Do you consider that the UK national heath service is a better option than the US private insurance system.
I blame the high price of medicines these days on advertising. It costs millions on top of R&D and testing to come up with marketing campaigns, produce TV spots, and buy airtime. I wish that were BANNED.
The commercials won't help. A doctor has to prescribe a drug. And if it's the right one, you'll get it. I think those commercials also do another bad thing. People see them and hear about "we treat these symptoms" and all that crap. They get two ideas.
1) They can self-diagnose themselves with an illness from a TV spot, leading to hypochondria-like effects.
2) They get it in their mind that medicine is about the convenience of getting rid of symptoms rather than treating an illness.
I'm sure there's other negatives, but I've yet to think of a positive.
Anyway, yes. It costs huge amounts of money to R&D up a new drug. But I've watched the number of annoying drug commercials on TV balloon over the last ten years. I've also listened to people talk over the same period of time how prescription drugs have skyrocketed.
Coincidence? I think not. Though, the inflation of the dollar during Bush's flawed reign hasn't helped either.
Let's all go to the doctor to get our heads examined and get a prescription for some shut the Hell up. Topics like this are just going to stir up malcontent. I know this is a "general topics" section, but it just seems like for the last month it's been nothing but socially-charged topics. Let's give this stuff a rest for a while.
Actually, JimmyJames, I and my fellow clinical pharmacists at work agree that direct to consumer ads (or DTC as we call it in the trade) are a HUGE problem. We often have to convince the patient (and the docs) that instead of this new, highly expensive drug they saw on TV, we can use this cheaper generic that does the same thing!
When I graduated from pharmacy school 20 years ago, DTC for prescription drugs was illegal. That changed during either Bush 41 or Clinton's term in office (can't remember which off the top of my head at this late hour). I think it should be banned again! Put that money back into R&D or into post-marketing studies to make sure more drugs don't have to be pulled from the market.
And as for Mr. Moore, has he moved out of his parent's basement in Flint, Michigan yet? 😉 How he became the 'expert' on everything known to man is beyond me. I think his next 'documentary' should be the mainstream press and their lack of objectivty, but that's just me...lol...
Has anyone ever called Michael Moore an expert on anything? He's a documentarian, and (I think) a very talented filmmaker. (He is, however, a terrible writer and a simplistic pundit. Take the camera out of his hands and he's pretty much just a grating and self-aggrandizing pain in the ass.) Also, to his credit, I think his getting his name on movie house marquees has everything to do with the fact that his movies make money. That's pretty much all the film industry cares about, right?
I know ky was being sarcastic, but I agree; I'd be interested to see a film by Moore about the media. I was impressed by his complicated take on gun ownership in Bowling for Columbine--I'd gone in expecting it to be a one-sided screed against gun rights.
All of that said, I haven't seen Sicko.
sicko is worth a watch. the movie is not about Moore. the issue is not Moore, Moore is rich and can afford health insurance and is probably rich enough to afford things not covered by health insurance. the issue is the rest of us. experts agree, ie doctors and healthcare professionals, as well as the public, that single payer is the way to go. the hybrid is HMOs morphed to a non profit single payer with full coverage for all but docs still private, ie they dont work for the government.
Do you consider that the UK national heath service is a better option than the US private insurance system.
That's not saying very much. Being set upon by rabid skunks is better than the US private insurance system!
Seriously, I know one person whose 36-year-old daughter died from an otherwise easily treatable form of cancer because her laid-off husband didn't have health insurance, another who couldn't get the medicine she needed because her HMO wouldn't cover it, still another who lost a doctor because that doctor stopped taking his insurance.
The insurance companies have successfully resisted efforts to socialize medicine, as is done in the civilized world, for the last 60 years. Lobbying congress hasn't worked. Is it time to directly confront health insurers (injurers)?