Patent linkage links marketing approval by the drug regulator to the patent status of the drug [18]. A secondary patent is a patent on aspects other than the original active drug ingredient, such as chemical va
In Bernstein’s paradigm for Type 1 diabetics, very rigorous blood-sugar monitoring with frequent injections of low-dose, short-acting insulin are intended to minimize the adverse cumulative effects of excess insulin. Neither program is for the faint-hearted, and they require a high degree of ...
The main finding of this review is that the stronger pharmaceutical monopolies created by TRIPs-plus intellectual property rules are generally associated with increased drug prices, delayed availability and increased costs to consumers and governments. There is evidence that TRIPS flexibilities can facilitat...
Testosterone to me is ALSO important for a sense of well-being when you get older. Everyone over 40 years old would be wise to investigate it because it increases your quality of life. Mark my words, in 10 years it will be available over the counter.” People travel to places like ...
Why the Price of Insulin is a Danger to Diabetics - Brooke Bennett - TED_重塑外语口语 15:25 What if You Could Sing in Your Favorite Musician's Voice- - Holly Herndon - TED_ 09:25 What Capitalism Gets Right – and Governments Get Wrong - Katherine Mangu-Ward - 11:25 The US ...
“All animal food is bad for you!” Never, of course, does this film note that whole eggs are rated the highest in biological value of all foods (a perfect 100, along with breast milk); that they don’t raise cholesterol in the vast majority of us; and a plethora of new studies co...
Oxidative stress is believed to trigger inflammation in MASH. Antioxidant compounds and enzymes have been found to be low in MASH patients. For the meta-analysis, Nicholas Ming-Zher Chee and colleagues at the University of Malaya selected seven randomized, controlled trials that compared the effects...
Sugar is highly addictive, aggressively marketed to children, and linked to virtually all of our modern lifestyle diseases. Attempts at reforming our sugar-sickness are thwarted by the billion dollar industries profiting from its drug-like effects. Fortunately, sweetness comes in many forms; ...
This article is the second in a two-part review of law's possible role in a regulatory approach to healthier nutrition and obesity prevention in Australia. As discussed in Part 1, law can intervene in support of obesity prevention at a variety of levels:
This idea has been bolstered by data showing that manipulation of many genes can cause obesity in vivo while also causing increased adipogenesis when tested in vitro. It is important to remember, however, that increased adipogenesis is not the primary driver of obesity in these models. The ...