High costs of drugs
In Kentucky and throughout the south, pharmaceutical prices force many to choose between medicines and food. The situation for many elderly is at a crisis point.
Then comes along a study, such as this one in the Journal of the American Medical Association, where medical students were found to receive at least one gift or attend at least one activity sponsored by a pharmaceutical company every week! Many medical residents consider these gifts inappropriate but accept them anyhow. And in case you didn't figure it out, the study points out that this frequent interaction between medical students and pharmaceutical representatives increases the likelihood that physicians will prescribe the sponsor's products, regardless of price differences.
Nathan Wilson


1 Comments:
Yes. Why is it that when people talk about reining in drug prices, making it harder extend patents and easier to manufacture generics, the pharmaceutical companies claim that it will cripple the money available for research and development of new drugs--yet they have plenty of money for tv spots and "marketing" to medical students. Why can't the money come from the ad budgets?
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