tkr4lf wrote: I just read through every post of mine in this thread, and I have only said the words "long term study" once, and that was to say:
You started this by pouncing on me as "talking through my ass" when I told you that drug companies basically take existing research and tweek it for profits rather than really doing the advancing research themselves. And then went on with an "explanation" of how "rigorous" the studies were (along with claiming that them marketing Viagara somehow proved they werenot just tweaking research

) to attempt to refute what I said... as well
YET.... it turns out that every assertion I made was actually correct and yet you still want to argue about it
tkr4lf wrote: tkr4lf wrote:Woodruff wrote:Ok, I understand all of that. But that just doesn't strike me as particularly rigorous, given the potential problems (particularly long-term) that can occur from medication. I guess to my view, "rigorous" would almost have to include some sort of a long-term study (which admittedly could be in the Phase 3 or 4 you described, as I have far less knowledge of it than you do).
It could be, but I doubt it. From my understanding, there aren't many (if any at all) "long term" studies like what would be ideal. The costs associated with running these studies is already enormous. I couldn't imagine how much they would have to spend to run the type of study that would pass your rigorous test.
That's not to say I don't agree. I do. I think they should continue to run tests on these medications, just to ensure the safety and efficacy. Unfortunately, big pharma is just like any other "evil corporation" in that their bottom line is profits. I think that in their eyes, it's more cost effective to simply pay off the people who bring up the law suits than to devote the significant amount of money and man hours needed to do a serious long-term study. That's pretty fucked up, but it is the truth (or at least I think it is, I could be wrong).
So you realize you're arguing with me about something we agree upon, right?
NO, I think you don't really understand as much as you think about medical studies, but instead of just admitting you were wrong on several fronts just decide to play the "attack player" game.
tkr4lf wrote:I already said that as far as I know there aren't many "long term" studies but that there should be.
Except, you decided to argue when I said a really long term study would take 20-50 years... and decided, though I never said it, that this clarification meant I was insisting this is what companies should do.
BUT, ....
Specifically, to clarify, if you are talking about a drug that will help a terminal patient.. who cares about impacts 5-10 years down the road, and who really needs to know whether it will cause them to get brittle hair or even have more serious issues. IF, however, you are talking about a drug for achne... I want to know it is pretty darned SAFE before letting teenagers take it! Maybe not 20 years safe, but definitely no indications of kidney problems, heart problems or even brittle hair that is permanent in more than a very small portion of the poeple taking it. Even that definition of "small portion" changes. If this is a disease that kills 1 in 250, then a risk of death in 1 in 1,000 is acceptable. If its something that most kids outgrow (acne.. though I do qualify that serious acne cases can permanently scar and thus do have lifetime impacts.. just not death), then a 1 in 1000 risk of death seems a bit extreme.
tkr4lf wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:tkr4lf wrote: Who is going to pay for these 50 year long studies? Certainly not the drug companies, they have a hard enough time paying for the studies they do now.
LOL.. LOL...LOL.
FIRST, never said a 50 year study should be required. I said 50 years would be required before you can start claiming it is a complete, long term study. The information WILL come out, in time.
BUT... this is yet one of many reasons why drug production, etc should not be dictated by the "market". They are not now, anyway, but let's do away with the fiction. The length of time needed to test a drug should be based on the risk and benefit, NOT the ability of the company to make a profit.
But the company has to make a profit or there is no incentive to even market the drug.
Yet one more reason why having these industries run on a "for profit" basis, particularly a profit without limits, is wrong and inappropriate.
tkr4lf wrote:
Look, I agree that the situation isn't ideal. In a perfect world, all medicines would be tested for as long as it takes to make sure that it is safe and effective, no matter what the costs.
But this isn't a perfect world. These are companies we're dealing with, and a company's bottom line is profits. There is no other reason to be in business other than to make money.
So every drug they market must make them enough profit to warrant the costs associated with researching, developing, manufacturing, testing, and marketing the drug.
Except right now, that is HEAVILY skewed by tax dollars and yet taxpayers are kept ignorant of this. The right wing utterly ignores the major payments we make to medical research, the fact that companies are flat out GI VEN patents for drugs researched for using NIH (taxpayer) dollars... and then the right wants to object to limits on the profits of these companies or even requirements that they actually produce the drugs for which they have patents.
tkr4lf wrote: What you want is a utopia that will never happen. It would be great if it would happen, but it won't. Big Pharma is pretty entrenched, much like the FDA. Good luck ever getting them to give up their power.
What I want above all is more honesty and awareness of the situation. Too many posters here, like yourself, seem very unaware of the full and complete extent to which taxpayers truly support these companies AND the huge profits they gain from just one very successful drug like Viagra (that very much make up for the losses in other areas -- never mind lower profits in other areas)
tkr4lf wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:tkr4lf wrote: Look, I agree that the current system isn't perfect, and is in need of change. But you have to be realistic here. That will never happen. Never. You would have 1 scientist devoting his entire adult life to seeing a single medication reach the market. There would be no feasible way to make it cost effective. Basically, if it was a requirement to run 50 year long studies on every medication, then the drug companies would cease to exist. Nobody would make medication since there is absolutely no profit to be made. Well, no profit unless a bottle of Tylenol costs $600.
Actually, with computerized records, the data could and should be collected pretty readily.
That has little to do with the costs of running a 50 year long study. Data collection is the least of your worries. You have to pay somebody to run the study for you, or you have to pay your own scientists to run a study. You have to pay to manufacture and ship all of the medication to the trials. You have to pay for the volunteers, at least in Phase 1 studies, etc.
Let me clarify a point upon which you appear to be ignorant. I HAVE DONE government research, for years. My research is designs are still used today in the field, are published. And, while no, I was not directly involved in medical/pharmaceutical research, I would see and hear about some of those people in various conferences, even back in college classes (note.. an anomoly of many biology classes is that you may sit beside graduate students in the very same lecture and study with them. you just get differing grades).
Sooooo:
It has a LOT to do with teh cost of running a 50 year study!
Physicians can be, should be required to list even just reported side effects of drugs. That is, if they give a drug and then the patient gets a stomache ache an hour later.. or 6 hours later .. or the next day.. that needs to be recorded. Now, if you are familiar with biological studies, you know that this, alone is not proof of anything (did the kid "just happen" to eat 3 bags of halloween candy right after taking the medication?). However, given huge numbers of people and the correct data, this stuff can very much highlight possible side effects and sometimes actual proof of side effects. This ability to collate and collect information is exactly what makes studies so costly.. and difficult. Only with computers can you possibly look at the many parameters and stratify the data well enough to get results. Computers make it much, much easier to pull out, say just women between the ages of 30 and 40.. and allows collection of data across a much wider physical region than traditional tests. The data is less controlled, and so this kind of collection won't completely replace the more intensive and controlled type studies, but as much as anything it can highlight much more efficiently where such studies might be more warranted. AND, when the results are serious and/or severe... this kind of data can show real results. (if I know there is even a chance of 1 in 200 kids dying from a cough medicine.. PULL IT!!! and only maybe worry about a follow-up study, depending on the evidence. If I see that there seems to be higher incidence of various problems in young children taking a particular medicine or women who are 40-45, then a better study is warranted).
tkr4lf wrote: I don't think data collection is a major concern when it comes to a drug company's decision on whether to run a 50 year long study or not.
Then you don't know much about the situation.
But, the bottom line is that companies will only do what is required or that they feel will be cost-effective in warding off lawsuits and penalties. Right now, they have no incentive.. actually have negative incentives to really do a good job of collecting side effect data after a drug is released (just to point out one BIG problem).
tkr4lf wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote: However, you ignored another part I ALSO wrote, where I specifically said that we cannot wait until a drug is considered fully safe before putting it on the market.
No, I didn't.
I just read through every post of yours in response to me and you never once said that we cannot wait until a drug is considered fully safe before putting it on the market. Not once. Either you have a terrible memory or you are a liar. Maybe you said it in another thread that I haven't seen. Either way, you did not say that in this thread to me.
I never said that this was a requirement, EVER. I objected to your classification of 1-2 year studies as being "long term" and "complete". They just are not. What level of testing should be required is a DIFFERENT QUESTION. So, to begin you "debated" a point that I never even made.
BUT.. still, I DID addres what you claim I did not:
However, I DID very much say, this:
Page 5, colorization added to the pertinent part.
At some point, you have to cut off any study. The truth is that you don't really know a drug's full impact unless it is used for a lifetime among huge numbers of people. However, most people are willing to accept that. The problem comes when people are not given full information about what IS available and when there are incentives to distort real results.
From page 6:
BUT... this is yet one of many reasons why drug production, etc should not be dictated by the "market". They are not now, anyway, but let's do away with the fiction. The length of time needed to test a drug should be based on the risk and benefit, NOT the ability of the company to make a profit.
And here, you save me finding this one:
tkr4lf wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:The risk we are willing to accept depends on the danger of the illness/injury in question. If we are talkingsoem new "death plaque" that is going to kill everyone in 10 years... I think you would get people willing to come out and take even gobs of arsenic IF there were some chance of it combatting the disease. If we are talking about a minor bruise... most people don't really see the need for ANY intervention. (But drug companies would be happy to convince us we need 1000 creams and such to treat them).
Yeah, that makes sense.
and it did not even kill you to admit that!
tkr4lf wrote:
And of course the drug companies would happily convince you that you need something when you don't, they are a for-profit company. They'll jump at the opportunity to make new profits.
Yes, they very much do that. And, for all the right wants to claim that the government has vested interests counter to the needs of the public, I have yet to see the extremely subversive impact of extra money for stockholders. In fact, most of the so-called "political" and "government" interest is actually monetary interest of people supporting various politicians.
tkr4lf wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:tkr4lf wrote:
So, yeah, get back to me when you have something realistic to offer, instead of completely unfeasible "ideal solutions" that would never work.
Then again, you could look at what I write instead of just assuming.
I do. And I see that most of it is rubbish. I also notice that you believe what you want to without needing any proof. Such as:
PLAYER57832 wrote:You were proclaiming that the drug companies do these wonderful long term studies
Ah, yes, you spoke of the "rigorousness" of the studies, not "long term". But you still felt free to pounce on me when I said they were not really long term. and:
HERE is the part that started it all off.
Night Strike wrote:
pmchugh wrote:
Well done you found one of the critics of the NHS, yes it isn't perfect I said that but how about you come up with your own arguments or thoughts rather than taking, at face value, the comments of a Southeast-England christian conservative who basically wants to americanise our entire political system?
The fact of the matter is we spend a lot less money on healthcare than the US, we cover people equally and fairly and the health care in the UK is not significantly worse than any other developed country.
When was the last time useful drugs were actually invented in the UK? Or any other country that has socialized medicine? Only free markets will develop new drugs and treatments, not ones that mandate costs and which drugs are allowed to be offered.
OUR system is not a free market system. Companies take government funded research and "tweek" it or work on things that will provide quick pay offs.
Viagra.. not cures for breast cancer, never mind malaria.
There are 2 primary reasons the US has provided so many drugs to date. The first is our sheer size. Our institutions have attracted people from all over. Other places had good research, but we tended to have more.
AND.. our wonderful education system, particularly the higher education system that has been open to more people than other countries' systems.
NOTHING about free markets. Sorry, that is pure illusion. (and no, you CANNOT find this by checking patents because the government does not get patents) PLAYER57832
Posts: 2342
Joined: Fri Sep 21, 2007 9:17 am
PLAYER57832 wrote:
Night Strike wrote:
pmchugh wrote:
Well done you found one of the critics of the NHS, yes it isn't perfect I said that but how about you come up with your own arguments or thoughts rather than taking, at face value, the comments of a Southeast-England christian conservative who basically wants to americanise our entire political system?
The fact of the matter is we spend a lot less money on healthcare than the US, we cover people equally and fairly and the health care in the UK is not significantly worse than any other developed country.
When was the last time useful drugs were actually invented in the UK? Or any other country that has socialized medicine? Only free markets will develop new drugs and treatments, not ones that mandate costs and which drugs are allowed to be offered.
OUR system is not a free market system. Companies take government funded research and "tweek" it or work on things that will provide quick pay offs.
Viagra.. not cures for breast cancer, never mind malaria.
There are 2 primary reasons the US has provided so many drugs to date. The first is our sheer size. Our institutions have attracted people from all over. Other places had good research, but we tended to have more.
AND.. our wonderful education system, particularly the higher education system that has been open to more people than other countries' systems.
NOTHING about free markets. Sorry, that is pure illusion. (and no, you CANNOT find this by checking patents because the government does not get patents)
Once again, you are talking out of your ass. Viagra was originally a heart medicine. It was during phase 1 testing that they noticed the side effect of massive erections. Fun fact: The PPD phase 1 clinic here in Austin that I worked at actually tested Viagra.
Also, these companies don't take government funded research and "tweek" it. They have extensive R&D departments of their own that do the research, and then Contract Research Organizations to do the actual studies. The only part the government plays in any of this is the FDA and their many requirements, but that is all about ensuring that the drugs that actually reach the market are safe.
You really should try to learn about things before you just start spouting stuff out about things of which you have no knowledge.
[/quote]
tkr4lf wrote: Also, no, drug development is not essentially a response to an emergency. Like I said, these companies have extensive R&D divisions, we have the university research that you pointed out, etc.
Skipped a piece because its just repeating what was already said. Again, this is specifically referring to the fact that we cannot wait for full and complete proof fo safety, because people need these medications. That IS my definition of an "emergency" and, in the context is an appropriate use of the word.
tkr4lf wrote: I think it runs counter to what you said because your statements imply that pharmaceutical companies "tweaked" research in order to create viagra because it would provide quick payoffs. Nobody "tweaked" anything. During a Phase 1 clinical trial an interesting side effect for a blood pressure medicine was noticed. And yes, like any company would do, they saw a huge market and huge dollar signs, and they jumped at the opportunity.
[/quote]
So they took and bottled it into a new form, sold it was a drug to cure erectifel dysfunction. In other words, they TWEAKED something that already existed, shifted its focus. They did not discover a wholly new drug.
tkr4lf wrote:EXACTLY! They are quick to note a possible benefit for a drug already in existance. They are not that great at finding and creating entirely new classes of drugs. They are quick to find cures for erectile dysfunction (yes, viagra). However, a cure for malaria.. a disease that still kills millions? It was not until the government realized that more soldiers were dying from malaria than injuries (or at least that malaria contributed significantly to the problems) that the research was done.
You still insinuate that the industry purposefully made an ED pill. They did not. It was a complete accident.
And that is completely wrong about they are not great at finding entirely new classes of drugs. New classes of drugs are found all the time. That's why there has been a steady advance in the quality of, say, anti-depressants, or blood pressure medicine, or heart medication, or AIDS medications. [/quote]And yet, you make these statements without really paying attention to where that research comes from.
now.. I can qualify that I could have misused the terms "class of drugs". I don't know the technical definition of what distinguishes one class from another. And its possible there is an exception.. most probably it would be in researching tropical plants. (though as I noted, that is largely a matter of collecting data.. its just the data is from tribes people not government research necessarily). HOWEVER, by and large companies take existing research and use it. the government makes the initial stabs that so often are unsuccessful.
tkr4lf wrote:As for a cure for malaria, I wasn't aware the government developed one because it noticed more soldiers were dying of it than injuries. Perhaps you have a source?
Ralph Nadar gave a pretty interesting speech on the topic. You can access it, but have to pay $20. I have not found a ready free source. (the information is likely there, just in various different places such that I just don't ahve time to tie it all together the way he did). A lot of the research was done in Walter Reed hospital, which got a bad name, but was actually a leading institution for a long time. One big reason it was neglected is that unlike the drug companies and private corporations, the staff of Walter Reed could NOT even call legislators on the phone to say they had definite needs for xyz, never mind say "hey, did you know we did... xyz".
Also, research done by the NIH, etc is required, by law to be GIVEN to private corporations..the corporations doing the closest type of research. This is one big reason a LOT of people are just utterly unawre of exactly how much research is done by the government. You cannot look at who gets credit for results (unless you look at published papers.. and then you generally have to know who the people are and so forth). Also, government employees are limited in the credit they can take in publications at times. (also limited in what they can publish, since research, unlike fiction, costs money to be published)
PLAYER57832 wrote:I see, so your claim is that pharmaceutical companies don't benefit from or have access to university research, government research, etc.?
No, that is not my claim at all. That's why, just above, I said:
tkr4lf wrote:Now, perhaps some of the research done at a university would be passed on to a pharmaceutical company to develop an interesting new drug. In that case, then yes, big pharma would be indirectly benefiting from government funded research. But there is no direct funding to private companies for research by our government.
This is the third time in this massive post that you have said something completely untrue. You should really work on that reading comprehension problem. [/quote]
Except your "point" was made that I was "talking through my ass" to say that these companies were mostly taking government funded research, tweaking it a bit and then making huge profits, rather than doing the baseline research.
So.. you disputed your own point. And STILL want to accuse me of need ing reading comprehension lessons.
tkr4lf wrote:PLAYER58732 wrote:They actually do recieve some direct funding, but they also benefit immensly from the indirect. The government does a lot of baseline research, the stuff that may not have any immediate result, that gradually builds general understaning and that every now and then winds up producing something phenomenal.
Care to provide some evidence? Have a source?
Oh please, this AGAIN.
You actually agree, here below:
tkr4lf wrote:I'm sure they do benefit from the indirect funding, but I from my understanding they do not receive direct funding from the government. Would you care to prove me wrong? All it takes is some evidence, and I will gladly admit that you are correct on that point.
Under what universe does "benefit from indirect funding" translate into "they pay for their own way" (to PARAPHRASE what you said.. please look the term up before you tell me I am quoting you incorrectly!)
THAT is where most of the real and true moving research happens.
ALSO, they DO receive the patents made from government funding (source noted above.. its Ralph Nadar). ANd, yes, they do receive some direct funding.
Just to be clear... this part:
PLAYER58732 wrote:They actually do recieve some direct funding
is what I would like some evidence of.[/quote]
Oh please.. you even admitted above that they likely to get some funding. You just wanted to say it wasn't significant amounts.
ANY combined, cooperative research effort is recieving direct funding.
tkr4lf wrote: I caught you in 3 different instances of either falsely accusing me of saying or doing something or falsely saying that you said something. Either you smoke a lot of pot and have a horrible memory, you just suck at debating, or you are an extremely dishonest person. Either way, I'm really tired of dealing with you.
You are unwilling to admit you are wrong.
I am a grown up... and long since past that idiotic stage of life. BUT, I do take exception with people trying to claim I say things I don't , twist my arguments, and who try to take credit for "winning:" debates that were not even really debates.
tkr4lf wrote: But right now, I'm really tired of you. I still stand by my belief that you just like to f*ck with people.
No, I like HONESTY.
Too bad you don't seem to even understand what that means.. specifically, it includes verifying before you strat lobbing out accusations. AND, if you are wrong, as you very much are above, you APOLOGIZE. Those things take maturity, though. Sadly lacking here of late.