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rich etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

6 Nisan 2017 Perşembe

Rich Americans live up to 15 years longer than poor peers, studies find

You can’t buy time – except, it seems, in America.


Increasing inequality means wealthy Americans can now expect to live up to 15 years longer than their poor counterparts, reports in the British medical journal the Lancet have found.


Researchers said these disparities appear to be worsened by the American health system itself, which relies on for-profit insurance companies, and is the most expensive in the world.


Their conclusion? Treat healthcare as a human right.


“Healthcare is not a commodity,” wrote US Senator Bernie Sanders in an opinion article introducing the issue of the journal, whichis devoted to inequality in American healthcare.“The goal of a healthcare system should be to keep people well, not to make stockholders rich. The USA has the most expensive, bureaucratic, wasteful, and ineffective healthcare system in the world.”


Sanders, like authors of the lead report, called for single-payer health insurance or what Americans might know as “Medicare for all”, a reference to an existing public health program for older Americans.


“Making sure that every citizen has the right to childcare, healthcare, a college education, and secure retirement is not a radical idea. It is as American as apple pie,” he said.


The Lancet studies looked at how the American health system affects inequality and structural racism, and how mass incarceration and the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare, have changed public health.


Among the studies’ key findings: the richest 1% live up to 15 years longer than the poorest 1%; the same gap in life expectancy widened in recent decades, making poverty a powerful indicator for death; more than one-third of low-income Americans avoid medical care because of costs (compared to 7% in Canada and 1% in the UK); the poorest fifth of Americans pay twice as much for healthcare as a share of income (6% for the poor, versus 3.2% for the rich); and life expectancy would have grown 51.1% more from 1983 to 2005had mass incarceration not accelerated in the mid-1980s.


The poorest Americans have suffered in particular, with life expectancies falling in some groups even while medicine has advanced. For example, researchers reported that the poorest fifth of women born between 1930 and 1960 statistically lived four years less than Americans in the top fifth of the socioeconomic spectrum.


All of these health outcomes arrive in the context of widening general inequality. The share of total income going to the top 1% of earners has more than doubled since 1970,making the US more unequal than all but three developed countries: Chile, Mexico and Turkey.


At the same time, the ACA brought relief to many. The number of Americans without insurance dropped from 48.6 million in 2010 to 28.6 million in 2015. The number of Americans who struggle with medical bills dropped from 41% to 35% in 2014.


Further, accounting for current public health insurance programs, military healthcare, the portion of local and state budgets used to purchase private health insurance for workers, and subsidies to employers to buy workers health insurance, researchers believe as much as 65% of health insurance nationally is already paid for by taxpayers.


The conclusions come at a tumultuous time for American healthcare.


Donald Trump’s election threw his predecessor’s market-based health laws into question. Trump promised multiple times on the campaign trail to repeal the ACA and replace it with “something terrific”.


Though Barack Obama’s signature health law insured more Americans than ever before, problems remain.


Insurance companies have increasingly passed costs on to consumers through “cost-sharing”, or asking Americans to pay more for doctor’s visits, prescription drugs and procedures before insurance kicks in. Sky-high prescription drug prices have prompted public outrage. And a requirement that Americans purchase insurance, even with government subsidies, was politically toxic.


Though Republicans promised for more than seven years to repeal the ACA – if they could only gain control of the federal government – once Trump took office, they offered a plan not conservative enough for conservatives, and not moderate enough for moderates. With an abysmal public approval rating of just 17%, the plan combusted weeks after it was introduced. Failure to pass the bill became a major loss for the Trump administration.


That has left a vacuum of ideas. Republicans tried and failed to resurrect a version of the hated plan this week. Progressives have expressed hope that single-payer reform could move into the forefront.


“I, like many others, was deeply concerned with Republican proposals that went down in flames,” said Dr David Himmelstein, a New York City doctor and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program, a group that lobbies for single-payer health reform. Himmelstein was also the author of one Lancet report, America: Equity and Equality in Health.


“It would have been tremendously damaging to large numbers of people in our country. So the defeat of that proposal was encouraging,” he said.


“It’s opened up much more room for debate about what there should be, so in that way, I think it’s an encouraging time that has perils but also opportunities.”


However, single-payer healthcare remains unpopular with American conservatives, who still control the government.


Robert Moffit, a researcher at the conservative thinktank the Heritage Foundation, argued that Americans would use healthcare willy-nilly if it were provided by the government.


“I mean look – you can save money with a single-payer system, don’t misunderstand me, but the quality and supply of medical services is going to be determined by government officials,” he said.


“You’re going to have inequalities in any state,” he said, calling it it “naive” to believe a “government-run system that is going to ultimately be highly politicized” would be better than a private one.



Rich Americans live up to 15 years longer than poor peers, studies find

17 Ocak 2017 Salı

3 Ultra Healthy Superfoods That are Rich in Essential Vitamins and Minerals

There’s no question about it—getting your nutrition from whole, organic foods is widely considered to be the best and easiest way to improve your health. However, it is getting increasingly hard to do so due to depletion of soils from over-farming, erosion and excessive fertilizer and pesticide use.  While organic foods are certainly the way to go, even they can be grown in depleted soils as not all farmers practice proper crop rotation and soil replenishment techniques, organic or otherwise.


So what is a health-conscious person to do to make sure they still get all their nutritional needs met? Supplement with superfoods.


What You Need to Know About Superfoods


Often grown wildly or in remote areas with incredibly rich soils, superfoods are special herbs and plants that are rich in whole food nutrients and medicinal compounds. Although they have been around for thousands of years, the term Superfood is a 20th-century phenomenon referring to a collection of ancient, nutrient-dense foods—especially phytonutrient- and flavonoid-rich fruits and vegetables—that are considered beneficial for health and well-being.


While a diet based on a variety of nutritious foods remains the best way to ensure a balanced nutrient intake for optimal health, there’s evidence that ultra-healthy superfoods, such as moringa, wheatgrass, and spirulina, can give a power-packed enhancement and upgrade.


Wherever you fall on the spectrum of making lifestyle changes to support better health, longevity and physical and mental fitness, there’s no doubt that what you ingest is integral to thriving. Even with this awareness, however, due to unknowingly eating foods from devitalized or not fully healthy soils, your best efforts to create radiant health and wellness can be sabotaged to varying degrees. Adding colorful and nutritious superfoods into your diet is a surefire way to fill in whatever gaps this may cause in your essential nutrient intake.


Not only are Superfoods a source of concentrated levels of much-needed vitamins and minerals, but they are also a rich source of antioxidants as well, essential substances that shield our bodies from cell damage and help prevent lifestyle diseases.


Antioxidants are molecules that protect cells in the body from harmful free radicals. Free radicals come from sources such as cigarette smoke and alcohol and are also produced naturally in the body during metabolism. Too many free radicals in the body results in oxidative stress, which activates inflammatory pathways. Chronic inflammation is linked to the cell damage that leads to cancer, diabetes, and heart disease.


As you can see, including superfoods regularly is surefire way to fine tune and even supercharge your health, but of the hundreds that exist, which ones are ideal for this purpose?


In my opinion, some of the best are as follows:


Moringa


Never heard of moringa before? Moringa oleifera is known by over 100 names in different languages around the world where it is eaten daily as a staple food due to its extraordinarily high level of nutrients. This easy-to-grow tropical plant species contains over 90 protective compounds and is rich in essential vitamins and minerals.  It is known to have extraordinarily high levels of calcium, iron, potassium, vitamin A, vitamin C, a full spectrum of B vitamins and complete protein.  It’s also rich in antioxidants like quercetin, which have a number of beneficial effects in the body from fighting inflammation to protecting cells from degeneration.


No wonder it’s known as “The Miracle Tree”; just about every part of the moringa plant can be utilized in some way. Moringa’s medicinal benefits include supplying the body with antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds, balancing hormones and slowing the effects of aging, improving digestive health, balancing blood sugar levels and helping fight diabetes, protecting and nourishing the skin, and helping stabilize mood and protecting brain health.


Wheatgrass


Sold either as a juice or powder concentrate, wheatgrass is a superfood prepared from the cotyledons of the common wheat plant (Triticum aestivum), with benefits that include increasing energy levels, detoxing chemicals and heavy metals and improving overall health and wellness


Wheatgrass is one of the most nutritious foods on the planet, rightly earning its title as one of the top superfoods known to man, and is a power-packed source of chlorophyll, vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E, and 98 different essential minerals found in soil, including phosphorus, calcium, iron, magnesium, and potassium as well as essential enzymes and 19 amino acids. Wheatgrass is literally overflowing with nutrition and other more exotic and equally beneficial medicinal compounds like enzymes and antioxidants.


Wheatgrass is 70 percent chlorophyll by weight, the phytochemical that gives dark leafy greens their color. Chlorophyll is essentially the blood of plants; and in humans, it reverses aging, suppresses hunger, cleanses the blood, combats odor, and has been linked to the prevention of cancer. 


Spirulina


Spirulina is a natural algae that is incredibly high in protein and is a world class source of antioxidants, B-vitamins, minerals and other essential daily nutrients. It’s also rich in phycocyanin, a potent anti-inflammatory compound.


Believed to have been a staple in the ancient Aztec diet, recent UC Davis studies support that it may be the most-potent immune-boosting food for cellular balance. Spirulina is one of nature`s richest food sources of the hard to get Vitamin B-12 and also contains more iron than spinach or beef liver, both important supplements to a sometimes-deficient vegan diet.


Additionally, it is rich in Vitamin E, beta-carotene, calcium, and chlorophyll. Its oils are richer in Gamma Linolenic Acid (GLA) than evening primrose oil. Studies have indicated that GLA helps lower blood cholesterol and high blood pressure and eases such conditions as arthritis, premenstrual pain, eczema and other skin conditions.


Taken as a powder or in tablets, it’s a source of easily digestible protein, appealing to athletes for energy and endurance. Other known benefits are that it may reduce cravings and appetite as well as helps promote healthy cholesterol levels and cardiovascular function.


By simply adding a few scoops of these nutritious superfoods to a smoothie or glass of water each day, you can fill in the gaps you might be missing in your diet and be well on your way to a lifetime of health and wellness.


Sources


Moringa: http://www.consciouslifestylemag.com/moringa-benefits-miracle/
Wheatgrass: http://hippocratesinst.org/clinical-research-studies
Spirulina: http://www.algaeindustrymagazine.com/special-report-spirulina-part-4-scientific-research-reveals-health-benefits/



3 Ultra Healthy Superfoods That are Rich in Essential Vitamins and Minerals

16 Ocak 2017 Pazartesi

The Guardian view on shorter working hours: not just for the rich | Editorial

Philip Hammond threatened in his interview with the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag to turn Britain into a low-tax offshore sweatshop, although he expressed a personal preference for a European model of social organisation. Just how distant his preference is from his threats is clear from some recent developments in Europe: the French have passed a law limiting the use of email out of hours; the Dutch and Finns are thinking about a universal basic income, and in Sweden the city of Gothenburg is evaluating an experiment that allowed care workers in an old people’s home to work six-hour shifts instead of eight-hour ones for the same full-time pay and benefits.


The idea has been tried on a small scale elsewhere in Sweden many times over the last 10 years, but almost always at “creative” or desk-based jobs. Dedicated physical work, as is involved in a care home, seems an entirely different category. Successive scandals at Amazon, Sports Direct, and similar places have accustomed us to the idea that a modern economy is distinguished by the most sophisticated possible exploitation of the workers who actually move things (or even humans) around by those who manipulate algorithms and exhort the rest of us to productivity.


The Swedish experiments suggest that there is a better way, and a better perspective to think about this than simply productivity, narrowly considered. They represent more than a victory for unionised labour and its allies in the endless struggle against capital. At the moment the experiment is justified on the grounds that the workers who had to work less felt less stressed and reported sick less often. They would, wouldn’t they? It still cost their employers extra money to replace them, and it’s not clear that there is the political will, in Sweden or elsewhere, for taxpayers to contribute further to the wellbeing of council employees. But there are other ways to look at the matter, starting with asking: what is the purpose of work?


The question worth asking is not whether shorter hours made the workers feel better, but whether it caused them to do their jobs better. In the case of creative industries, the answer is obvious, and to some extent measurable: there really is a limit to the amount of time that can productively be spent on sustained intellectual effort every day. Once that is exceeded, more work produces less worthwhile product. Some of the things necessary to fill a long working day, like meetings and email, actually erode the capacity to produce anything valuable. This isn’t surprising. Professional athletes have to be careful not to overtrain. Why not professional athletes of the mind and the imagination? Teachers and social workers burn out. There need be no shame in this: people are not machines, and work that demands inner resources demands also that they be given time to be replenished.


But care work, too, makes demands on the intellect, the emotions, and the capacity for attentiveness, which are hard to measure but go far beyond the physical. Anyone who has looked after small children understands this and knows that it would be almost impossible to keep up periods of intense engagement for as much as eight hours. Old people are not less demanding, deserving, or less in need of attention. If they are propped up in front of a television screen and left to vegetate for hours this isn’t productivity but institutionalised meanness and indifference.


In practice, and by long, bad tradition, every kind of health work is associated with crushingly long hours. The doctor on call and the A&E nurse can both work to the point of impaired judgment far beyond exhaustion, sustained only by the knowledge that they are desperately needed. In this country, at the moment, we can hope for no more than a very slight amelioration of these conditions. But the European experiments suggest that there might be a radically different and better way in some other future far from Brexit Britain.



The Guardian view on shorter working hours: not just for the rich | Editorial

8 Ocak 2017 Pazar

Now, open wide. Then I can tell how rich you are | Barbara Ellen

A study published in the Journal of Oral Rehabilitation reports that more than 100,000 A&E visits a year are caused by tooth problems, with patients trying to avoid NHS dental charges by going to hospitals for free treatment, frequently at weekends.


This comes as no surprise. While it’s said that it will soon be possible to identify whether someone is rich or poor simply by how overweight they are, I’ve long thought that dentistry could turn out to be another poverty indicator, with many of the poorest unable to afford to maintain basic dental health.


In some areas of the country, NHS dentists are notoriously hard to find and oversubscribed, but it doesn’t end there. NHS dentistry is chronically underfunded, with patients forced to make up the shortfall for treatment costs, whatever their personal circumstances, while dentists who treat NHS patients complain that fixed fees don’t cover the time spent on complex issues.


British dental problems aren’t always about money; children are entitled to free care, but figures showed that two out of five hadn’t visited an NHS dentist in the past year. However, it does seem to be about money when so many adults are clogging up A&E departments or, as reported last year, turning to GPs, who are obviously ill-equipped to treat them.


Put bluntly, the poorest in British society are increasingly becoming too frightened to go to the dentist, not because of the treatment, but because of the cost. This is shameful. If these findings are anything to go by, Britain is well on the way to regaining its international reputation for notably bad dental health. Not all Britons, of course, just those who can’t afford basic care, with “basic” being the operative word.


At the risk of being accused of liberal hand-wringing, this feels very personal to me because, where dental treatment is concerned, I’ve been such a spoilt cow. When I was last with an NHS dentist, I was always able to afford upgraded treatment over the basic option, but it was obvious that for some people that “choice” was going to be as stark as the choice between extracting a tooth or – the more expensive option – trying to save it.


Then there’s cosmetic dentistry. I’m just coming towards the end of a lengthy period in adult braces, which has been quite an experience – I look as though I’m permanently vomiting a garden gate. Away from the comedy aspect, I’m painfully aware of how lucky I am. My orthodontic treatment, even with a finance plan, will have been way out of reach for many people. These are people who’d need the same treatment (which, without boring you with details, wasn’t purely cosmetic), but wouldn’t have been able to afford it or even been given the chance on the NHS.


Where teeth are concerned, what does “cosmetic” even mean anyway? Not everyone wants gleaming, whitened TOWIE choppers, but nor are teeth just for chewing. Teeth aren’t optional – teeth are crucial. And teeth are emotional. Not only is toothache vile, with teeth linked to general good health; people need teeth for everything from work and job interviews to personal confidence, relationships and every conceivable form of social interaction.


It’s not enough to say: “Well, look after them then.” Of course people should look after their teeth and most people, rich and poor, try their best. However, when things go wrong, it can’t be anything but a disgrace if people are so scared by dental costs that they end up sitting in casualty departments in the hope of free care.


This should be a source of national shame, as should be the growing realisation that it won’t be too long before a person’s social circumstances can be accurately assessed simply by them opening their mouth.


Who really needs a booze bracelet?



Where was this miraculous ‘stop boozing you idiot!’ device when the likes of me sorely needed it?


Where was this miraculous ‘stop boozing you idiot!’ device when the likes of me sorely needed it? Photograph: Philip Toscano/PA

Excitement is mounting as the world gets ever closer to a tracking device to tell you exactly how disgustingly sloshed you are. And that’s because, on realising how drunk we are, all of us are likely to say: “Good heavens, in that case, I must depart this fine hostelry to make my way homewards.” Because that’s how it always works, especially in Britain.


Milo Sensors, from California, has developed a product called Proof. It is “wearable technology” (or how about just admitting it’s a bracelet?), a bit like a Fitbit, and it monitors blood alcohol levels, alerting you to the point where you may start feeling the urge to sing, dance, cry or express your viewpoint more candidly than usual – a bit like being in a Question Time audience, only with more alcohol and less Brexit.


Where was this miraculous “stop boozing you idiot!” device when the likes of me sorely needed it? The angst we’d have avoided, the time we’d have saved, all those deathly mornings ringing around apologising for behaviour you couldn’t remember to people who’d rather not speak to you.


However, maybe the answer is that people like me didn’t need it. Or more precisely, we wouldn’t have heeded it. Instead of electronic devices, previous generations had these things called partners, family, friends and bar staff who told you when you’d had enough…and whoever bothered listening to them?


In which case, how many people are going to take any notice of an electronic bracelet nagging them about their alcohol levels?


I still like Proof as an idea, and I’d still like them to send me a free one, but it seems fated to be used by people who are more likely to be intoxicated by new technology than they are by alcohol.


It’s touching how much Robbie Williams likes his fans



Coming clean: Robbie Williams using hand sanitiser.


Coming clean: Robbie Williams using hand sanitiser. Photograph: BBC

Robbie Williams has responded to the furore over the incident on New Year’s Eve, when, after shaking hands with members of the excited crowd, he was shown squirting sanitiser on to his mitts, his face plastered with the kind of grimace usually reserved for old footage of cow rectal examinations on All Creatures Great and Small.


Williams isn’t a complete PR dolt, so he’s now issued an amusing video of himself using hand sanitiser after he’s touched a family member.


Well played. However, it’s not quite enough to dispel the feeling that as much as celebrities such as Williams say they “love” their fans, it’s nowhere near as much as they love a nice relaxing bath in scalding hot Dettol after they’ve had anything to do with them.


The feeling that this “love” they feel for fans may be a tad selfish and needy, as in, wholly to do with wanting them to continue buying their stuff. And as much as they want to reach out to their public and touch hearts and lives, this doesn’t include any other kind of touching or the little bottle of Carex hand gel is coming out again.



Now, open wide. Then I can tell how rich you are | Barbara Ellen

23 Eylül 2016 Cuma

Natural Energy Enhancers – Top 8 B Vitamins Rich Foods You Should Eat

Good health comes from good nutrition, getting proper nutrients is important for preventing and treating many diseases. B vitamins provide many benefits, from boosting a healthy metabolism, reducing the risk of heart disease, improving digestive health, fighting fatigue, preventing blood disease, reducing stress to preventing many other health problems.


Keep reading to find out some recommended natural sources for B vitamins you can include into your diet.


Walnuts


Packed with many essential nutrients and provide tons of benefits, walnuts are also enriched in B vitamins, including Vitamin B1, Vitamin B5 and Vitamin B6, which play an important role in improving your mood, boosting your energy level and preventing memory loss.


Banana


Banana is one of the most tasty fruits that is rich in B vitamins. It’s not only loaded with potassium, fiber and vitamins C, but also a good source for vitamin B5 and Vitamin B6. Eat a banana when you feel stressed or tired, it’s a natural energy booster and also improves your mood.


Almonds


These nuts are super high in B vitamins, including Vitamin B1, Vitamin B2, Vitamin B3, Vitamin B5, Vitamin B6, Vitamin B9 and Vitamin B12. They’re also high in fiber, protein and healthy monounsaturated fats.


Spirulina


It’s recommend to add a teaspoon of spirulina to your smoothie or salad as it provides  a good amount of both Vitamin B6 and Vitamin B12.


Oats


Oats are not only rich in fiber, they are also packed with B-vitamins, including Vitamin B1, B2, B3, B5 and B6.


Peanuts


Peanuts are a great source of Vitamin B1, B2, B5, B6 and B9. They also benefit to you in other ways, consider adding them to your meals or making perfect snacks.


Sweet Potato


It tastes amazingly, and is also a nutritional powerhouse. Sweet potato is a good source of many minerals and vitamins, such as Vitamin C, magnesium, potassium, beta-carotene and Vitamin B6.


Spinach


Spinach, this green leafy vegetable is rich in Vitamin B2 And B9, as well as other nutrients, including vitamin C, iron, potassium and magnesium. Eat raw spinach or cook lightly to enjoy its top benefits.


Sources:
1)http://en.amerikanki.com/vitamin-b-rich-foods-boost-energy-mood/
2)https://www.healthaliciousness.com/articles/Top-5-Natural-Vegetarian-sources-Vitamin-B12.php
3)http://www.whfoods.org/genpage.php?tname=news&dbid=61



Natural Energy Enhancers – Top 8 B Vitamins Rich Foods You Should Eat

5 Haziran 2014 Perşembe

Australians want to tax rich, commit on overall health and schools, depart own tax as is

Australians want the wealthy taxed much more, public investing on health and schooling improved, and their personal tax charge left specifically in which it is, in accordance to a survey released on Friday.


In sharp contrast to measures in the federal spending budget, Australians polled by the thinktank Per Capita uncovered a dramatic shift in the direction of support for investing much more on publicly funded solutions, and an improve in the perception that the nation’s wealthiest are not doing their honest share of the heavy lifting.


“Between 2010 and late 2012, our views of the tax system grew to become steadily significantly less generous – we felt more and more that we have been paying also considerably tax and our support for public investing, although higher, was falling,” mentioned the yearly survey’s summary.


“These sentiments have now reversed … [Australians] now reject the strategy to investing cuts mooted by the government’s commission of audit.”


The survey, carried out in February shortly right after the initial Commission of Audit report, found 70% of Australians feel the government need to spend much more on public companies. Just eight% believed it ought to commit less.


The survey also discovered that 53% of individuals believed they have been paying the correct quantity of tax, an approximate 17% swing away from the proportion who believe they pay out also much tax, when in contrast to the 2012 results.


“It’s a striking reversal from a quite consistent trend across the very first three years of the survey that noticed Australians feeling less generous about their tax contributions, to a place now exactly where men and women are saying, ‘We really don’t truly feel more than taxed and instead we want to make sure our public companies are protected and expanded,’ ” Per Capita’s executive director, David Hetherington, told Guardian Australia.


The survey discovered that a lot more than 7 out of ten people believe higher income earners do not shell out their fair share, but the final results revealed a level of “cognitive dissonance” between people who really don’t believe they count in the class.


Practically half the respondents who earned a high cash flow and who explained they paid also much tax also believed that other substantial revenue earners pay out too tiny.


“We’ve seen over a variety of many years that high income earners’ perception of what a large income is in Australia aren’t well grounded,” Hetherington mentioned. “People who are wealthy on an goal basis, do not see themselves as wealthy or higher cash flow earning.”


“We did ask how people would like to see public companies funded, and one particular of the responses was ‘higher revenue tax prices on the best five% of earners’ and that was the most well-liked.”


Subsequent in line, with 23%, was removal of tax concessions on superannuation and housing.


Hetherington explained the survey occurred weeks outside the normal “policy wonk” discussion that heats up shortly before a federal spending budget, so it was unlikely men and women were influenced by speculation all around what the treasurer, Joe Hockey, would reveal.


“However, I would say although that the broader political debate is a aspect that has an effect on the survey results,” he explained.


“I think what it shows is that the government has misread the mood of the Australian people, and in certain misread the value that people area on public solutions. We see a great deal of talk about value of residing pressures, but one particular of the factors that feeds into the way households perceive cost of living is entry to substantial top quality, minimal expense public services.


“If all of a sudden the kids’ Tafe program has gone up by a issue of four or five, we’re going to charge you $ 7 to go to the physician, we are continuing to subsidise non government schools at the cost of public colleges, I think individuals come to feel that.”


Far more than half of respondents mentioned that if the government is to boost funding to public schools, it must be accomplished by cutting paying on non-government colleges.



Australians want to tax rich, commit on overall health and schools, depart own tax as is

23 Nisan 2014 Çarşamba

The genuine explanation medicines cost so considerably and why huge pharmaceuticals are so rich | Molly Scott Cato

The GlaxoSmithKline Francois Hyafil Research Centre, Villebon Sur Yvette, France - 07 Sep 2010

A laboratory at GlaxoSmithKline: Revenue are ‘the reward to the organization for investing in analysis … without this kind of an incentive new medication would not be invented’. Photograph: Sipa Press/Rex




This morning we heard of the row amongst the drug company Roche and the government’s drug adviser, the National Institute for Wellness and Care Excellence (Good), apparently negotiating more than the last six months of the lives of women suffering from breast cancer. At situation was the £90,000 per patient that Roche is charging for the drug Kadcyla, which is not a remedy but can lengthen lifestyle. Protected by what are recognized as intellectual property rights, the firm has a legally sanctioned monopoly and is free to set its cost. This approach is a game of chicken amongst the business and the government, which is subject to lobbying by desperate families but also restrained by a constrained budget.


Pharmaceutical organizations can extract massive revenue by controlling understanding about how to make their medicines. Economic theory about industry competition would recommend that, on seeing the massive income being made, other producers would enter the market and produce the drug a lot more cheaply. This is precisely what manufacturing organizations have been carrying out in current many years, especially in India, offering generic medication to individuals in the world’s poorer nations. But this has been challenged by large pharmaceutical companies, which use their intellectual property rights to constrain the operation of market forces to their benefit, and to the disadvantage of the world’s bad.


The 1st test case of the rights of companies to revenue v the rights of the world’s folks to lifestyle was fought in South Africa in the late 1990s. At that time as numerous as a quarter of its individuals of working age were HIV good, and the government determined to disregard global law and import generic Aids medication from India. The value variation remains staggering – $ 350 for a year’s provide compared with $ ten,000 for the branded medicines – so a bad nation like South Africa had little choice.


South Africa was able to justify its actions under clauses in the trade-related intellectual house rights (Journeys) agreement exempting nations that encounter public well being disasters, but its actions have been challenged by the US trade representative and action was taken against the South African government by the Pharmaceutical Makers Association of South Africa. The government’s courage was rewarded and the situation was ultimately withdrawn in 2001, with the agreement of a deal on sensible pricing and availability of Aids medicines.


The lack of a free marketplace in pharmaceuticals puts pressure on health systems in richer economies as well, due to the fact the price variations are large: the British Generic Companies Association says: “The average price to the NHS of a generic medicine is £3.79, while the regular value of a branded medication is £19.73.” The distinction of £16 is the reward to the organization for investing in analysis and improvement. The argument for this suspension of normal marketplace forces is that with out this kind of an incentive new medication would not be invented.


The row between the United kingdom government and Roche implies that this argument is beginning to unravel, but it also factors towards the underlying dilemma: the lack of true competition. Whilst the rhetoric of totally free markets is much more widespread than ever, the actuality has been an rising degree of consolidation in recent years. The alliance in between Novartis and GlaxoSmithKline is the latest instance, followed swiftly by the AstraZeneca bid for Pfizer.


And the difficulty of market place consolidation and corporate electrical power is not constrained to the pharmaceutical sector. Just last week, the German publisher Axel Springer accused Google of in search of to set up a “digital superstate” and there was also speculation about a merger between the beer giants SABMiller and AB InBev. February, meanwhile, saw the merger of banana giants Fyffes and Chiquita.


The trade talks taking place amongst the EU and US might additional diminish the electrical power of national governments to control consolidation: the draft Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership is explained to threaten governments with damages if they introduce legislation that may undermine the returns corporations count on to obtain from their investments within national territories. Enforcement of industry competition and anti-believe in action may possibly be liable to legal action.


Health commentators appear to have been distracted by the debate about privatisation from looking too closely at the industry power of huge pharmaceuticals. Individuals who care about wellness and freedom – dammit, even these who care about a working capitalist economic system and fair competitors – ought to be raising a lot more questions about the way our medication are produced and how the expertise over existence and death is owned and managed.




The genuine explanation medicines cost so considerably and why huge pharmaceuticals are so rich | Molly Scott Cato