Take Your Medicine

Sanofi-Aventis is a local pharmaceutical company. I drive by their massive campus on my way to Montclair a couple times a week. The facility is immense: it has its own three traffic lights on a state highway. Nestled in the center of this large sanctuary to engineered improvements to natural life is the Sri Venkateswara Hindu Temple (it too has its own traffic light). The first time I saw this temple – it is still under construction – I almost drove off the road. It is a stunning structure to see in the edges of rural New Jersey and it is a testament to the religious diversity of the state. Being small-minded in matters of zoning and construction (I’ve never owned property or a house), I wondered how this fascinating building came to rest in the center of a major pharmaceutical company’s strip.

As I considered this juxtaposition, it occurred to me that I was seeing a living metaphor. In our country of (admittedly uneven) advanced healthcare, an industry driven by science and its wonders is still penetrated by a religious institution. A temple to ancient Indic gods surrounded by a temple to human accomplishment. We can lengthen life, if there is cash on the barrel-head. Being technically unemployed, I do not receive healthcare benefits. According to bravado wafting from the governor’s office, other state employees may soon be joining me. Yet it is the cost of healthcare that has consistently caused the stagnation of some sectors of the economy. According to this month’s Harper’s Index, since the year 2000 Massachusetts has allocated $1,200,000,000 (yes, one-billion, two-hundred-million dollars) to decrease class sizes and to increase teacher pay. Of that amount, 100 percent has gone to cover rising healthcare costs. Kali have mercy!

Those of us in central New Jersey, like our Hindu temple, are surrounded by pharmaceutical companies. I have, because of my robotics avocation, been inside some of the facilities of a couple of these companies. Their visitor lounges surpass any faculty lounge I’ve ever witnessed in both opulence of appointments and sense of wealth. Yet I know that legislators refuse to tap these shoulders when it comes to taxes. Those wealthy beyond compare have already paid their dues. Besides, these guys have the keys to life: bad heart? Overweight? Sexual malfunction? All can be cured, given the cash-in-hand. Yet in the center of the capitalism’s campus stands a temple for a time-honored religion. Where your heart is, there will be your heart medication also.

4 thoughts on “Take Your Medicine

  1. You wrote:

    Yet it is the cost of healthcare that has consistently caused the stagnation of some sectors of the economy.

    I would like to add a few data points:
    (a) Back in the depression days, Roosevelt enacted the classic, stupid “centralist planning” strategy of freezing wages.

    (b) Companies now had trouble luring in skilled workers by offering higher salaries so they offered benefits instead — Roosevelt did not have the forsight to freeze all values the company could offer an employee.

    (c) With people getting health care benefits (HCB), MDs see their revenues increase as people went to docs whether they needed too or not.

    (d) MDs see HCB as great boon and lobby congress to make it a law for employers to supply this.

    (e) Laws are passed and the costs rise.

    (f) Medicare (another story) fixes prices

    (g) Lobbying influences prices and competition is lowered.

    (h) Insert your quote here

    You will note, that with these data points, the reader may be led to a different conclusion than you intended. But then, I am not sure what policy/economic tweeks you’d suggest.
    My position: a government which can be bought by MDs, Pharmacy companies, Medical gadget companies etc is a bad government because they destroy free markets.
    Presidential powers which allow central planning are bad.
    Just wanted to say it plainly.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Thanks for your comments, insightful as always, Sabio. My fish are considerably bigger than healthcare professionals, however. I look at the CEO salaries of pharmaceutical companies (among others, just so happens the temple in the middle of one of them) and weep. I appreciate hard work being rewarded, but I know an awful lot of very hard workers who have trouble paying the rent.

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  2. Henk vdG

    I am sure it was 39 when we saw crackpot non pharmacy introduced stateside and thus west wide..

    I just recieved an appeal email from a natural “practitioner”. I wasnt polite enough to pass my best wishes but a goodly tower (a la czech councillors @ Karl 5) sounds like a good idea.

    Which ever deity deigned to give me the bone cracker flu and rhinocerous disposition for easter will get some retribution soon enough. Hope you guys enjoy yourselves.

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