Home > Self Help Anxiety - General > Life-saving HIV treatment – patent pool animation
Jun
20


Three problems stopping people from getting the HIV drugs they need, and one solution to the problem. Join the push for the Patent Pool. One way we can help the millions of people around the world who need treatment for HIV but aren’t getting it.

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25 Responses to “Life-saving HIV treatment – patent pool animation”

  1. Klikkaren
    June 20th, 2010 at 19:36 | #1

    Does any one know wich program that is used to make this animation?

  2. HIVVideos
    June 20th, 2010 at 20:16 | #2

    STOP AIDS DRUG CAMPAIGN SOUNDS BETTER. Why would anyone want a patent pool to fund Genocide in Africa…

  3. houseofnumbers
    June 20th, 2010 at 20:55 | #3

    View the new documentary “House of Numbers” to see why questions about this must be raised and deeper issues about HIV and AIDS need to be discussed. Lives are at risk, and this is the first documentary with the worlds foremost authorities highlights the scientific problems with HIV testing, science, statistics, and why there is no cure. If sheds new light on a misunderstood phenomena. GO to houseofnumbers[doc]com to see the trailer.

  4. hpvhere
    June 20th, 2010 at 21:06 | #4

    One in six Americans between the ages of 14 and 49 have genital herpes and close to 1 in 2 black women are infected, new figures from the CDC( STDloves C o M HIV dating site) reveal.

  5. mabelsweets
    June 20th, 2010 at 21:17 | #5

    It’s not the end of the world when you found you had HIV! I found stdsingle. com offer the online services for STD people. You many find you love here.

  6. mykoolaidtastesfunny
    June 20th, 2010 at 21:20 | #6

    before somebody says…azt isn’t used anymore…yes it is. They just remarketed it as zidovudine so people would keep buying it.

  7. mykoolaidtastesfunny
    June 20th, 2010 at 22:12 | #7

    31. May, MT et al, 2006. “HIV treatment response and prognosis in Europe and North America in the first decade of highly active antiretroviral therapy: a collaborative analysis”, Lancet. 2006 Aug 5;368(9534):427-8,

    INTERPRETATION: Virological response after starting HAART improved over calendar years, but such improvement has…NOT…. translated into a decrease in mortality.

    direct links to the study are included int he article

  8. mykoolaidtastesfunny
    June 20th, 2010 at 22:43 | #8

    AZT was added to California’s list of known carcingens as of Dec 2009

    Also…the SCIENCE says the meds do NOT improve health or liespan. Google…

    20 Unanswerable Questions for Aids Inc

    20. Why have improvements in “virological responses” (”viral load” and CD4 counts) to HAART….NOT…. translated into decreased clinical progression to AIDS and death (31)?

  9. DarkHero187
    June 20th, 2010 at 23:42 | #9

    im so scared right.

  10. Alexscottmurad
    June 21st, 2010 at 00:23 | #10

    WOOHOOOO

  11. stdsupports
    June 21st, 2010 at 01:01 | #11

    Welcome to HIVlover, com, the largest and? most trusted dating site for singles living with HIV/Aids and other STDs.There are hundreds of thousands of members are living with HIV/AIDS, Herpes and other STDs just like you.

  12. 2012sparkyAZ
    June 21st, 2010 at 01:23 | #12

    Yeah that sounds like a great idea! Lets put silver matter in our blood stream, which is not even a requirement of you body system and doesn’t even flush out of our body!

  13. LorentJovet
    June 21st, 2010 at 01:25 | #13

    Exactly, instead of trying to design pharmaceuticals to fight AIDS, we should mass produce colloidal/nano silver but then again Big Pharma wouldn’t want people to know you can get better for less than $50 and the New World Order eugenicists wouldn’t want their depopulation schemes compromised.

  14. LorentJovet
    June 21st, 2010 at 02:02 | #14

    Yes but colloidal silver is a much better idea

  15. LorentJovet
    June 21st, 2010 at 02:16 | #15

    Indeed

  16. stdsupports
    June 21st, 2010 at 03:08 | #16

    HIV case is on the rise!! I just found the largest HIV dating and support site == HIVlover, com == . One local HIV activist says he’s concerned about the staggering new numbers.

  17. jazzamk
    June 21st, 2010 at 03:46 | #17

    So wait, do the royalties indicate a cut in profits to the pharmaceutical companies? If so, I’m afraid this video takes a very wishful look at the market, however convincing it seems.

  18. chorjack
    June 21st, 2010 at 04:14 | #18

    IdleGod, I agree with you. Patents are not there to make things hard for anyone, it works as an incentive. What the patent pool does is it works like a music licensing ageny for all the artistes – only the smallest ones benefit from it. And what is fair pricing anyway?

    Clapittyclapclap, you are horribly mistaken when you say it rewards innovation. In what way does it do that? Lower the amount of remuneration generated? Do not forget that pharmaceutical companies are not charity organisations!

  19. rachelmann12
    June 21st, 2010 at 04:25 | #19

    Fantastic Idea!! Lets all show the pharmaceutical companies that we (the people) want NO NEED this to become a reality!

  20. clapittyclapclap
    June 21st, 2010 at 05:20 | #20

    No misunderstandings. You need a patent pool because the manufacturer CANNOT do the same things direct. They can’t develop the new drugs without the cooperation the patent pool allows. We can’t get the prices down without the competition the pool generates.

    It rewards innovation and spreads the power to produce life savin- drugs amongst many. It reduces bureaucracy by having all the patents in one place, rather than lengthy individual negotiations.

    …watch it again IdleGod, but concentrate.

  21. IdleGod
    June 21st, 2010 at 05:55 | #21

    This video glistens with misunderstanding of patents. Why do you need a patent pool when you can just do the exact same thing direct from the manufacturer? It sounds like someone wants more control and are not willing to pay out the inventors of the drugs. Without the inventors making money, there is no reason to make more drugs. Sure, they are overpriced, but thats where better regulation comes in. Patent pools just adds another level of obfuscation to the problem, it doesn’t solve it.

  22. ortafunk
    June 21st, 2010 at 06:48 | #22

    You could also Google The Bob Beck Protocol Videos

  23. xTordyx
    June 21st, 2010 at 07:21 | #23

    What program is used to make this animation?

  24. clapittyclapclap
    June 21st, 2010 at 07:49 | #24

    Sorry firpeace/Antidog – nowt naive about this idea.

    75% of people on HIV treatment are using generic drugs made in the developing world – nothing shady about them.

    Generic competition’s been the most important factor behind lower prices – essential new drugs are still only available at the big prices big pharma charge – we need the pool to create that competition for new drugs.

    It’ll promote innovation in a way that the current system never will.

    It’s supported many including the UK govt.

  25. Antidogma07
    June 21st, 2010 at 08:18 | #25

    More effective a solution would be if a fair pricing act is determined by a consortium of pharmaceutical companies and international organizations. The pharmaceutical companies keep selling the drugs, but at a more equitable price that is related to the country’s cost of living. Big pharmaceutical companies are not pro bono organizations. If you take the dough away, they will not sell anymore.

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