This article explores whether the current patent system strikes the optimal balance between providing incentives to inventors to bring new medical devices to the marketplace and promoting public health by ensuring that these medical devices are widely available at a reasonable price. After providing an overview of the relationship of patent law to medical devices, the author explains how ethical and economic considerations suggest the need for an alternative patent system for medical devices and notes the difficulties with this proposal. The author concludes that a combination of alternatives to the current system most equitably account for the interests and needs of both healthcare device consumers and producers
This Article contributes to the patent debate by observing that new and emerging technologies are ra...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
There is debate among scholars as to whether patent law provides more benefit than harm. Some studie...
This article explores whether the current patent system strikes the optimal balance between providin...
Patentable inventions have often been transformative, but the pace of such innovation has changed ex...
The U.S. government’s recent but unusual push to negotiate drug prices has struck a chord with many ...
As patents grant monopolies, the patent system has a considerable impact on markets. When corporatio...
Health care costs continue their inexorable rise, threatening America’s long-term fiscal stability, ...
The author assesses the physicians\u27 immunity statute from legal policy, ethical, and financial ...
The cost of medicines imposes a significant financial burden on society, with New Zealand spending $...
Imagine a device that could help identify skin cancer by examining moles underneath a patient’s skin...
This article examines the value of human rights arguments in institutional, activist and doctrinal s...
The ultimate end of patent law must be to spur innovations that improve human welfare—innovations th...
This paper offers an economic rationale for compulsory licensing of needed medicines in developing c...
Patent monopolies are tolerated because we believe they promote progress that benefits society. What...
This Article contributes to the patent debate by observing that new and emerging technologies are ra...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
There is debate among scholars as to whether patent law provides more benefit than harm. Some studie...
This article explores whether the current patent system strikes the optimal balance between providin...
Patentable inventions have often been transformative, but the pace of such innovation has changed ex...
The U.S. government’s recent but unusual push to negotiate drug prices has struck a chord with many ...
As patents grant monopolies, the patent system has a considerable impact on markets. When corporatio...
Health care costs continue their inexorable rise, threatening America’s long-term fiscal stability, ...
The author assesses the physicians\u27 immunity statute from legal policy, ethical, and financial ...
The cost of medicines imposes a significant financial burden on society, with New Zealand spending $...
Imagine a device that could help identify skin cancer by examining moles underneath a patient’s skin...
This article examines the value of human rights arguments in institutional, activist and doctrinal s...
The ultimate end of patent law must be to spur innovations that improve human welfare—innovations th...
This paper offers an economic rationale for compulsory licensing of needed medicines in developing c...
Patent monopolies are tolerated because we believe they promote progress that benefits society. What...
This Article contributes to the patent debate by observing that new and emerging technologies are ra...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
There is debate among scholars as to whether patent law provides more benefit than harm. Some studie...