Soldato
- Joined
- 7 Jan 2009
- Posts
- 6,881
Like mentioned it is a mutating virus...so as you can imagine it changes all the time and becomes resistant to whatever we throw at it.
But they'd make a bomb from the cure. They can always market other remedies for other ailments that don't work.
you ever read the active ingredients in something like lemsip? lol
paracetamol (500mg), phenylephrine (6.1mg) and caffeine (25mg).
lemsip arent exactly cheap either you may aswell buy a pack of lockets , some paracetamol and a can of redbull it probably works out cheaper and does the same thing
Not as much as from the preventatives you have one cure yet about 10 different preventatives that you can safely use at one time here's the math.
1 x cure = **** load of money once.
10 x preventatives = **** loads more money and can be sold again and again
If you were a pharmaceutical bigwig who only cared about how much profit you could make from what you sell which seems to be the more tempting business plan?
The vast majority of the products used for colds are also marketed towards influenza as well, so you wouldn't lose the whole revenue stream.
A large enough percentage though I can picture men in suits having heart palpatations!
You'd potentially always have a revenue stream for cures though as perhaps children would inherit immunity?
If they Inherited immunity that would destroy the market for the cure and preventetives and we'd see said men in suits jumping from boardroom windows.
Even tho there is no cure I recommend you go vitamin C crazy it helps fight it and its the one vitamin you cannot overdose on. Keep yer fluids up also.
http://www.newsweek.com/2007/11/14/c...ure-colds.html
So where did the vitamin C-cold connection start? It all stems from Linus Pauling, a Nobel Prize-winning chemist who lived from 1901 to 1994. In 1970 he wrote the book "Vitamin C and the Common Cold," which popularized the notion that this particular vitamin could prevent one of the most common ailments on earth. But the book came with little scientific backing and was largely devoid of evidence, says Pauling biographer Thomas Hager. "He published this very influential health book without writing a single scientific paper on the subject," he says. "He seemed to be prescribing a major change in dietary habits without much evidence." Nonetheless, the book's message stuck.
No, no they don't.They have the cure but you aint never going to get it !
best prevention is to keep away from skanky sniffing sneezing coughing people. if everyone quarenteened themself it could be erradicated, but nooo they all goto work, shops, pubs, school and give it to everyone elsedirty selfish ****s