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Thanks to india Rs.2.84-lakh cancer drug will soon cost just Rs. 8,880

And I need a new Ferrari, but $300,000 is too expensive. I will just give a car thief $30,000.

You compare a life saving drug with a Ferrari? How many terminally ill patients get well or get their lives extended by possessing a Ferrari? I don't know how much of a Chinese you still are but it is clear that your association with capitalist profiteers has blinded you totally. That is why you make these silly comparisons. Why should a drug like Nexavar cost so much? Is it that the drug is that expensive to make? Or is that the cost of the R & D that went into it? Even if the cost of development of the drug indeed very high, why do you assume that the company is justified in selling it at prices where very few could afford it? Why do you think that the original drug maker is justified is pricing the drug right out of reach of all the poor in the world so that only the rich benefit from it and the company itself makes loads of money? I have many more questions for you. But I won't bother. You can continue supporting profiteers and racketeers. But that is not the way we think here. Like the guy said, profit is Ok but not profiteering at the cost of patients.
 
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Telling the truth and upholding the patent holder's side of the story is not trolling.

Can't you see now how much your Indian press just tells you what you want to hear.
if you had talked about the right of the company for its patent, its OK. but desgracing the other sided(INDIA) is not the right way and you know that calling us as stealers was wrong.
you have talked about comunable and non communable decease in your previous post. Don't you know that CANCER is one of the deadly decease and it does not see if it is a poor or rich who gets affected by it. To you knowledge the poor in my country are a large population and the % of CANCER affected patience in large in this sector and for them giving 1000 rs for a drug on a daily or weekly basis is imposible.
 
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Thank you India.

The drug is used for the treatment at the advanced stages of kidney and liver cancer. The drug stops the growth of new blood vessels and targets other important cellular growth factors. Though it is not a life-saving drug, it is a life- extending drug. In the case of kidney cancer, it can extend the life of a patient by four-five years, while in the case of liver cancer it can extend life by about six- eight months.

Those are some bleak options. In such a situation the whole world should work together.

I hope Natco supplies to Shaukat Khanum Cancer hospital where 60% of the cases are treated for free.

Cancer patients truly deserve everyone's help. There are some diseases like Aids, Diabetes, Heart disease where our lifestyles cause them but cancer is something which just sneaks up on you, its a manufacturing defect of some sorts the body says sorry, I'm going to destroy myself now.

I was just reading up on this guy a few minutes ago.

Battling blood cancer, this Dubai braveheart will work to stay alive... if they'll only let him - Emirates 24/7

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Thirty-two year old Afsar Zawar Khan worked for about seven years in the UAE as a heavy bus driver, picking up workers from their work site and dropping them home, but he cannot do this any longer.

His employer is not keen to risk the lives of about 60 labourers travelling with him because he has been diagnosed with acute myelocytic leukemia (AML).

Earning just Dh2,500 a month, Khan could not meet the huge medical expenses for treating this disease.

He has to take four ‘Glivex’ tablets, each costing Dh90, every day to prolong his life. His monthly expense on the tablets alone come to about Dh11,000.

Says Afsal Khan, who was shocked to learn of his deadly disease about seven months ago.

“When I was suffering from frequent fevers, severe body pain, fatigue and weight loss, my friends advised me to meet a doctor.

“My normal weight, which was about 90kg, came down to 68kg. Initially, I thought I was suffering from diabetes.

Doctors at Al Ahlia Al Noor Clinic and Khalifa Medical City in Abu Dhabi confirmed that I had blood cancer. I have a Daman medical insurance card, but it does not cover this ailment.”

He was working with Juma Khalfan Transport for the past one and a half years.

He said since doctors in Khalifa Medical City did not give him an appointment as there was a long queue and was told to wait for 15 days, he decided to go back to his family in Pakistan, where his father, two younger brothers, wife and five children live.

“I decided to go back to Pakistan because medical treatment is expensive here and my insurance did not cover the disease.

“If I died, I wanted to be near my parents, children and wife. Initially, I met a local physician in Pakistan who treated me for some time and charged me about Rs80,000.

“Then I was admitted to Aga Khan Hospital, Karachi. During the past six months, my treatment cost me nearly Rs1 million, but I got some concession due to my poor financial situation.

“I came back here with about 100 Glivex tablets with the help of a special certificate from Dr Salman Naseem Adil from the Department of Medicine, Aga Khan Hospital.

“The doctor’s report said he was admitted with complaints of general weakness, abdominal pain and weight loss for six months. He was also found to have very high WBC (white blood count) and was discharged on October 10, 2011. His WBC came down to 82.2 (from 384.7) and was advised regular medication.

“Another Rs1 million is needed for continuing my medical treatment. I cannot think of it because I have already sold whatever assets I had – three vehicles that I purchased with my small savings in the UAE.

|My younger brother was driving a taxi but we had to sell it to raise money for my treatment. Two other vehicles and the family gold were also sold to raise money for my treatment.”

“We used to earn 9,000 rupees a month by renting and running taxis. I sold these vehicles and my brothers are also unemployed now.

“As my UAE visa was about to expire, I came back to the country last week because I wanted to approach my employer for help and see whether the insurance company would take care of my treatment,” said Khan, who is now living with a friend in an Al Quoz labour camp.

Mohammed Tahir, chief accountant of Juma Khalfan Transport LLC, said: “Afsar had been working with us for a couple of years and now he has come back from Pakistan after treatment. Daman insurance does not cover chronic diseases like blood cancer.

“We are trying to help him in whatever way we can. We have about 70 employees who were asked to donate Dh 50 to Dh 100 per month for his treatment. If all the employees donate, we will be able to raise Dh5,000 to Dh 6,000 per month, which is not enough to cover his medical expenses.”

As per the report of the Clinical Pathology Department of Al Noor Hospital, Abu Dhabi and Aga Khan Hospital, Karachi, Afsar Khan is chronically ill –suffering from AML and needs to take a one-year course of the costly ‘Glivex’ tablet, which he is unable to purchase with his limited resources and the paltry sums donated by his friends, relatives and colleagues at Juma Khalfan Transport.

“My aged father, children and wife were all crying when I said I am going back to the UAE. I decided to come back here because I have sold whatever I had and there is no money to continue my treatment, let alone taking care of my family.

My family asked me to stay back but I returned because I thought my employer, the insurance company or my friends will help me. I have brought about 100 Glivex tablets for the next couple of months.

“I am living with my former colleague Abdul Rahman, now a driver with Emirates Transport, in an Al Qouz camp where six people are sharing a room.

“When I have to go to Abu Dhabi to meet my boss or the insurance company, I get exhausted and frequently fall ill and sometimes vomit.

“My friends are taking care of me, but I don’t want to trouble them for long,” he said, adding that if the insurance company can cover his disease, he will be able to rest and continue medication for a year.

Sohaib Khan, a colleague at Juma Khalfan Transport, said: “I know him for the last one year. He worked with me in the Ruwais gas plant as a driver.

“I don’t know how he got this chronic disease. We used to share a room and at nights, he used to wake up and complain of severe pain.

“We are giving small amounts to help him, but it is like a drop in an ocean. When he was in Pakistan, we collected some money and sent it to him, but we are poor people and cannot raise the big amount needed for his treatment.”

Some of us are trying to locate this guy and see if some monetary help can be rendered. AED 11,000 per month for one medicine and he earns AED 2,500 that too his employer wants to fire him.
 
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As per the Indian Patent law, rule 18 section 1 and 2, Indian government can issue a compulsory license for life saving drug if,

1. Cost of drug is very high
2. Innovator does not have set up a Manufacturing plant in the said country.
3. The demand for drugs is very high and supply is very less.
4. When people cant afford the medicine.

Natco will give 6% of its revenue generation from this Medicine to the Innovator...

Thank you India.



Those are some bleak options. In such a situation the whole world should work together.

I hope Natco supplies to Shaukat Khanum Cancer hospital where 60% of the cases are treated for free.

Cancer patients truly deserve everyone's help. There are some diseases like Aids, Diabetes, Heart disease where our lifestyles cause them but cancer is something which just sneaks up on you, its a manufacturing defect of some sorts the body says sorry, I'm going to destroy myself now.

I was just reading up on this guy a few minutes ago.

Battling blood cancer, this Dubai braveheart will work to stay alive... if they'll only let him - Emirates 24/7



Some of us are trying to locate this guy and see if some monetary help can be rendered. AED 11,000 per month for one medicine and he earns AED 2,500 that too his employer wants to fire him.

India could supply medicine with good quality and cheap price to Pakistans citizen, if direct negotiation is done. Although Indian medicine do reach Pakistan via Dubai, hence they have to pay more.. I hope Pakistan's goernment cosider their policy and let her people get benefited..
Thanks for your support Asim...
 
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LOL, more Indian half-truths.
You left out the part where they concluded Chinese cars were as good as anybody in 5 years and the show ended in mandarin Chinese (implying The Chinese were going to takeover Top Gear too). Compare that with your Mumbai special where you guys had to lodge a formal protest to the BBC.

LOL Indians.
Hey,you replied to this one post,why not other posts where your IP attack got banged?:/
 
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