also, bomb president CIA al qaeda JFK twin towers jupiter moon martians [s]emtex.
yurell wrote:Cost of drugs in the US are also ridiculously high compared to Europe, from what I understand. One that made me particularly rage was this issue. All because the American companies have a monopoly within America, since you're not allowed to buy from overseas.
Edit: Oh shivers, I didn't realise this was the Republican thread, thought it was another. I don't want to derail your thread, so feel free to ignore me.
I don't see what I'm ignoring. The iPad example is a bad one, the statement that health care should be paid for by the recipient is one I agree with, and I agree with the economic logic.Ghostbear wrote:Reading his entire statement and then promptly ignoring the first half of it is being generous, yes.
Yes.Ghostbear wrote:So some people shouldn't deserve drugs that either life-saving or necessary to be functional drugs because the market has priced them out?
"Reasonable to you?" Are you a doctor? Are you well-read on drug policy and medicine? Can you name the 1962 regulation change that I referred to without looking it up?Ghostbear wrote:Considering the price you have to pay for those drugs and the costs borne on societal overall, testing for efficacy seems pretty reasonable to me.
I refer you to the last paragraph of my previous post.Ghostbear wrote:That aside, you appear to have missed the point: would the removal of those regulations be sufficient to make the pharmaceutical business not have a significant barrier to entry? I'm very doubtful.
Vaniver wrote:Yes.Ghostbear wrote:So some people shouldn't deserve drugs that either life-saving or necessary to be functional drugs because the market has priced them out?
Under any feasible medical system, not every life-extension is worth purchasing. If you don't agree with that premise, we can't have a meaningful discussion about life on Earth.
That's the value used to determine the cost of a pollutant / risk to human lives; how much you would have to pay a general person to make them worse off. When talking about saving a person that currently exists, you have a lot more information that you ought to use when determining value, and the value proposition is different. But a system that has a way to value QALY improvements and approves or denies treatments based on that would be a solid system.Malice wrote:Isn't the government value on a human life something like 8 million dollars? That seems far above the kind of treatments we're talking about, which are still too expensive for many who need them.
A single-payer system would probably work in the US, and the radical readjustment necessary to get there could permit other technological / policy breakthroughs that matter far more than the institutional incentives. (If you have everyone's medical data in one place, the amount you can learn about human health by using data mining techniques could alter medicine as much as the invention of the randomized experiment.)Malice wrote:Treatments can (and sometimes are) cheap enough to be viable options in general while expensive enough to be largely unavailable to some segment of the population. Other Western nations with socialized/Universal/free health care manage to increase the availability of life-saving medication without "giving away the store"; why not the US?
Malice wrote:Isn't the government value on a human life something like 8 million dollars? That seems far above the kind of treatments we're talking about, which are still too expensive for many who need them. Treatments can (and sometimes are) cheap enough to be viable options in general while expensive enough to be largely unavailable to some segment of the population. Other Western nations with socialized/Universal/free health care manage to increase the availability of life-saving medication without "giving away the store"; why not the US?
This would be a meaningful sentence if you actually ever defined the limit at which "life-extension" is not worth purchasing.Vaniver wrote:Under any feasible medical system, not every life-extension is worth purchasing. If you don't agree with that premise, we can't have a meaningful discussion about life on Earth.
That leaves Deamonte Driver dead, and it leaves me one of the schizophrenic homeless people on the street.Vaniver wrote:I don't see what I'm ignoring. The iPad example is a bad one, the statement that health care should be paid for by the recipient is one I agree with, and I agree with the economic logic.
I don't think anyone is asking for anything more incentive-eliminating than the single payer system. It wouldn't even harm incentives that much.Vaniver wrote:A single-payer system would probably work in the US, and the radical readjustment necessary to get there could permit other technological / policy breakthroughs that matter far more than the institutional incentives. (If you have everyone's medical data in one place, the amount you can learn about human health by using data mining techniques could alter medicine as much as the invention of the randomized experiment.)
Other innovation incentives need to be watched carefully, though. The US, as the largest and most profitable medical market, motivates a lot of drug research and medical tool investment (both here and abroad). A single payer that drives down the cost of medical spending might cause that investment to be reduced significantly. (This might actually be a good thing for health / the economy overall; the current US medical investment climate is far too focused on highest quality at highest cost, rather than increasing the quality/cost ratio. There are too many variables to predict confidently, though.)
Vaniver wrote:But a system that has a way to value QALY improvements and approves or denies treatments based on that would be a solid system.
CorruptUser wrote:Obviously an old codger that has one foot in the grave is probably not worth as much as a young adult fresh out of college.
buddy431 wrote:The United States is pretty notorious for having very strict regulatory hurdles to getting drugs approved. It's quite common for drugs to be approved in Europe before the U.S., if they're ever approved in the U.S. Drugs for Psoriasis that doesn't respond to other drugs, drugs to help people recover from anesthesia, and new treatments for diabetes. That being said, this isn't always the case. The U.S. has faster approval for cancer drugs than Europe, probably both because many cancer drugs come from biotechnology, where the U.S. holds an advantage over Europe, as well as the fact that the U.S. has a very strong Cancer advocacy faction. And there are drugs that are approved in Europe and then subsequently withdrawn, due to either higher risks or lower benefits than first believed, such as Acomplia.
I tend to agree with Vaniver that the U.S. drug approval process is overly cautious (as in, we're hurting more people by not letting useful drugs come to market than we're helping people by preventing potentially unsafe drugs come to market), but reasonable people may disagree about the appropriate barrier to approval.
Vaniver wrote:I don't see what I'm ignoring. The iPad example is a bad one, the statement that health care should be paid for by the recipient is one I agree with, and I agree with the economic logic.
Vaniver wrote:Yes.
Under any feasible medical system, not every life-extension is worth purchasing. If you don't agree with that premise, we can't have a meaningful discussion about life on Earth.
Vaniver wrote:"Reasonable to you?" Are you a doctor? Are you well-read on drug policy and medicine? Can you name the 1962 regulation change that I referred to without looking it up?
Vaniver wrote:I refer you to the last paragraph of my previous post.
Prices of care, while costs for patients, are revenues for care providers, and now we're exactly at the incentives that I'm talking about. To the degree that less money goes to health care, it is less attractive to invest in improving health care. (As mentioned before, total health may improve if incentives are aligned towards improving health rather than providing care. Paying people to floss would probably do more for dental health than fancy new equipment for dentists.)omgryebread wrote:Because of the system's huge bargaining power, they'd be able to negotiate prices of care lower.
This can't go both ways, though. Either costs are lower because pharmaceutical companies are being paid less, or costs are the same because pharmaceutical companies are being paid the same. (Alternatively, Big Pharma benefits while the pharmaceutical industry as a whole suffers; this typically falls under "regulatory capture.")omgryebread wrote:Drug companies can't charge as much per patient, but they get a lot more patients. Big Pharma was for the PPACA, once they won a few concessions.
Panels are both wasteful and inaccurate. I support death formulas.Qaanol wrote:ITT: Vaniver and CorruptUser support death panels.
There are many people who are not willing to agree with that premise, or who object to "the market should set the threshold" with "thresholds are bad." Once you agree that some people should die when it would be possible for them to live, then it's just a question of who and why.Ghostbear wrote:The examples at hand seem to be focused more on the plausible end of the pricing spectrum however, so your answer doesn't really seem to further the conversation.
Fixed. No, I'm not a doctor, but I'm familiar with off-label prescriptions (i.e. the pre-1962 system with some unnecessary limitations). My expectation is that if you haven't heard of the Kefauver Harris Amendment, you haven't seen any serious examinations of whether or not it's been good for American healthcare. (It hasn't.)Ghostbear wrote:What a bunch of arbitrary limitations. Vaniver's discussions: those without [experience] need not apply?
Qaanol wrote:Vaniver wrote:But a system that has a way to value QALY improvements and approves or denies treatments based on that would be a solid system.CorruptUser wrote:Obviously an old codger that has one foot in the grave is probably not worth as much as a young adult fresh out of college.
ITT: Vaniver and CorruptUser support death panels.Spoiler:
Vaniver wrote:[... ] and markets are the best way to answer that question in a way that both respects individual choice and incentivizes individuals to promote the values of others.
Vaniver wrote:Fixed. No, I'm not a doctor, but I'm familiar with off-label prescriptions (i.e. the pre-1962 system with some unnecessary limitations). My expectation is that if you haven't heard of the Kefauver Harris Amendment, you haven't seen any serious examinations of whether or not it's been good for American healthcare. (It hasn't.)
Vaniver wrote:As is, the efficacy requirement has costs but no benefits. Previously, a drug needed to go through safety trials to be put on the market, but then efficacy was up to doctors, scientists, and the public to determine. Now, a drug needs to go through safety trials and then efficacy trials. The efficacy trials only determine what goes on the label, though- doctors can prescribe the drug for any purpose.
How much I care, and what I would do about it, primarily depends on why the market doesn't balance itself. If there is a high barrier to entry for engineering reasons, then an oligopoly is the efficient solution.Ghostbear wrote:In a basic sense, I don't think I'd say anything you wrote in that section wrong, but what do you do when the market is such that it will not balance itself? Whatever the reasons for it, pharmaceuticals is more or less an oligopoly market.
I think the response to this hinges on how you view intellectual property. If someone's default state is death, and you invent a way to keep them alive, then it seems like anything they're left with above death is an improvement thanks to you. If you instead discover something that's common property, fencing people out and charging a massive toll at the gate makes them worse off.Ghostbear wrote:When someone needs treatments either to function or to just plain survive, the demand is going to be sufficiently inelastic that you could very plausibly be seen as exploiting their situation.
Vaniver wrote:Sometimes, the oligopoly exists for non-engineering reasons, typically because of non-engineering barriers. In those cases, removing the barriers is typically the way forward.
sardia wrote:In related news, Santorum sweeps all Missouri, Minnesota, and Colorado.
sardia wrote:In related news, Santorum sweeps all Missouri, Minnesota, and Colorado. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/08/us/po ... f=politics
Technically, he could lose Colorado, but the effect is the same. A long drawn out nomination, yuck. =\ Oh, and the nomination is still Romney's to lose since he has the advantage of being well funded, organized, and isn't splitting the anti-Romney vote.
Diadem wrote:Wikipedia has a nice list of all the republican primaries. Under 'delegate allocation' however it lists N/A for Colorado, Minnesota *and* Missouri. How can it be N/A? I'd understand 'unknown'. But not applicable? They must allocate delegates some way right?
How many delegates does Sanatorum have now compared to Romney? Wikipedia says 4. But that can't be right. 4 bound perhaps? But what about unbound ones?
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