Price controls only make sense when there is a monopoly to control.
Originally posted by: tnitsuj
I think they should stop advertising prescription drugs on TV...but maybe that is just me.
Originally posted by: smashp
With 35% profit margins, 28% of revenue spent on advertising and marketing, and ONLY 12% spent on R&D you think that is bad enough.
Originally posted by: rjain
Drugs aren't "necessary" for health, and the government shouldn't be the one setting the production and discovery cost limitations. People live fine without curing every little thing that bothers them. Producing drugs at a 1% margin is impossible, as the overheads of R&D (via direct research by big pharma or acquisition of, licensing from, or joint ventures with biotech companies) are what dominate the industry.
Originally posted by: smashp
Originally posted by: rjain
Drugs aren't "necessary" for health, and the government shouldn't be the one setting the production and discovery cost limitations. People live fine without curing every little thing that bothers them. Producing drugs at a 1% margin is impossible, as the overheads of R&D (via direct research by big pharma or acquisition of, licensing from, or joint ventures with biotech companies) are what dominate the industry.
The facts are the major drugs companies direct R&D expendutiures are 12% of revenue, yet advertising is more than double.
PLUS they mainly used reseach paid for by Tax dollars to make the largest breakthroughs.
If they want to use taxpayers money to do their research, they should have a modest profit cap of 10%.
see the problem is marketing is grouped under the same heading as admin. unless you strip out admin costs you can't say what the marketing costs are. smoke that.Originally posted by: smashp
here put this in your pipe and smoke it.
Profit (net income) --Marketing/Admin-- R&D
Merck............................17...... ............ 15............ 6
Pfizer............................13...... ............ 39............ 15
BMS..............................26...... ............ 30............ 11
Pharmacia......................4...... ............ 37............ 15
Abbott..........................20...... ............ 21............ 10
Am Home Prod............-18...... ............ 38............ 13
Eli Lilly..........................28...... ............ 30............ 19
Schering-Plough...........25...... ............ 36...... ...... 14
Allergan........................14...... ............ 42............ 13
This above is data collected from 2000
http://www.familiesusa.org has all the info you need
read this
http://www.familiesusa.org/site/DocServer/PPreport.pdf?docID=249[/q
Originally posted by: smashp
here put this in your pipe and smoke it.
Profit (net income) --Marketing/Admin-- R&D
Merck............................17...... ............ 15............ 6
Pfizer............................13...... ............ 39............ 15
BMS..............................26...... ............ 30............ 11
Pharmacia......................4...... ............ 37............ 15
Abbott..........................20...... ............ 21............ 10
Am Home Prod............-18...... ............ 38............ 13
Eli Lilly..........................28...... ............ 30............ 19
Schering-Plough...........25...... ............ 36...... ...... 14
Allergan........................14...... ............ 42............ 13
This above is data collected from 2000
http://www.familiesusa.org has all the info you need
read this
http://www.familiesusa.org/site/DocServer/PPreport.pdf?docID=249
Then what would be the incentive of investing in such companies? You could ladder CD's within those margins and have practically 0 risk. Nobody is going to startup a company with those kinds of margins looming over them. The company is also going to have a very difficult time with any kind of expansion. Your solution would basically crash the market.Absolute controls...anything determined as a product necessary for health (ie water, important drugs, super clean and efficient engines etc) should be capped at the bottomost acceptable profit level...say bout 3-5%. That's enough to make a smidge of money to keep yourself alive while you help mankind continue to exist. Only luxury items should have any appreciable mark-up.
that's called "central planning" the russians tried that and it causes misallocation of resources and shortages (by the way, the same is true in Canada when it comes to health care dollars). Old Canadian saying, where do you find a surgeon in December - in Florida, because the hospital has run out of money.price controls
o.k., there goes the first amendment...another little detail the Soviets never believed in.Direct to consumer (DTC) advertisement should be banned
apparently you don't actually practice medicine, or know anything about how it actuals works. there is no such thing as a "medication consultation". There are entire programs devoted to smoking cessation, diet, and exercise programs. you don't get "jack" from an HMO or PPO no matter what you do for a patient. The dreaded "medications" that you speak of are "standard of care" and in the real world, everyone already does get instructed about diet, exercise and smoking cessation...the public just doesn't chose to do much with the advice. Besides, what do you think the "public" hears everyday in all the media, smoking is bad, we're all overweight, exercise is good for you....you would have to be a moron not to know this already..If a physician scedules (3) 30-minute sessions to instruct a patient on diet, exercise, and smoking cessation, she won't get jack for reimbursement from an HMO or PPO. Over the same 90min, I could schedule (9) 10-minute medication consultations at $45 per
That's curious, in my experience, most "new" medications debut in Europe well before (several years) they appear in the U.S. because the FDA requires proof of safety and efficacyAmerican physicians are notorious for using more medication and newer medications
Originally posted by: heartsurgeon
o.k., there goes the first amendment...another little detail the Soviets never believed in.Direct to consumer (DTC) advertisement should be banned
Originally posted by: heartsurgeon
that's called "central planning" the russians tried that and it causes misallocation of resources and shortages (by the way, the same is true in Canada when it comes to health care dollars). Old Canadian saying, where do you find a surgeon in December - in Florida, because the hospital has run out of money.price controls
o.k., there goes the first amendment...another little detail the Soviets never believed in.Direct to consumer (DTC) advertisement should be banned
apparently you don't actually practice medicine, or know anything about how it actuals works. there is no such thing as a "medication consultation". There are entire programs devoted to smoking cessation, diet, and exercise programs. you don't get "jack" from an HMO or PPO no matter what you do for a patient. The dreaded "medications" that you speak of are "standard of care" and in the real world, everyone already does get instructed about diet, exercise and smoking cessation...the public just doesn't chose to do much with the advice. Besides, what do you think the "public" hears everyday in all the media, smoking is bad, we're all overweight, exercise is good for you....you would have to be a moron not to know this already..If a physician scedules (3) 30-minute sessions to instruct a patient on diet, exercise, and smoking cessation, she won't get jack for reimbursement from an HMO or PPO. Over the same 90min, I could schedule (9) 10-minute medication consultations at $45 per
That's curious, in my experience, most "new" medications debut in Europe well before (several years) they appear in the U.S. because the FDA requires proof of safety and efficacyAmerican physicians are notorious for using more medication and newer medications
in medications, while drug certification in Europe is less stringent (only need to prove safety, efficacy is left up to the physician to decide).
so let me get this straight..you want cheap drugs, although you don't really believe they do much good.
you don't want anyone to make very much "profit" making drugs..only profit to be allowed for luxury goods.
yes, it's all making sense to me now...
Originally posted by: tnitsuj
I think they should stop advertising prescription drugs on TV...but maybe that is just me.
apparently you don't actually practice medicine, or know anything about how it actuals works. there is no such thing as a "medication consultation". There are entire programs devoted to smoking cessation, diet, and exercise programs. you don't get "jack" from an HMO or PPO no matter what you do for a patient. The dreaded "medications" that you speak of are "standard of care" and in the real world, everyone already does get instructed about diet, exercise and smoking cessation...the public just doesn't chose to do much with the advice. Besides, what do you think the "public" hears everyday in all the media, smoking is bad, we're all overweight, exercise is good for you....you would have to be a moron not to know this already..
Granted, most companies include the costs of providing samples as a marketing expense . . . at retail rate of course.Physicians' prescribing practices do change based on gifts such as meals, conferences, and other perks received from drug companies, according to a just-published study in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Interactions between physicians and the pharmaceutical industry are not as innocuous as they seem. Pharmaceutical companies spend more than $11 billion each year to promote and market drugs -- an estimated $8,000-$13,000 per physician per year.
