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275 points swores | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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FredPret ◴[] No.40173118[source]
Drugs may be overpriced.

There is probably some bloat in drug development. But then again, maybe not. I'm not an expert.

What I do know is that drugs have gotten dramatically better in the short amount of time I've been alive.

The other thing we all know is that the source of this article, The Guardian and their friends, have a shitlist of industries and institutions it loves to hate.

Ask yourself: will they ever write a positive article about a defense contractor, a bank, big pharma, a US billionaire, or a landlord, even if said entity walks on water and then saves a million babies and the penguins and the world?

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pfdietz ◴[] No.40173169[source]
People who don't like prices of new drugs are free to not use those drugs.

They want to have the benefits of the existence of drugs without paying the cost of discovering the drugs and bringing them to market. It's pernicious entitlement, made more outrageous by complaining about the greed of those actually providing the new drugs.

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AlexandrB ◴[] No.40173317[source]
Ah yes exciting new drugs like insulin[1] and epinephrine[2]. I'm also certain that someone going into anaphylactic shock is extremely well positioned to make a considered decision on whether they like the prices of new drugs like epinephrine or not.

[1] https://www.rand.org/pubs/articles/2021/the-astronomical-pri...

[2] https://www.vox.com/policy/23658275/epipen-cost-price-how-mu...

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1. loeg ◴[] No.40174005{3}[source]
Insulin is a bad example because the old formulation is very cheap. The expensive variant is a new, better drug that was recently developed.

People going into anaphylaxis aren't buying epi pens. You buy them in advance.