Medical Patents may be a reality soon

Glaucus

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Oblivious Supreme Court poised to legalize medical patents
The Supreme Court on Wednesday heard oral arguments in a case that raises a fundamental question: whether a physician can infringe a patent merely by using scientific research to inform her treatment decisions.

Unfortunately, this issue was barely mentioned in Wednesday's arguments. A number of influential organizations had filed briefs warning of the dire consequences of allowing medical patents, but their arguments were largely ignored in the courtroom. Instead, everyone seemed to agree that medical patents were legal in general, and focused on the narrow question of whether the specific patent in the case was overly broad.

This should make the nation's doctors extremely nervous. For two decades, the software industry has struggled with the harmful effects of patents on software. In contrast, doctors have traditionally been free to practice medicine without worrying about whether their treatment decisions run afoul of someone's patent. Now the Supreme Court seems poised to expand patent law into the medical profession, where it's unlikely to work any better than it has in software.
As you can see, this is not about patents on drugs or equipment. This is essentially patenting a treatment. For example, you could patent the following: If blood pressure goes up 10%, increase atenolol dosage by 25mg.
 
hmmm, no decision yet (that I see).
but as they have made some really STUPID decisions lately, I'm not holding out hope

this will just increase health costs....another reason for never going to the doctor or hospital.
 
It would be insane. This could cause the price of medical care to explode (even more). You start of with stuff like this and you end up with the recommended dosage for which condition being patented which means that the doctors will be paying up when prescribing as recommended. If this is allowed I may just have to try to be the first to patent "Take two aspirin and call me in the morning".
 
Yes, and with the US switching to a "first to file" patent system, using prior art to invalidate a patent won't help you. That would really suck for everyone. On the plus side, Americans won't be coming to Canada just for cheap drugs, but for cheap diagnosis/prescriptions as well.
 
Oblivious Supreme Court poised to legalize medical patents
As you can see, this is not about patents on drugs or equipment. This is essentially patenting a treatment. For example, you could patent the following: If blood pressure goes up 10%, increase atenolol dosage by 25mg.

Worse, they'll then go after other countries to try to enforce these same patents under the auspices of the Berne Convention and similar like they do with copyrights.
 
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