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Work in healthcare?
- Donald
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So another month has passed and I'm yet to start the work I was supposed to do on this topic... due in 2 weeks 
Looking for your views on:
Regenerative medicine
Personalised drugs
Gene therapy
Expectations of medical advances within say the next 5-10 years
Transhumanism
And the ethical concerns and financial considerations of the above on public healthcare.

Looking for your views on:
Regenerative medicine
Personalised drugs
Gene therapy
Expectations of medical advances within say the next 5-10 years
Transhumanism
And the ethical concerns and financial considerations of the above on public healthcare.
- Sailor
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Big, big issues, and hard to react to them in a way that makes sense without a lot of thought.Donald wrote:Looking for your views on:
Regenerative medicine
Personalised drugs
Gene therapy
Expectations of medical advances within say the next 5-10 years
Transhumanism
And the ethical concerns and financial considerations of the above on public healthcare.
The first two are perhaps the easiest.
Regenerative medicine, at least in the form of stem cell therapy, is likely to develop more and more as various national authorities relax their rules. Any ethical considerations and/or objections will gradually fade away.
I can't see that personalised drugs will do anything other than become more and more common, principally in the private sector. Financial pressures on public healthcare will continue to influence a 'one size fits all' approach.
International Pensioner of Mystery
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I used to go to Medica every year.
This is the world's biggest medical trade fair and take place in Duesseldorf in November. It's a great place to find out how suppliers are thinking, particularly in hardware.
The timing's a bit skew for you now, I guess, but you might get something out of a trawl through last year's exhibitors
http://www.medica-tradefair.com/cipp/md ... ducts.html
and conferences
http://www.medica-tradefair.com/cipp/md ... orums.html
This is the world's biggest medical trade fair and take place in Duesseldorf in November. It's a great place to find out how suppliers are thinking, particularly in hardware.
The timing's a bit skew for you now, I guess, but you might get something out of a trawl through last year's exhibitors
http://www.medica-tradefair.com/cipp/md ... ducts.html
and conferences
http://www.medica-tradefair.com/cipp/md ... orums.html
International Pensioner of Mystery
- jjmartin349571
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I can't say that I know enough about any of those topics for my opinion on them to be worthwhile. I'm ashamed to say that I probably haven't read up on any of those subjects since my A levels, even though they're something that would interest me.
I think the primary concern for public healthcare in adopting treatments/procedures will always be cost. The commissioning bodies are always looking for the most cost effective treatments which will help the majority of the population which that body serves, and will procure them from the local hospital trust who can provide the required service levels at the best value for money. Whilst there is provision for people to apply for specialist treatments on an individual basis, the harsh reality is that there isn't infinite financial resource and so more often than not its a case of helping the many over funding a treatment that may potentially save/prolong the life of just one person. It's sad, and I know plenty of people who have bad sentiments towards the NHS because of course when it's a sick relative we want them helped with no expense spared and to be denied that is heart wrenching, but the reality is there's lots of people in the same position and with a finite budget you can only commission services that will help the most people pound for pound.
I think the primary concern for public healthcare in adopting treatments/procedures will always be cost. The commissioning bodies are always looking for the most cost effective treatments which will help the majority of the population which that body serves, and will procure them from the local hospital trust who can provide the required service levels at the best value for money. Whilst there is provision for people to apply for specialist treatments on an individual basis, the harsh reality is that there isn't infinite financial resource and so more often than not its a case of helping the many over funding a treatment that may potentially save/prolong the life of just one person. It's sad, and I know plenty of people who have bad sentiments towards the NHS because of course when it's a sick relative we want them helped with no expense spared and to be denied that is heart wrenching, but the reality is there's lots of people in the same position and with a finite budget you can only commission services that will help the most people pound for pound.
- Donald
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And of course you canprelude91 wrote:Either way, can't help with the research.

I'm sure you have an opinion on something. For example how would you feel if you had the money and the tech existed for you to have a bank of synthetic organs on standby, whilst people on waiting lists for donors are dying?