Pharmaceutical Industry
The author of this report has been asked to review five Harvard Business Review documents from the recent years that relate to the pharmaceutical industry. From this review, the author is asked to summarize and offer several lessons learned from the cases as it relates to the power and limitations of the pharmaceutical market in addressing medical needs of patients. Indeed, there are some obvious lessons that can be cited in the reports. While pharmaceutical markets can solve a lot of problems and cure a lot of ills, the profit motive and the logistics of helping certain people prevent certain people from being assisted in a timely fashion, if at all.
Lessons Learned
One major challenge of the pharmaceutical industry is getting drugs to market. The process of getting a drug to market is long and arduous. Even when everything goes according to plan, the specter of lawsuits coming when a drug has nasty side effects is always looming as the trail lawyers are waiting in the wings. However, there has been some progress made with the timetables, at least, through the use of collaboration such as is described in the Harvard Myelin treatise published in 2010. Through such work, and just as one example, the foundation was able to identify nineteen new potential targets for developing treatments and they were able to do this in roughly half the time that is normally needed when organizations and researchers work alone rather than in collaboration like Myelin did. The less in this case is that when there is less fuss about profit and who will get credit, more can get done and with time horizons that are much less than is normal even under optimal conditions.
A similar lesson can be learned when looking at the work of Faster Cures. Their...
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