CF drug welcome – profiteering pharmaceutical industry repugnant

A new drug, Kalydeco, will be made available to Cystic Fibrosis sufferers in Ireland. The drug, which treats a mutation specific to 10% of CF patients, will lead to a significant increase in quality of life.

A new drug, Kalydeco, will be made available to Cystic Fibrosis sufferers in Ireland. The drug, which treats a mutation specific to 10% of CF patients, will lead to a significant increase in quality of life.

This will be welcome news for the many CF sufferers such as Orla Tinsley who have courageously campaigned for treatment of the hereditary disease for years, and ensured that the government who delayed in accessing Kalydeco could do so no longer.

The government which negotiated with the manufacturers of the drug, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, who initially insisted on charging €234,804 per patient per annum. Whatever price was eventually negotiated, no doubt the manufacturers have reaped a handsome profit.

The practices of the pharmaceutical industry are indicative of the rotten nature of capitalism.  Pharmaceutical companies, whose patents give them a monopoly on their products, are free to charge the profit maximising price for their drugs. If the price is too high, sufferers who cannot afford the vital drugs will die, as they do in their millions every year. Meanwhile, drugs companies make global profits of over $100 billion.

Furthermore, the profit motive entails that a drugs company will only invest in research if the likelihood is that they will see a high enough rate of return. Human ingenuity is capable of solving a great many of the world’s ills but in a system where production is tied to profit millions must suffer and die in order to line the pockets of the capitalists.

These companies should be wrenched from the hands of the profiteers and placed in democratic public ownership so that currently available drugs can be put in the hands of those who need but cannot afford them and that money can be invested in creating new drugs which can do much to alleviate the suffering of many.

 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Past and present crimes

Next Article

New Croke Park deal has nothing positive to offer

Related Posts
Read More

Review: Elysium

Elysium is a dystopian sci-fi action film released in August 2013, starring Matt Damon and Jodie Foster. Set in the year 2154, it follows the story of Max da Costa, a factory worker living in the ruins of a future Los Angeles. In this future, the rich and powerful have fled the poverty, disease, and environmental destruction they’ve wrought on the world, and moved to a space station called Elysium. There they live in an idyllic society, far removed from the struggle of ordinary people on earth.

Read More

Charles Dickens: the making of a great writer

This year is the bicentenary of Dickens’ birth. Biographies, reissues and TV and film adaptations have poured out showing he still has immense drawing power even 140 years after his death. Dickens was a towering figure who dominated English literature for nearly 40 years, from the early runaway success of The Pickwick Papers in 1836 to the cryptic murder story, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, left incomplete at the author’s death in 1870.