| Literature DB >> 30146961 |
Christopher Okhravi1, Simone Callegari1, Steve McKeever1, Carl Kronlid1, Enrico Baraldi1, Olof Lindahl1, Francesco Ciabuschi1.
Abstract
We design an agent based Monte Carlo model of antibiotics research and development (R&D) to explore the effects of the policy intervention known as Market Entry Reward (MER) on the likelihood that an antibiotic entering pre-clinical development reaches the market. By means of sensitivity analysis we explore the interaction between the MER and four key parameters: projected net revenues, R&D costs, venture capitalists discount rates, and large pharmaceutical organizations' financial thresholds. We show that improving revenues may be more efficient than reducing costs, and thus confirm that this pull-based policy intervention effectively stimulates antibiotics R&D.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30146961 DOI: 10.1177/1073110518782913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Law Med Ethics ISSN: 1073-1105 Impact factor: 1.718