shadron
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2005
- Messages
- 5,918
Well, assuming it were mine, as I've already implied twice, I'd start by removing the government imposed restrictions on freedom of choice for medical care. I could go a lot further to a total deregulation of drugs (abolish the FDA) so instead of assuming anything passed by a body is 'safe' people would have to learn to take responsibility for themselves as to what they want to take.
Each man his own chemistry lab, and he with the best lab wins? No thank you.
For the majority, that would mean leaning on expert opinion along with a fundamental understanding of statistics. The years of mandatory testing required to bring a drug to market would be gone so not only would pharmaceuticals be much cheaper but I guess there'd be many more pharma companies and they'd be a lot more inclined spend on r&d.
No, I think what you'd have, first of all, is a lot more of what I get in huge amounts in my email daily. Sawdust pills. What the hell good is statistics going to do for that? You're just making counterfeiting the brand name a lot more lucrative, which is where we were when the FDA (its predecessor, actually) was legislated into being. I agree that the testing may be somewhat overdone, but deleting it altogether is not the answer.
Getting off topic a bit again, but if the goal is to make the cost of medical insurance down, there's a large number of such measures that could make a big difference - if one is prepared to look further than the spend-more, tax-more, regulate-more paradigm.
I'll believe that when I see/hear it. If it's more like this one, you are wasting your time.