Former Intel CEO and co-founder Andrew S. Grove to speak at annual meeting of Society or Neuroscience
Former Intel CEO and co-founder Andrew S. Grove has some scathing words to say to the pharmaceutical industry. During Grove’s tenure with Intel, he saw transistors on a chip grow from 1000 to nearly 10 billion, but treatments for major diseases like Parkinson’s are exactly the same today as they were 12 years ago.
Grove tells Newsweek that he thinks something is deeply wrong with the biomedical research system in the country.
Grove isn’t alone in wondering why researchers are able to heal animals in tests of cancer, make paralyzed mice walk again and other feats, but nothing seems to translate over to humans, which is the point of the research.
One of the best points made by Grove in his Newsweek interview is that in the semiconductor industry, when a device can’t be made the same way twice; they investigate the cause. One such investigation led to a breakthrough that is now a main building block of all sorts of common household devices like cell phones and MP3 players.
Had the original problem not been investigated, the breakthrough allowing the wealth of electronics devices we enjoy today may have never happened or would have at least been delayed greatly.
In the pharmaceutics industry, when a batch of drugs tested doesn’t provide results better than the results of a placebo group the entire batch is junked with no research into the cause of why the drug didn’t work. Grove says in a nutshell that the pharmaceutical industry is missing a huge amount of potential benefit by not being able to take the things in each failed medication that are good and roll them into one medicine that works.
The mere act of investigating failures in pharmaceutical research could lead to unforeseen breakthroughs that could potentially affect millions of lives worldwide.
"If you look at the last five years, if you look at what major innovations have occurred in computing technology, every single one of them came from AMD. Not a single innovation came from Intel." -- AMD CEO Hector Ruiz in 2007
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