OT As pandemic surges anew, global envy and anger over U.S. vaccine abundance

Discussion in 'Blazers OT Forum' started by SlyPokerDog, Apr 24, 2021.

  1. Road Ratt

    Road Ratt King of my own little world

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    How Lifting Intellectual Property Restrictions Could Help World Vaccinate 60% of Population by 2022.



    Time to grow a freaking heart Joe.
     
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  2. Phatguysrule

    Phatguysrule Well-Known Member

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    Artificial scarcity is how the rich protect their place at the top.

    Is anybody really surprised that a person who's presidential campaign was almost entirely funded and supported by the elite is enabling and encouraging artificial scarcity?

    We must reduce the impact that corporations and the wealthy can have on our political process.

    Publicly funded elections are crucial.
     
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  3. EL PRESIDENTE

    EL PRESIDENTE Username Retired in Honor of Lanny.

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    Like I said, let them pay a licensing fee to manufacture. What is the pandemic pricing, $3 per dose? Make it the same with the understanding that all rights are reserved. Protecting Intellectual Property brings us the Modernas and Pfizers instead of having a Generic Sputnik vaccine. If it weren't for having the IP rights protected, we would probably not have as many vaccines, and pretty weak versions.

    This vaccine is still a work in progress and being studied. You want to halt any further big development and advancements or slow the progress? Yank the IP from Big Pharma and best of luck.
     
  4. e_blazer

    e_blazer Rip City Fan

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    I think this is more complicated than the article implies. It's not like sharing a cookie recipe. We've seen that when Johnson and Johnson turned over manufacturing for part of its vaccine to a second party, they screwed it up and a lot of bad vaccine had to be dumped. The mRNA vaccines are new technology and require special handling and storage. I wonder how much of the equipment and technology needed to produce and process those vaccines exists in other parts of the world? Get some bad vaccine out into circulation and start killing some people and it's going to be really hard to sell folks on getting vaccinated at all. OTOH, doing what we can to get vaccines out in other parts of the world is critical to a lasting solution to this pandemic. Each case has the ability to produce new variants and eventually that's going to generate virus strains that can evade the current vaccines. Where's Bill Gates and his foundation in all of this? I thought they were working on the problems of getting billions of doses out around the world.
     
  5. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    cbsnews.com

    Pill to treat COVID-19 could be available year's end, Pfizer CEO says
    Kate Gibson

    April 28, 2021 / 2:52 PM / MoneyWatch


    Fending off COVID-19 and avoiding potential trips to the hospital could soon be as simple as taking a pill.

    Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CNBC on Tuesday that the drugmaker is working to introduce an experimental drug to treat the disease at its onset by year-end. Pfizer in March began an early-stage clinical trial of a new antiviral therapy for the coronavirus, which has killed more than 573,000 Americans.

    The drug could potentially be prescribed "at the first sign of infection, without requiring that patients are hospitalized or in critical care," Dr. Mikael Dolsten, chief scientific officer and president, worldwide research, development and medical of Pfizer, stated last month. Part of a group of medicines called protease inhibitors, which are used to treat HIV and Hepatitis C, the drug curbs production of enzymes needed for the virus to multiply in human cells.

    Pfizer announced an experimental at-home pill which will treat COVID-19 at first signs of illness – and it could be available by the end of the year. ⁰⁰Dr. Neeta Ogden tells CBSN it could be a “game changer.” pic.twitter.com/cC3ykBMEMc

    — CBS News (@CBSNews) April 28, 2021
    Should clinical trials prove successful and the Food and Drug Administration approves the drug, it could be available across the nation later in 2021, Bourla said.

    "I think that with this drug we really have to look at it as a game changer," Dr. Neeta Ogden told CBSN. "We haven't seen medication even discussed on the horizon that one can take early on or prophylactically if you've been exposed, kind of like what we have for the flu."

    She added, "The virus continues to mutate, and it will continue to be present in some form, and we need to have these kinds of remedies that we can take at the first sign of symptoms that will prevent spread, that will prevent severity, that will prevent hospitalizations."

    Pfizer — which developed the first approved COVID-19 vaccine in the U.S. with German drugmaker BioNTech — continues to test its vaccine in 6-month-old to 11-year-old children. The company earlier this month asked the FDA to widen its vaccine authorization to adolescents between 12 to 15 years old after studies found it to be effective. Bourla told CNBC he's "very optimistic" the agency will grant its request.


    Americans 16 and older are eligible to be vaccinated. Still, people across the country are skipping their critical second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine. As of early April, more than 5 million people had missed their second shot, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Asked about hesitancy over getting the vaccine, Bourla said he would tell people: "Your decision is not going to influence only your health — your decision to get vaccinated is going to influence the health of others and likely the health of the people that you like and you love the most because they're the people that you interact with."
     

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