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Drug Giant Pledges Cheap Medicine For World's Poor

bmsleight writes in with a Guardian piece on the decision of the world's second biggest pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline, to radically shift its attitude towards providing cheap drugs to millions of people in the developing world. "[The new CEO] said that GSK will... cut its prices for all drugs in the 50 least developed countries to no more than 25% of the levels in the UK and US — and less if possible — and make drugs more affordable in middle-income countries such as Brazil and India; put any chemicals or processes over which it has intellectual property rights that are relevant to finding drugs for neglected diseases into a 'patent pool,' so they can be explored by other researchers; and reinvest 20% of any profits it makes in the least developed countries in hospitals, clinics, and staff."

2 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. What happens when you feed and medicate... by AmazingRuss · · Score: 1, Troll

    ...the poor? In 15 years you have twice as many poor.

  2. Re:It's called market segmentation by retchdog · · Score: 0, Troll

    Maybe the World Bank could make it a condition for poor countries getting loans, that they "volunteer" some of their citizens for this project. They could even get a partially-subsidized patent grant in exchange. It's a win-win and it's fair too, because they don't have anything to offer but miserable, uneducated and useless masses?

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky