sickciety

sickciety t1_j60h56y wrote

Maybe you should do it. Since it's so easy and your the first one to see a viable option to increase supply with waste products . Its not like there arent actual chemist, biologists and genetic engineers who also want to increase supply and provide a viable cheaper option who are actively sued or stopped from doing so . But we dont live in a free market . If it were a free market we would have 1$ insulin like india . You don't have to explain economics to me , im a libertarian and quite well understand we dont live in a perfect capitalist society . But I think human health and life are more important than Lilly's profit margin .

Honestly were just arguing over something neither of us could actually help to solve the issue.

My issue is with the patenting of life and the overpriced medication that is a lifeline for diabetics . When your life depends on a medication they can charge whatever they want and you will pay it . Thats not economics , thats not fair market pricing .... thats just sick!

2

sickciety t1_j60d392 wrote

I dont think you realize how much the population of diabetics has increased . Nor how the Lilly corporation has gone to great lengths to protected their ip and profit margin

I can tell ill never change your mind . I listed sources , made my argument and have gotten bored of this conversation.

You may not realize how bad of an issue it is until your an old man and have to pay 200$ for 1oz of insulin that lasts about 2 weeks if kept cold . We are all so ignorant of things until they affect us or the ones we love. I have a 10yo who was diagnosed t1 at 18 months old .

It doesn't take much research to realize the insulin industry was turned into a monopoly by Lilly .

2

sickciety t1_j609yok wrote

You do know how those older insulins were produced right ? Before the gmo yeast project the insulin was made from pork slaughterhouse waste .

Yes it can be done but not in large amounts

There was a female chemist who during ww2 in britain produced enough insulin this way for her and 2 other people in her town . They had to starve themselves of carbs and sugars so they could use less insulin.

By the end of the war she had slaughtered her families entire pig farm ( they were the largest pig farm in the uk at the time and they went bankrupt trying to keep their daughter alive . It was just enough insulin just for those 3 people even while rationing it just wouldn't be enough for a wider population

Here's a good source of info

https://americanhistory.si.edu/blog/2013/11/two-tons-of-pig-parts-making-insulin-in-the-1920s.html

2 tons of pig pancreas will produce 8 ozs of insulin .

4

sickciety t1_j607t85 wrote

Not without gmo yeast .

They patented the process of making the yeast also

The only way I could see some company producing those older insulins is through a completely new process , say someone modified a fungus to produce that older type of insulin

They would not be able to produce even the Humalog because the drug itself is patented

−2

sickciety t1_j605u8x wrote

Patents only last 20 years if you don't change the product .

From Google

" This is in part because companies have made those incremental improvements to insulin products, which has allowed them to keep their formulations under patent, and because older insulin formulations have fallen out of fashion. "

Humalog was patented in 1996 its a 30 year old insulin which is the type many people still use to this day is still patented by Lilly. The courts have decided that in 2030 they will have to reapply for a patent .

When it was discovered the creator wanted to sell the patent for 1$

"23 January 1923 – "insulin belongs to the world"

They all sold these patents to the University of Toronto for $1 each. Banting famously said, “Insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world.” He wanted everyone who needed it to have access to it."

Then

"Banting, his co-discoverers, and others on the Insulin Committee secured a patent for both the product and the process, and issued a one-year license to Lilly. This year, designated an “experimental period,” would give both Lilly and researchers in Toronto's Connaught Laboratories a chance to perfect the process."

That 1 year liscence never ended and when the creators died their intellectual property was now owned by a trust managed by the insulin committee , the seated members of that trust were eli Lilly representatives .

4

sickciety t1_j603sok wrote

Making insulin is as easy as brewing beer . Same equipment , same inputs . The only difference is regular people can't get their hands on the gmo yeast because they patented the process of making it and the yeast themselves . No company can sell it without the permission of eli Lilly . If caught making or selling it they can be sued for doing so. I know of one company who started making it and trying to open source the process and they were hit with cease and desist letters . Lilly claimed they stole their intellectual property . They thought if they didn't sell it they would be fine giving it away for free but they were sadly mistaken . We also are not allowed to import insulin , it supposidly costs 1$ per vial in India( but the lilly produces insulin for export which is sold for 2$ in places like aphganistan )

This is the main reason why insulin is so expensive. Because they've created a monopoly. If it were left up to the free market we would have very very cheap insulin .

9