Swift wrote:As I mentioned earlier in the thread, this strain seems to be about 60% mortality. Does that change the ethics? If you say "no", what is the magic number: 30%, 40%?
How informed can the consent be if the patient is not familiar with modern medicine (I don't know if these people are or not)?
What about some complicated details (this is, I think, how these decisions really come down) - let's say this serum costs $25,000 per person to produce and is believed to drop the mortality rate to about 25%, but that is not yet determined in large scale trials. On the flip-side, standard supportive care (IVs, blood transfusions, respiratory support, etc.) costs $10,000 per person, but the mortality rate is still about 50%, but this is a proven treatment. What say you then?
I'm only giving you (and GJ) a hard time because you seem to have all the answers, ethical and otherwise. I don't, and try hard to not give anyone the impression I might.
SciFi Chick wrote:I see that CNN has gone the way of FOX in not bothering to get their facts straight before reporting on a story.
Here is a more accurate summary of what happened. It's not a "secret" serum, and it wasn't created in mice.
I would imagine the hope is to create it with mice, but for now, they have to rely on the antibodies in someone who has survived. Not something that can easily be mass produced.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:I see that CNN has gone the way of FOX in not bothering to get their facts straight before reporting on a story.
Here is a more accurate summary of what happened. It's not a "secret" serum, and it wasn't created in mice.
I would imagine the hope is to create it with mice, but for now, they have to rely on the antibodies in someone who has survived. Not something that can easily be mass produced.
That's terribly unfortunate, in that case.
TSC wrote:Besides which, I'm not trying to say how we fix the outbreak. I'm saying that the Americans are getting opportunities that the Africans aren't, and that's fucked up. Maybe there are issues with providing experimental treatments. Whatever; that's immaterial to my point, which is that problems or no, the Americans were offered the treatment and the Africans were not.
That's my real issue.
And, no, I don't have an answer to that. I've said that I don't. I don't want the Americans not to be offered the treatment, and it appears that it is impractical for the Africans to be offered the treatment. So I have no answer. That won't stop me pointing out that it's unjust.
Gullible Jones wrote:@Swift: I don't claim to have all the answers. That doesn't mean I can't recognize when something stinks.
The Supreme Canuck wrote:I'm only giving you (and GJ) a hard time because you seem to have all the answers, ethical and otherwise. I don't, and try hard to not give anyone the impression I might.
I feel that dig's a bit unwarranted. Pointing out things that are wrong and then saying "Hey, this seems like it could help fix them" is not the same as saying I have all the answers.
Besides which, I'm not trying to say how we fix the outbreak. I'm saying that the Americans are getting opportunities that the Africans aren't, and that's fucked up. Maybe there are issues with providing experimental treatments. Whatever; that's immaterial to my point, which is that problems or no, the Americans were offered the treatment and the Africans were not.
That's my real issue.
And, no, I don't have an answer to that. I've said that I don't. I don't want the Americans not to be offered the treatment, and it appears that it is impractical for the Africans to be offered the treatment. So I have no answer. That won't stop me pointing out that it's unjust.
Swift wrote:It really comes across, at least to me, as "this is wrong and unjust and what are YOU FOLKS doing about it. You are not stepping up on this, you priviledged Americans". Well, what are you doing about? I've been working on social issues that are important to me for almost 40 years. I donated my time and money to these things, and still do (as recently as last Sunday). I feel insulted to be told I am priviledged and am not doing enough.
I'm probably taking this entirely too personally, but that's how I feel. I'm sorry, but I'm out of here...
The Supreme Canuck wrote:You know what? Fuck it - I'm out too. All I'm doing now is arguing in circles and, apparently, pissing people off. So count me out.
Christ, it's the gun thread all over again... why the hell do I talk about things like this?
squ1d wrote:Did somebody say troll ?
Sorry I have had ebola of the emotions lately.
Apparently 'privilege' is the new hammer of rhetoric and all things are nails.
That doctor guy from the first page died, so I guess he wasn't very lucky at the roulette table.
Rommie wrote:Additional plot twist: Americans are the only citizens who have to pay income taxes when living abroad. I was always told this is because I have an extensive use of embassies/diplomats/evacuations/whatever at my disposal that is above and beyond what other countries offer their citizens. Apparently that includes being evacuated from ebola-stricken countries, so that's cool.
Rommie wrote:No, I still have to file with the IRS every year on all my income including that made abroad (I don't make enough for them to take extra due to Dutch-American reciprocity). In fact, due to obscure reasons it's a complete nightmare now for Americans who live abroad to file properly- good summary here. The latter is due to laws applying to a lot of random stuff it shouldn't and expats not exactly having a big voice or a government representative.
I mean there might have been something worked out specifically with Saudi Arabia (or it was just a helluva lot easier to hide your income a few years ago- my Canadian second cousin did that route too), but you've definitely had to file even if an expat as long as I remember.
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