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N I C E Cancer Drug Rejection

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Zacs-Master | 12:11 Fri 08th Aug 2014 | News
36 Answers
How can the above organisation be all for promoting Clinical Excellence when they reject a new drug. Where does the 'Excellence' fit in to that scenario?
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Interesting, this word "Excellence", a word that was never used in the NHS until late 1970's. Hospitals suddenly described various departments as "Centres of Excellence" and when one inquired who decided on that accolade, nobody seemed know. NHS is state controlled medicine and NICE is a government body, comprised of eminent men with valuable merit...
13:35 Fri 08th Aug 2014
£90,000 for 6 months?
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Yes, but if it's excellent as a treatment surely they're going against their own ethos? May be they should be called NICEBOIIE NICE But Only If Its Economical.
I think when the costs outweigh the benefits they are right.
As svejk said, £90,000 for an extra six months of life? Not worth it in my opinion unless the person can fund it themselves.
The real culprits are the drugs companies who hold peoples` lives to ransom.
Maybe when the cancer drugs fund stops paying for it we can purloin a little of the money that we give away in foreign aid and help our own citizens for once.
sadly, these financial decisions have been and always will have to be taken.
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But surely 'excellence' doesn't have a price tag.
You can't expect the drug companies to give the drugs away when they have spent millions of pounds on research and development to produce the drugs.
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Never said anything about giving them away.
My last post was in answer to 237SJ saying the drug companies hold people's lives to ransom.
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237 never mentioned giving them away either. I think you've jumped to that conclusion.
How`s your Dad, Zacs?
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I'm afraid he died about 6 weeks ago 237. How kind of you to remember. It was in a wonderful hospice and he just slipped away pain free (I hope) in the end.
Oh Gosh, sorry - I didn`t know. My condolences.
Sorry to hear that, Zacs :-(
Is £90k "worth it" for a possible extra six months of (good quality?) life?
2 answers
1) if you are the person in question with cancer, Yes
2) if you are a publicly funded body with a finite amount of money to spend on all healthcare for all people, No.
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Thanks both. Very kind.
ps, your other answer appeared while i was typing - i'm sorry if i sounded insensitive :(
I'm sorry for your loss Zacs-Master.

Maybe I did read too much into the post, it seemed like the poster was criticising the cost to the public of the drugs.
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black_cat; my argument is not about the affordability but of a body which is there to promote excellence in clinical care. I just can't reconcile the word 'excellence' and the rejection of a life enhancing drug.

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