Friday, April 16, 2010

"Pharmaceutical Market Access Act"

From: JRMadDog@aol.com
To: David_Vitter@vitter.senate.gov
Sent: 03/26/2010 13:23:51 Central Standard Time
Subj: "Pharmaceutical Market Access Act"

Dear Senator Vitter,

Regarding the Pharmaceutical Market Access Act which would allow U.S. citizens to buy safe, FDA-approved drugs from Canada where medications are sold cheaper than they are in the U.S, I would like you to consider the following:

"... if you want Canadian pharmaceutical prices in the US, the steps you must follow are clear. You must cut your standard of living by 20-30%. You must reform your ludicrous product liability laws. And you must squeeze pharmaceutical industry profits through price controls and dominant purchaser policies, thus causing lower levels of pharmaceutical investment and innovation, getting cheaper prices for medicines already discovered at the cost of prolonged pain and suffering for victims of diseases we cannot yet cure or control. And you must restrict patient access to the latest and best medicines in order to keep costs low.

"I leave you with this final thought: suppose the difference in prices between Canada and the US is, as I’ve suggested, primarily market driven. Suppose also that the US government allows reimportation of drugs from Canada, eliminating market separation. In that case, prices in Canada can be expected to rise to US levels, with the result that Canadian consumers lose out and US consumers are no better off. In addition, drug companies are worse off since any price discrimination which occurred was profit maximizing. And those in need of pharmaceutical innovation (i.e. the sick and potentially sick) are worse off because the stream of future innovations will be reduced.

"Basically, everybody loses, or at the very least nobody wins."

Source: Why are Drugs Cheaper in Canada? A Revised Version of a Talk by AIMS President Brian Lee Crowley To the MPPI Conference “Drug Re-importation: Unintended Consequences” Portland, Maine, September 16th, 2004 http://www.aims.ca/library/MPPI_pharma-revised_.pdf

Regards,
J. R. Madden

7515 Sheringham Ave
Baton Rouge, LA 70808-5762
225.769.0361 office-at-home
225.266.6196 mobile

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

John C. Andrews ...

Email from John Lorentz, Tue, 13 April 2010:

I know that you used to [get] together with John Andrews at many Worldcons over the years, and I didn't know if you had heard the news.

After a long illness, John passed away last Friday [09 April 2010]. He'd had a bad reaction to anaesthesia a few months ago, but in the end it was his muscular dystrophy that was the cause. He's going to be missed greatly by his friends here in Portland.

###

I consider John to be one of my dearest fannish friends as we met prior to the 1977 SunCon in Miami, Florida and stayed in touch especially at WorldCons until I stopped attending annually with MagiCon in 1992. We did see him at the Baltimore WorldCon in 1998.

We got a Christmas card from him every year with the ever-informative "John C. Andrews" signature added. That is, only his signature let us know he was alive as he wrote nothing else within the card.

I do know John will be missed in Portland and elsewhere as well.


Thursday, February 11, 2010

Filk discovered by NPR ...


Science-Fiction Music: Monsters, Aliens In 'Filk'

Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approx. 7:00 p.m. ET, Tuesday, 09 February 2010

NASA recently announced that a significant amount of water has been found on the moon, leading to speculation that we might someday populate our orbiting friend. The idea sounds far-fetched, but it's the type of thing science-fiction fans have been dreaming of for many years. In music, stories of space travel and extraterrestrials date back further than listeners may think. ...



Thursday, January 28, 2010

My father during World War II

Two (2) photographs of my father, Paul H. Madden, Jr. taken during his time in Europe during World War II (WWII). There are also his notes on the back of the photos which I transcribe. He was nineteen (19) years old at the time.

1. Saarlautern, Germany Jan. 1945 (Note gas mask and top button of jacket is buttoned. Two means of I.D. for American soldiers during Battle of the the Bulge.
[During the Battle of the Bulge, German infiltrators dressed in American uniforms were a problem. So, gas masks, which had not been needed, were issued to all U.S. soldiers in the area and their were instructed also to button the top button of their tunics/jackets. These two actions would help distinguish the true G.I.s from German imitators.
He is carrying an M-3 submachine gun AKA "grease gun"; it was not his issued weapon, M-1 Garand, but it looked cool.]





2. April 1945 (On Pass from "Reppel-Deppel")

["Reppel-Deppel" was shorthand for Replacement Depot or Repo Depot.]








Saturday, January 23, 2010

Pay-For-Delay Phamaceutical Deals

From: jrmaddog@aol.com
Date: Sat, 23 Jan 2010 21:12:48 EST
Subject: Pay-For-Delay
To: edit.cen@acs.org


C&EN Editor,

RE: Questioned Deals In Europe, C&ENews, 88(3), January 18, 2010, p6. &

FTC Seeks Ban On Pay-For-Delay Deals, C&ENews, 88(3), January 18, 2010, p22.

When an individual offers to not release information about another individual in exchange for money (e.g., the David Letterman incident), it is called extortion.

When a generic pharmaceutical maker agrees to not release its own, legal product in exchange for money from the original patent holder, it is called business.

What am I missing?


Regards,
J. R. Madden

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

My thought on The Book of Eli ...

Re: Irony with the Bible

by jrmaddog 4 days ago (Thu Jan 7 2010 13:56:51)

Personally, I think the book was chosen because of its dimensions. It has been hollowed out to hold the trans-dimensional, warp-induction, dislocation projector powered by a Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator which will result in a really big kaboom!

The fact that it was a Bible is just a red herring.

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