Research
Costs / Lowcost Mystery Novels
Research is expensive.
During the late 1990s the NIH often spent more than $130,000 per year to fund
an average research project. Drug manufacturers estimate that they spend an average
of $359 million to develop one new drug. The availability
of funding often determines what medical research is conducted. Voluntary health
organizations and other groups act as advocates in urging or lobbying the government
to spend more on their own particular disease. Governments in developed countries
usually spend most heavily on diseases that affect their own citizens, and these
diseases are typically different than those commonly found in developing countries.
Pharmaceutical companies also emphasize development of the most profitable new
drugs, usually for diseases that occur in developed countries. As
a result, little research is done on diseases that kill millions of people in
developing nations. In 1998, for instance, the NIH planned to spend only $116
million on malaria and other tropical diseases. While rare in industrialized nations
with developed health care programs, malaria kills 1.5 million to 2.7 million
people in developing countries each year. |