Monday, August 8, 2016

Better Return on Our Tax Dollar Investment



 I received the following post in my Facebook timeline recently. The full release by Congressman Cole can be found at: https://cole.house.gov/media-center/weekly-columns/funding-fight-cure.


One of the most important investments Congress makes with our tax dollars is the funding of university grants to support basic scientific research or the search for treatments or cures of diseases or cancers. Unfortunately, these grants turn out to be give aways rather than investments. Although society does ultimately gain some benefit from the funded research, the greatest return on these investments enures to the benefit of the researcher, their university, and ultimately, big pharma.

How does this happen?

In 1980, the Bayh-Dole Act was passed as a form of economic stimulus. In a nutshell, this act allows universities to claim ownership of inventions or scientific discoveries that result from federally funded research. The net effect of this is to incentivize universities and their researchers to jealously guard their research in anticipation of the financial and professional rewards that will result from patenting their discoveries. The payoff comes when these patents are sold or licensed to industry. 

How about a solution that would lead to more rapid advances in science and a better return to society?

My proposal:

All the fruits of federally funded research should simply go into the public domain and be unpatentable. Big pharma would be free to use the research to commercialize the findings; however, the drugs would essentially be generic from day one. The cost of the basic research and initial trials being already borne by the taxpayer, our ROI would come in the form of more drugs and treatments for more diseases and cancers at lower cost as more producers are allowed to compete. 

Bayh-Dole was essentially a wealth transfer from taxpayers to universities and the pharmaceutical industry. Congress should act more like venture capitalists and less like a non-profit charity. Bayh-Dole should be repealed or modified.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Professional Success

My Professional Success


Beth Adele

Many in the world of academia gauge their success by the number of articles they have published or by the prestige of the university or college at which they teach. Using these criteria, my career has not been particularly successful. As I transition to the next iteration of my odd life, however; I will claim one small measure of professional success of which I am proud. I am pretty sure I am not entitled to the claim but I am staking it anyway.
I first met Beth Adele in 2002/2003 shortly after joining the marketing faculty at the University of Central Oklahoma. She was sitting at the end of a long conference table, eagerly interviewing for the position of Graduate Assistant to the Marketing Department as she began her pursuit of a UCO MBA. She was hired into the position which was the beginning of our professional relationship. The intervening years have seen her complete the MBA, work in industry, teach at UCO as either an adjunct or a full time instructor, make a huge impact at UCO in Career Services, and create UCO VetHERO. She did all this while starting a family and commuting to UT Tyler for her own Ph.D. program. During this time our relationship grew from faculty-student to colleagues, research collaborators, and friends.
For the past three years I have had to immense good fortune to have Beth work with me as Assistant Dean in the School of Business at Cameron University. Now, as the School of Business has transformed into the Department of Business in the new School of Graduate and Professional Studies, Beth has been named interim Department Chair.
The transition is complete: Faculty-Student. Colleagues. Research Collaborators. Friends. And, since July 1, Beth is now my boss.
Beth would have achieved all this had we never met. She has the talent, ability, and drive to succeed. I am just pretending I might have had anything to do with it. That said, I am claiming this one little success. One cannot help but be proud when their student (actually never had her in class) becomes their boss.