Tag Archives: vaccine

Zika in Florida: A Case of Government Failure

Happy Older Couple in Beach ChairsAs readers know from a previous post, I was in Florida for Christmas, trying to unwind. Do you know who else was in Florida? Mosquitoes carrying the Zika virus! How did the U.S. government fail in its fundamental duty to protect us from this invader?

Most agree that government has a role to play in preventing and suppressing epidemics, a classic public-health problem. Viral or bacterial infections are not passed from animal to person, or person to person, by voluntary exchange. Instead, proximity to another’s infection can lead to an individual’s becoming infected, notwithstanding any market interaction.

So, even the most freedom-oriented individuals accept government spending and restrictions on individual choice when the threat of epidemic increases. In 2014, the arrival at Dallas-Fort Worth airport of a man carrying the Ebola virus caused some lawmakers to seek a ban on air travel from countries where Ebola had broken out. Continue reading Zika in Florida: A Case of Government Failure

Intellectual Property Rights for Global Health

(A version of this Health Alert was published by Forbes.)

patent-pendingRepublican congressional leaders are eager to give President Obama Trade Promotion Authority, or “Fast Track.” Proponents argue that Fast Track will break the logjam holding up important international trade agreements like the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), which includes countries as diverse as Australia, Canada, Peru and Vietnam.

Fast Track would allow the president to finalize the agreement before sending it to Congress for a straightforward up-or-down vote within a limited time. However, the likelihood of Fast Track resulting in TPP getting a “thumbs up” from Congress is limited by potential differences between the president and the congressional majority on intellectual property rights.

In a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, Representative Paul Ryan (R-WI) and Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) asserted that the administration must pursue a number of negotiating objectives, including “beefing up protections for U.S. intellectual property” if it wants Congress to approve the TPP.

It is uncertain the president is as committed to intellectual property as Mr. Ryan and Mr. Cruz hope, especially with respect to patents for medicines. Although the text of the TPP is not yet available to the public, the U.S. Trade Representative, who negotiates in the president’s name, insists that “TPP countries have agreed to reflect in the text a shared commitment to the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health.”

The 2001 Doha Declaration was an attempt to limit international trade agreements’ commitment to patent rights that were accepted in the World Trade Organization’s 1995 Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement. It insists that low and middle-income countries should have broad latitude to allow generic drug makers to make copies of patented medicines through a legal mechanism called “compulsory licensing.” Continue reading Intellectual Property Rights for Global Health

New Orleans Hospitals Liable, Swine Flu Reprint, and Other Swine Flu Coverage

Are New Orleans hospitals liable for not protecting electrical generators during the new Katrina flood? Maybe.

New York Times reprints CDC press release: Government response to swine flu was almost perfect, except for wildly over-predicting the threat.

Less generous swine flu coverage previously at this blog: the reaction of hospitals, the lack of vaccines, and a decentralized approach to pandemics.

Isolde’s love potion may not be a myth.

In the new issue of Nature, the neuroscientist Larry Young…predicts that it won’t be long before an unscrupulous suitor could sneak a pharmaceutical love potion into your drink. But the really good news, as I see it, is that we might reverse-engineer an anti-love potion, a vaccine preventing you from making an infatuated ass of yourself.

Autism’s voice of reason.

A new book defending vaccines, written by a doctor infuriated at the claim that they cause autism, is galvanizing a backlash against the antivaccine movement in the United States. But there will be no book tour for the doctor. He has had too many death threats.

CRP. It may be worse for the heart than cholesterol.

Among foods that help to reduce the inflammatory marker CRP are cold-water fish like salmon, tuna and mackerel; flax seed; walnuts; and canola oil…Other aspects of the Mediterranean diet – vegetables, fruits and red wine (or purple grape juice) – are helpful as well.

Hits & Misses – 2008/12/03

How Much Is Your Life Worth? Would you pay $54,000 for 6 more months of life? The British government won't pay more than $22,750. And that's the system Tom Daschle wants to use as a model for America. [link]

Medical Residents Are Still Not Getting Enough Sleep. [link]

Worried About Being Uninsured in the Future? United lets you secure your right to future insurance today. [link]

Does Your Doctor Have Financial Conflicts of Interest? The Cleveland Clinic bares all. [link]

One in Ten Doctors Lose Money Giving Children Vaccines. Next step: stop doing it. [link]

Rejecting the Vaccine Gifthorse

Cervical cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in women, with 500,000 new cases each year worldwide and 274,000 annual deaths.  In the US, there are 12,000 new cases a year and 3,600 deaths – better than the international rate because of extensive Pap smear testing.  New vaccines are able to prevent about 70% of these cancers and millions of young American women are taking advantage of the opportunity.  The payoff is attractive: the social cost is from $30,000 to $70,000 per year of life saved in the developed world.  If the price comes down, these vaccines could "revolutionize women's health" in developing countries, particularly Africa.

A front page story on this spectacular medical development appears in The New York Times, running to almost two full inside pages.  The article is filled with….celebration?….no criticism!….of many things….but mainly of drug companies for marketing the vaccines and …..(are you ready?)….ACTUALLY MAKING A PROFIT.

The Times should focus next on childhood vaccines, where federal policy has squeezed all profit out of the market, where there is no promotion or marketing, and where the vaccination rates are abysmally low – even where the procedure is free.

See the NCPA Brief Analysis on this.