Views on basic human essentials range from shelter to clothing, and when a person is sick or about to die, they deserve medical treatment. Medicine plays a great role in today’s society to help people live day to day. Not only can they maintain life, but they also fix it as well. Pharmaceutical prices have sky rocketed to where people in financial crisis cannot afford to buy essential medicines. The disadvantage people in society are suffering due to greedy pharmaceutical companies prioritizing profit over a patient’s health. America’s poor cannot afford the astronomical pharmaceutical prices because patents allow for certain drugs to be distributed by monopolies, physicians are given incentives to prefer a certain drug over another, and the cost to research and develop drugs is too much for companies to have competition. The number one cause of the high prices, is how patents are maintained. Gerard Raj in the European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology exclaims that, “…a patent lasts for 20 years from the date of its application.” (2). This allows for a certain company to monopolize their drug and set any price they see fit. Patents are supposed to protect people’s ideas and inventions, but when they do not look to sell the drug fairly, consequently, they do not deserve to have their idea protected. In the span of 20 years, the company rules over their new drug and does not have to compete with a company producing a similar drug. Not only do the companies have the patent for
Imagine this: you are tragically diagnosed with a chronic life-threatening illness. Your only hope to survive is through medication to treat your disorder. The medicine is pricy but you can work out the costs each month. One day, you go to fill your prescriptions and realize the cost of a $13 pill has jumped to an astounding $750. You need this patented medication to survive and to afford it you end up losing your home, filing for bankruptcy, and sleeping in your car. This story sounds fictional but it is the reality for many Americans who can no longer afford their grossly overpriced medications.
This topic is important because I stated before there are other human beings out there that are dying and instead of getting the treatment they need they are forced to live with the disease until they die, and pharmaceutical companies are now charging an arm and a leg. Take the medication Daraprim, a medication that is given to AIDs patients it used to cost a dollar a pill something that most individuals could pay, that was until 2010 when the company CorePharma bought the rights and started charging 13.50 a pill. (CNN Money) This amount is still semi reasonable for individuals in America, while those in Africa well if they couldn’t pay for it before then they certainly won’t be able to buy it now. (CNN Money) CorePharma was once lead by Martin Shkreli the man who is now awaiting sentencing because he was charged with fraud and conspiracy (Business Insider). This same man raised the medication again from thirteen dollars and fifteen cents up to seven hundred fifty dollars a pill, that is a five-hundred percent increase. (CNN Money). They then dropped the price in half so now pill costs
What is Love medicine? Love Medicine is a fiction novel by Louise Erdrich. The book is based on Native American stories, which cover three generations, fifty years, several families, and there are many relationships. Love Medicine is a collection of short fiction stories of “people that are living on Chippewa reservation in North Dakota”. Louise Erdrich makes the story with use of flashback. Love Medicine is not on particularly one theme but there are some stories on other themes such as, true identity, religion, family, love etc. Love Medicine is the creative formation of stories and characters which allow for the original creation of love. Each character exposes his or her individuality
The documentary “Money and Medicine,” reveals the essentials of unnecessary health care spending and the policies that intervene with the health care systems. In the beginning of the film, the people being interviewed talked about patients receiving major amounts of unnecessary treatment and that a majority of health care spending is devoted to needless services. Several physicians in the video explained the extreme dangers that are present within health care; along with clarifying that they are paid more when doing harm to their patients and when they do more for them even if it is not beneficial to do so. If the cost of health care continues to rise, health care will become too expensive and unavailable that the U.S. will be put in a financial
The cost of prescription drugs in America has risen to the level that most Americans could not afford them with out the help of an insurance plan. The greedy and capitalistic pharmaceutical companies rely on the United States to fund the future development of drugs with skyrocketing prices and enormous margins. Recently the issue has extended into the mainstream political arena, thanks in part to the new Medicare bill(2). With the push by congress for the importation of drugs from foreign sources, regardless of the potential long and short term consequences, the time to vocally support health care reform is upon the American public.
One added reason could be the current high number of mergers in the industry. Which in the long run leads to less competition, driving the innovation down and the prices up. In the United States, there are no regulatory efforts to stop the companies for charging so much. They are one of the only nations that believes in a free market for drug pricing. They are only one of two countries that allow direct-to-consumer advertising of pharmaceuticals. As of today the United States does not import drugs from
Deborah Lupton is a sociologist and a research professor at the University of Canberra, Australia. She received bachelor degrees in sociology and anthropology at the Australian National University, as well as a Masters in Public Health and a doctorate from the University of Sydney. She has written 14 books and 130 academic journals on the topics of medicine and public health from a sociological perspective. She is currently researching topics such as sociology in a digital culture and digital health analysis (Lupton, 2012).
The Washington Post reported on June 16, “Once again, the United States has most the expensive, least effective health care system in survey.” It’s apparent that the United States healthcare system is in an economic crisis. Furthermore, the United States healthcare system is not only in economic turmoil, but the social systems currently in place offer little to no future economic resolve for the predicament we are currently situated in. The paradox that seems to have fallen upon American healthcare is that, “The system doesn’t want you to die, but at the same time doesn’t want you to get well.” Heineman (2012) It is bad business. In other words, medicine is a business and I have witnessed this approach towards business in medicine first hand in my over five years of clinical and business experience in the medical field.
I argue that advances in technology, nondiscretionary costs, and lack of competition in the medical equipment, pharmaceutical retail and insurance markets are the main reasons behind the high cost of health care. In this paper, I will use and analyze various resources like America’s Health Care Crisis: Who’s Responsible by Nancy Levitin, Health Care USA: Understanding its Organization and Delivery by Harry A. Sultz and Kristina M. Young, and Epidemic of Care by George J. Isham and George C. Halvorson to prove and support my argument, which is that advances in technology, nondiscretionary costs, and lack of competition in the medical equipment retail market, are the specific factors behind the rising cost of health care. I will also propose different strategies that will help achieve lowering the price of healthcare. Many people across the nation are unable to seek medical attention due to insufficient funds. If people do not receive health care, communicable diseases may spread more often on a large scale and life-threatening diseases may go undiagnosed leading to an increase in death rates. Making health care affordable can be achieved by making advanced technology less expensive, decreasing the amount of nondiscretionary costs, and increasing the competition in the medical equipment, pharmaceutical retail and insurance markets.
by finding the identity of his parents and accepting his talent. It is after he
healthcare system preforms inadequately and is ranked 37th in the world next to countries who don’t have the advanced medicine or technology like the U.S. which is terrifying. Among the top wealthiest countries we are dead last and highest health expenditures according to common wealth fund. How is it possible that a country like ours that has all the technology in the world fall short in providing health care? The answer – money, America’s health care has become more of a business than a service. America has, become an over medicated country consumed by greed by private practice insurance and physicians. Unlike other countries where it’s a service provided to its citizens everybody is insured, everybody has access to quality health care at a low cost.
The more that people think about it, the more they realize that something truly needs to be done. When someone walks into an emergency room, they are seen by the level of condition that they have which includes their pain level and how sick they really look. But some hospitals care about the people who have money and can really pay for what they need to be fixed. With the prescriptions being on the rise, the amount of money people have in their pocket has declined an extreme amount. People are starting to encourage the government to get involved just so that they can afford to keep themselves healthy. It shouldn’t matter whether you have insurance or not, the cost of prescriptions shouldn’t be getting higher than an actual doctor’s visit. Patients shouldn’t be having to struggle to get what they need to keep them or especially their child alive. As the American Hospital Association put it, no one should have to be strained or squeezed into a hospital just because they struggle to keep the hospital going due to the rise of prescription costs. Some insurance companies are trying their best to help patients that are elderly and that have disabilities by giving patients options to choose whether they want the high cost of the drug or the low cost of the
Health care costs are extraordinarily high and keep getting higher. Individuals in the US that do not have access to medical services are running as high as 43.4 million and This number has grown by over a million in each of the last three years. (AFSCME, n.d.). The rise of prescription drug
The theme outlines how pharmaceutical companies and hospital corporations are illegally robbing patients of their time, money, and most importantly life. In this situation, it was shown in the conspiracy between Sidereal Pharmaceuticals, Shapiro Institute, as well as Mason-Dixon University. The pharmaceutical industry’s hypocrisy is outlined through this quote, “They want people to think their motivation is for the public good when they are, in fact, poster boys for capitalism run amok... The reality is that they spend more money on advertising prescription drugs directly to the public than they spend on research. (FIND THIS QUOTE)
Mukherjee (2015) talks about the three laws of medicine however these are his personal laws that may or may not be followed by other health professionals. He explains each law that he had learned through personal experiences with patients. The first law is ‘A strong intuition is much more powerful than a weak test,’ explains that there may be some hidden variable when diagnosing a patient that could be crucial in life or death situations. A variable could be the environment that a person lives in or their lifestyle and this chapter notes to know when to look for small clues that could possibly help. The second law is ‘”Normals” teach us rules; “outliers” teach us laws, ' talks about how normal cases teach and build the rules of what should be done on a regular basis of patients, what is normal. Outliers are the cases where it may untreatable but has the chance to reshape and even advance medicine. The third law is 'For every perfect medical experiment, there is a perfect human bias, ' talks about how we hope for a medical treatment that can help treat a disease but it is biased because it either works or doesn’t work despite a few anomalies. These are laws Mukherjee has learned from experience and applies throughout his career, they may not be followed by all health practitioners.