An article by Charles Davis on the Truth-Out website explains
the mercenary effect of capitalism on health-care and is worth quoting at
length.
More than 920,000 children died of pneumonia in 2015,
according to the World Health Organization. For 2015, Ian Read, the chairman
and CEO of Pfizer who earned a salary of $23.3 million, reported that the
pharmaceutical giant turned a $7.7 billion profit, driven in part by a 53
percent growth in revenue from the Global Vaccines division.
Pfizer is the leading manufacturer of a vaccine that can
prevent the contraction of pneumonia, a respiratory infection responsible for
taking the life of 1 out every 6 children who dies before the age of 5. That
vaccine is called Prevnar and it is making very rich people lots of money,
generating $1.8 billion in revenue last year alone.
"They have quoted us a price in Niger of $15.60 a
dose," Kate Elder, a Vaccines Policy Adviser with the medical aid
organization Doctors Without Borders (MSF), said. A child needs three of those
doses, meaning the cost of inoculation would be $46.80. Niger with a population
of more than 19 million and a gross domestic product, according to the World
Bank, of $8.1 billion is about equal to what Pfizer made in profit last year. For
that reason, "We have not bought Pfizer's vaccine because it is too
expensive," said Elder. "It's pretty obscene." With its
consistent cash flow and steady profits - just under $16.9 billion over the
last two years - is the world's second largest drug company so stingy when it
comes to providing the developing world affordable access to a life-saving
vaccine? When the bulk of its cash flow comes from sales at a premium price in
the wealthy, industrialized world, why is it quite literally allowing children
to die in the world's most impoverished places? MSF is calling on Pfizer to lower
the price to $5 per child for all developing countries and humanitarian
organizations. GlaxoSmithKline, a British pharmaceutical company, also
manufactures a pneumonia vaccine. It, too, is making lots of money: $10.3
billion in profit last year alone. But it also sells that vaccine for more than
the $5 a child MSF says it can afford.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
three doses of Prevnar - the number required to be inoculated - sells on the
private market for just under $48, if one buys a pack of 10; the US government
pays $28.80. Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, a public-private initiative with the
stated aim of "creating equal access to new and underused vaccines,"
reportedly gets its pneumonia vaccine from Pfizer for $3.30 a dose, which comes
out to just under $10 a child. But it isn't free - and it isn't charity.
"Oh, it's not a loss," said Elder. "They're still making a
profit. They're not doing this altruistically."
In Niger over the last decade, more than 950,000 children
under the age of 5 died, according to the WHO, with roughly 15 percent of those
deaths - around 140,000 - attributable to pneumonia. That is 140,000 children
who, if vaccinated, might be alive today. Around the world over the last 10
years, that number rises to nearly 10 million children who have died a
preventable death.
Preventing children from dying of pneumonia -
"Cost," according to Elder, "is the primary access barrier"
- would also prevent people from dying of other causes, as it would free up
limited medical resources to treat others who, instead of being dead, would be
contributing to the culture and economy of the world's poorest countries. Tens
of thousands of children, and tens of thousands of others, are dying in Niger
and developing countries around the world because those who have already made
billions off the pneumonia vaccine, more than recuperating their costs, want to
make a few billion more.
As MSF's Rohit Malpani put it in a statement, "A deeply
discounted price when compared with a developed country price may look good,
but really it reflects the unaffordable prices of vaccines in developed
countries more than it reflects developing countries getting a good deal."
if money is still being made at $10 a child, then these companies are making a
whole lot of it in the developing world. Indeed, Pfizer says growth in its
pneumonia vaccine sales was driven by the United States, where revenues grew by
102 percent. "It costs 68 times more to fully immunize a child now than it
did in 2001," according to MSF, "and the expensive pneumonia vaccine
accounts for much of that increase.
Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline might well contend that they are
just complying with the economic laws of the global economic system that we
have today; they're just following the orders of capitalism, which dictates
that maximizing quarterly profits and shareholder value is quite literally more
important that little children dying. And they wouldn't be wrong. But for
capitalism to kill, it's needs capitalist killers and there's no evidence that
those growing wealthy from this lethal economic arrangement feel too bad about
what they do. Plenty of money - literally billions of dollars - is being made
in the developed world off this one vaccine while millions of children who need
it the most, in underdeveloped areas where malnutrition and armed conflict
exacerbate the risks of pneumonia, go without. What MSF and others are asking
for is not socialism, alas, but a sort of reparations: You've made enough off
the poor, and more than enough off the relatively rich, globally speaking, so
now it's time to share the wealth with those who centuries of greed have hurt
the most.
We are long past the age when we lacked the resources to
prevent people dying from preventable diseases. In the 21st century, it is not
pneumonia that is leading hundreds of thousands of kids under 5 to an early
grave every year, but another malady - cut-throat, kid-killing capitalism -
that has sickened millions and killed millions more. Eradication of
greed-is-good as an ethos, allowing a select few to privatize the gains of
scientific advancement, is humanity's best hope for a remedy to this planet's
many ills.
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