The avocado you picked up at the grocery store almost certainly started its journey at a family farm in Mexico. From there, a packing company bought, sorted, and shipped it to the United States. Stateside, a distributor bought it and shipped it to the grocery store in your town. By the time you paid a dollar for that avocado, it had passed through the hands of perhaps four companies, each competing with several others for a slice of the fruit trade. That single dollar covered all the costs: growing, packing, shipping, displaying, and ringing it up at the checkout stand. Now think of something more personal, like the life-sustaining pill your mother takes to manage her chronic illness. That drug is manufactured by a pharmaceutical company. From there, it’s typically sold to a pharmacy benefit manager, shipped to a retail pharmacy, prescribed by a doctor, and ultimately paid for by an insurance company, Medicare or Medicaid. Like the avocado, the pill changes hands several times. However, there’s a crucial difference. In this case, every hand it passes through belongs to the same sprawling healthcare corporation. Even the doctor writing the prescription might be on that company’s payroll. Your $15 co-pay is just a small part of the cost you can see. Some experts argue that this model is a net win, but others see it differently. They argue that letting a handful of companies set prices for manufacturers and consumers alike smothers competition. This reduces patient choice, as these companies steer patients to their own services and drive up the cost of the medication people need to stay alive.
How Big Healthcare Companies Keep Drug Prices High
The avocado you picked up at the grocery store almost certainly started its journey at a family farm in Mexico. From there, a packing company bought, sorted, and shipped it to the United States. Stateside, a distributor bought it and shipped it to the grocery store in your town. By the time you paid a dollar for that avocado, it had passed through the hands of perhaps four companies, each competing with several others for a slice of the fruit trade. That single dollar covered all the costs: growing, packing, shipping, displaying, and ringing it up at the checkout stand. Now think of something more personal, like the life-sustaining pill your mother takes to manage her chronic illness. That drug is manufactured by a pharmaceutical company. From there, it’s typically sold to a pharmacy benefit manager, shipped to a retail pharmacy, prescribed by a doctor, and ultimately paid for by an insurance company, Medicare or Medicaid. Like the avocado, the pill changes hands several times. However, there’s a crucial difference. In this case, every hand it passes through belongs to the same sprawling healthcare corporation. Even the doctor writing the prescription might be on that company’s payroll. Your $15 co-pay is just a small part of the cost you can see. Some experts argue that this model is a net win, but others see it differently. They argue that letting a handful of companies set prices for manufacturers and consumers alike smothers competition. This reduces patient choice, as these companies steer patients to their own services and drive up the cost of the medication people need to stay alive.
CBS News Anchor Nearly Loses His Life Savings In a Scam
A phone scam was so convincing that even veteran CBS News correspondent Matt Gutman admits that he nearly walked into his bank and emptied his account before realizing something was terribly wrong. Gutman recounted receiving a call from someone claiming to work in his bank’s fraud protection department. The caller introduced herself by name, provided a badge ID, and appeared to have detailed knowledge of his personal banking information. “They seemed to know so much about me, about my bank account,” Gutman said. He went on to explain that they suspected there was significant fraud at the bank branch where he banked and wanted to enlist his help in catching the perpetrators. The conversation took a more alarming turn when the caller outlined what she claimed was a plan to catch the criminals. "What we need you to do, in order to intercept these fraudsters, is to go into the bank and withdraw everything from your bank account and take it with you so you have it in cash, and that’ll trigger the fraudsters into action. That’s how we’ll be able to catch them,” said the caller. Gutman said he thought that was a little weird. His first thought was: “Why would you use a regular citizen for something that seems like a law enforcement issue?” Then the caller said something that set off alarm bells in Gutman’s brain. “You can’t tell anybody at the bank that this is happening because they might be in on it.” That’s when Gutman realized he was dealing with scammers. This case underscores how increasingly sophisticated digital scams have become, with fraudsters using convincing scripts and personal information to gain victims’ trust before attempting to steal their money. If you receive a call from someone claiming to be a bank or fraud investigator, hang up.
Why Malls Across America Are Dying
In 1956, consumer retail was revolutionized when the $20 million, 800,000-square-foot Southdale Center shopping mall opened in Edina, Minn. Its climate-controlled environment offered respite during the freezing Minnesota winter, a forum for bored teenagers, and bargains for savvy shoppers. It was the birth of the American shopping mall: a cultural institution that would extend across the country and define the country’s suburban landscape. While the modern shopper has evolved, the mall has not. No longer able to attract the traffic they once boasted, many malls in the U.S. are now struggling to fill floor space and falling into disrepair. Victims of online shopping, changing consumer tastes and, in some ways, their own success, a number of malls are now trapped in a swift decline. Now they’re referred to as “dead malls.” Many malls have succumbed to “demolition by neglect,” which refers to allowing a mall to sit without any form of maintenance, redevelopment, or filling in vacant spaces until they’re forced to be demolished. No new indoor malls have been built since 2006, and 15% of existing malls are expected to close their stores within the next 10 years.
Japanese Team Finds Frog Bacteria That Wipes Out Cancer Tumors With a Single Dose
Japanese scientists have discovered a naturally-occurring bacteria in a frog species with remarkably-potent anticancer activity — in fact, it destroyed cancer tumors in one dose. Led by Professor Eijiro Miyako, the team at Japan’s Advanced Institute of Science and Technology discovered that a natural bacteria from the intestines of a Japanese tree frog achieved a 100% tumor elimination rate in mice with just a single intravenous dose. Not only did the gut bacteria kill the cancer cells, it also engaged the animal’s immune system for comprehensive tumor destruction. The research team isolated a total of 45 bacterial strains from the intestines of Japanese tree frogs, fire belly newts, and grass lizards. Through systematic screening, nine strains demonstrated anti-tumor effects, with E. americana exhibiting the most exceptional therapeutic efficacy. In mice with colorectal cancer, a single intravenous administration of E. americana achieved complete tumor elimination with a 100% complete response rate — dramatically surpassing the efficacy of current standard therapies. Future research and development will expand to other cancer types, evaluating the efficacy in breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, melanoma, and other malignancies.
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