^ You didn't even read the article, did you? You stopped at the headline and the first paragraph.
If you had read a bit farther, you would have seen the REAL numbers:
From 1997 to 2011, AstraZeneca spent under $58 million on R&D for 5 new drugs. That's $12 million each drug.
From 1977 to 2011, Pfizer spend about $108 million on R&S for 14 new drugs. That's $8 million for each drug.
The list goes on.
From the article:
Remember, this is YOUR evidence, not MINE, so don't you dare attack and insult my intelligence again.
If you had read a bit farther, you would have seen the REAL numbers:
From 1997 to 2011, AstraZeneca spent under $58 million on R&D for 5 new drugs. That's $12 million each drug.
From 1977 to 2011, Pfizer spend about $108 million on R&S for 14 new drugs. That's $8 million for each drug.
The list goes on.
From the article:
The drug industry has been tossing around the $1 billion number for years. It is based largely on a study (supported by drug companies) by Joseph DiMasi of Tufts University. It's a nice number for the pharmaceutical industry, because it seems to justify the idea that medicines should be pricey (and increasingly, they can be very pricey, costing tens of thousands of dollars per patient per year) without making it seem that inventing new medicines is so expensive an endeavor as to be ultimately futile.
Remember, this is YOUR evidence, not MINE, so don't you dare attack and insult my intelligence again.

























