2011年7月1日 星期五

Drug Development Services And The Roll That They Play In Bringing New Drugs To The Consumer


With the cost of prescription drugs on the rise and many people questioning how expensive it is going to be to cure diseases in the future, drug development services around the globe are working to keep the cost of new drugs down? How are they doing this? Drug Development services are in fact, the "sub contractors" in the business of finding new cures for diseases and by competing amongst themselves they insure that drug development costs will be at a minimum.

Subcontractors of the Prescription Drug Business

It can take decades to actually find a cure for a disease and in fact there are diseases today, such as cancer, that no cure has yet been found for after billions have been spent in a fruitless search. Even after a cure is found and a drug is discovered, it takes and average of ten years for it to pass safety tests and be approved by the FDA for use in the U.S. So, discovering and testing drugs is a very expensive and time consuming prospect.

An Army of Researchers is Needed

Through the course of finding and testing a new drug, multitudes of tests and experiments must be ran. Also, mountains of pages of documents must be written, organized and submitted. For a drug company to do all of the work on their own and "in house" it would require an army of employees and research facilities the size of an average small city. Of course, all of the cost of such a massive bureaucratic and research infrastructure would have to passed on to the consumer when they bought the drugs that were produced.

Competetition Means Cheaper and Better Drugs

By using drug development services drug manufacturers can move quicker and cheaper in their search for cures for diseases. When drug development services compete with each other for work from drug companies, the end result is that the work is done cheaper and the quality is higher, which means better drugs at a lesser cost to the consumer in the end.








Written by Kathy Tippleman. Find the latest information on Drug Development Services [http://pharmadirections.com/drug_development_services.htm]


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