Newspaper clippings where are the cures how patent gridlock


Question: NEWSPAPER CLIPPINGS: Where Are the Cures? How Patent Gridlock Is Blocking the Development of Lifesaving Drugs A curious thing happened on the way to the biotech revolution. While investment in biotech research and development has increased over the last three decades, new drugs that improve human health have not been forthcoming at the same rate. What explains this drug discovery gap? Patent gridlock plays a large role. Since a 1980 Supreme Court decision allowing patents on living organisms, 40,000 DNA related patents have been granted. Now picture a drug developer walking into an auditorium filled with dozens of owners of the biotech patents needed to create a potential lifesaving cure. Unless the drug maker can strike a deal with every person in the room, the new drug won't be developed. Peter Ringrose, former chief science officer at Bristol-Myers Squibb, told the New York Times that the company would not investigate some 50 proteins that could be cancer-causing, because patent holders would either decline to cooperate or demand big royalties.

1. Discuss the ethical principles (e.g., beneficence [doing good] and nonmaleficence [avoiding causing harm]) and issues of morality of a legal system that delays research because of the legal rights of patent holders.

2. Discuss what steps could be taken to right the wrongs of patents that delay and often discourage research.

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Management Theories: Newspaper clippings where are the cures how patent gridlock
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