Dr Matthew Norton, head of policy at Alzheimer’s Research
UK, said there was a “perception” that Big Pharma now feared “diseases like
Alzheimer’s are too tough to crack”.
Between 1998 and 2012, there were 101 unsuccessful attempts
to develop drugs for Alzheimer’s disease, with only three drugs gaining
approval for treating symptoms of the disease, according to the study. Experts
said that with no known cure and a huge increase in cases expected within a
decade, “a massive step change in research funding” was needed. The number of
people living with dementia worldwide is to reach 135 million by 2050, by which
time the cost of care is anticipated to exceed $1 trillion (£652bn) in the US
alone. The Wish report warns that, without a major drug breakthrough, dementia
will “move from a major health challenge to a global economic crisis”.
Former Labour health minister Lord Darzi said “the future
costs to societies and economies will be enormous without significant
intervention now.”
Dr James Pickett, head of research at the Alzheimer’s
Society, said: “With no known cure, limited treatments, and a projected
prevalence of one million within the decade, we need a massive step change in
research funding in order to develop new treatments.”
This typical of capitalism and the quest for profits by drug
companies who place the needs of investors before patients who need a cure for
this disease. Under capitalism business is not interested in essential work
unless there are high enough profits in it to satisfy them.
The global pharmaceuticals market is worth US$300 billion a
year, a figure expected to rise to US$400 billion within three years. The 10
largest drugs companies control over one-third of this market, several with
sales of more than US$10 billion a year and profit margins of about 30%. Six
are based in the United States and four in Europe. It is predicted that North
and South America, Europe and Japan will continue to account for a full 85% of
the global pharmaceuticals market well into the 21st century. Companies currently
spend one-third of all sales revenue on marketing their products - roughly
twice what they spend on research and development.
As a result of this pressure to maintain sales, there is
now, in WHO's words, “an inherent conflict of interest between the legitimate
business goals of manufacturers and the social, medical and economic needs of
providers and the public to select and use drugs in the most rational way”.
This is particularly true where drugs companies are the main source of
information as to which products are most effective. Even in the United
Kingdom, where the medical profession receives more independent,
publicly-funded information than in many other countries, promotional spending
by pharmaceuticals companies is 50 times greater than spending on public
information on health.
A similar conflict of interests exists in the area of drug
research and development (R&D) particularly in the area of neglected
diseases. The private sector dominates R&D, spending millions of dollars
each year developing new drugs for the mass market. The profit imperative
ensures that the drugs chosen for development are those most likely to provide
a high return on the company's investment. As a result, drugs for use in the
industrialized world are prioritized over ones for use in the South, where many
patients would be unable to pay for them.
The sickness to be cured is capitalism.
1 comment:
Great article and so true
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