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gmalivuk wrote:Yes. And if wishes were horses, wishing wells would fill up very quickly with drowned horses.King Author wrote:If space (rather, distance) is an illusion, it'd be possible for one meta-me to experience both body's sensory inputs.
addams wrote:I'm not a bot.
That is what a bot would type.
gmalivuk wrote:Yes. And if wishes were horses, wishing wells would fill up very quickly with drowned horses.King Author wrote:If space (rather, distance) is an illusion, it'd be possible for one meta-me to experience both body's sensory inputs.
Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet,
This is not Done by Jostling in the Street.
poochyena wrote:i'm really glad to see educated comments and no "theres a cure for cancer and the government withholds it from the public to level out population and stimulate the health system"
Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet,
This is not Done by Jostling in the Street.
TheKrikkitWars wrote:I can't help feeling that if anything big pharma is quite exploitative in offering new treatments which offer only the most meagre improvements in prognosis at exorbitant prices. It would be more ethical to use these incremental improvements as baby steps in R&D rather than selling them when there is little real benefit over another treatment.
Izawwlgood wrote:Most doctors and patients I've interacted with who were dealing with terminal cancer made it quite clear that they were either approaching, at, or past, the point of 'we've done all we can'. I don't think it's remotely predatory of a drug company to sell a drug that marginally lengthens a patients life; having options is always a good thing.
Great things are done when Men & Mountains meet,
This is not Done by Jostling in the Street.
TheKrikkitWars wrote:poochyena wrote:i'm really glad to see educated comments and no "theres a cure for cancer and the government withholds it from the public to level out population and stimulate the health system"
FWIW, My government does actually restrict access to cancer treatment based on a cost vs. benefit analysis; treratments which cause significant reduction in quality of life, are exorbitantly expensive, or will only prolong life for a small amount of time are less likely to be funded (and some may be funded for one cancer and not another if there is evidence to show that some cancers respond better to the treatment in question than others)... I feel that this is actually the right approach.
I can't help feeling that if anything big pharma is quite exploitative in offering new treatments which offer only the most meagre improvements in prognosis at exorbitant prices. It would be more ethical to use these incremental improvements as baby steps in R&D rather than selling them when there is little real benefit over another treatment; Make of that what you will
Having lost a sizeable number of family and friends to cancer and seeing the different effects on both them and the people around them of different approaches, I've come to sympathise with this viewpoint.
TheKrikkitWars wrote:When you're talking about cost differences that can hit 5 figure sums for an improvement in prognosis (not outcome, but the statistically most likely outcome) that can be measured in weeks; I can't help but think that's senseless.
Shadow5 wrote:In regards to the Treatment Vs Cure conspiracy, I personally do think there is far too much emphasis on 'treatment' over seeking a 'cure', and I do believe this is in part fuelled by the pharma companies focusing on treatments which are far more profitable.
qetzal wrote:Shadow5 wrote:In regards to the Treatment Vs Cure conspiracy, I personally do think there is far too much emphasis on 'treatment' over seeking a 'cure', and I do believe this is in part fuelled by the pharma companies focusing on treatments which are far more profitable.
Meaning what? That pharma companies deliberately avoid developing potential cures? Do you seriously think it's more profitable to sell a crappy chemo drug where the patient still DIES after 6 months, than it would be to sell a drug that CURES them? That's just ludicrous.
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