"We are on the verge of a revolution in medicine: understanding, treating, and ultimately preventing the causes of degenerative aging. But medical revolutions only happen if we all stand up in support of funding and research. We did it for cancer. We're doing it for Alzheimer's. We can do it for aging - and create an era of longer, healthier lives!"

Required Reading
Activism and Advocacy
Calorie Restriction
The Community, Visualized
Cryonics
Healthy Life Extension Explained
Introductory Articles
Longevity Meme Newsletter
Methuselah Foundation
Mprize for Longevity Research
Stem Cells, Regenerative Medicine
SENS, Negligible Senescence
What is Anti-Aging?

On the Causes of Aging
Accumulating AGEs
The Failing Immune System
Junk in the Lysosome
Mitochondrial Free Radicals
Senescent Cells
Other Causes of Aging

Objections Answered
Boredom
Inequality and Economics
Overpopulation
Stagnation
The Tithonus Error
What About Retirement?

Recent Entries

  • Thoughts on Engineered Longevity and Selfishness
  • A Little More On Preventing Decline in Liver Function With Age
  • The Quest for Clearly Understood Signifiers
  • The Endocrine System, Longevity, and Methionine
  • There Are Old People and Fat People, But Few Old Fat People
  • More Cryonics History From Depressed Metabolism
  • Attitudes of Aging Researchers To Healthy Life Extension
  • Three Decades From Now
  • On Stem Cells, Aging, and Latexin
  • IGF-1, FOXO and Telomeres at Ouroboros
  • An Interview With Dave Gobel of the Methuselah Foundation
  • Tear Down the FDA
  • Advancing Knowledge of Stem Cells in the Brain
  • On the Psychology of Longevity Advocacy
  • Casting an Eye Upon Alcor's Board
  • The Murky Depths of Parkinson's Disease
  • How To Tell Whether It's Working
  • Gregory Stock at Aging 2008
  • Preparation is Only Helpful When Done Before You Need It
  • Cancer and Immune System Proficiency

    Weblogs of Interest
    Accelerating Future
    Ageing Research
    Anti-Ageing Research
    Alcor News
    Al Fin Longevity
    April's CR Diary
    Andart
    Biosingularity
    CRON Diary
    Cryonics Society
    Depressed Metabolism
    Distributed Republic
    Ethical Technology Blog
    Existence is Wonderful
    Frontier Channel
    Future Current
    FuturePundit
    grailsearch.org
    Longevity Science
    Marginal Revolution
    Metamagician and the Hellfire Club
    Methuselah Foundation Blog
    Mises Economics Blog
    Nanodot
    Ouroboros
    Overcoming Bias
    Pimm - Partial immortalization
    Responsible Nanotechnology
    ScienceBlogs
    Sentient Developments
    Singularity Institute Blog
    The Loom
    The Speculist
    Tangled Bank
    Transumanar

      
    Search

    Archives (Monthly)

    August 2008
    July 2008
    June 2008
    May 2008
    April 2008
    March 2008
    February 2008
    January 2008
    December 2007
    November 2007
    October 2007
    September 2007
    August 2007
    July 2007
    June 2007
    May 2007
    April 2007
    March 2007
    February 2007
    January 2007
    December 2006
    November 2006
    October 2006
    September 2006
    August 2006
    July 2006
    June 2006
    May 2006
    April 2006
    March 2006
    February 2006
    January 2006
    December 2005
    November 2005
    October 2005
    September 2005
    August 2005
    July 2005
    June 2005
    May 2005
    April 2005
    March 2005
    February 2005
    January 2005
    December 2004
    November 2004
    October 2004
    September 2004
    August 2004
    July 2004
    June 2004
    May 2004
    April 2004
    March 2004
    February 2004
    January 2004

    Creative Commons License
    Attribution, noncommercial, no derivative works. Play nice.

  • « Healthy Life Extension: Live Like You Mean It | Main | Roundup on the Singularity Summit at Stanford »

    Saturday, May 13, 2006

    Another Side of Learning About Money: Hows and Whys of Research Funding

    I talked a little about money and personal finance in the context of healthy life extension yesterday. Economics is both the root and representation of society and human interaction; modest understanding of the flows and practicalities will bring you great advantage in your endeavors.

    I imagine that many of the folk reading Fight Aging! are very interested in the rate and details of progress in medical research, and specifically in work that may lead to healthy life extension technologies. If you're interested in medical progress and don't understand the workings of investment and commercialization, then you are left largely blind. You will not understand why some work succeeds while other work does not; you will fail to grasp the full significance of many news stories; you will not have a realistic view of the near future of medicine; you will not understand how and why some actions, events and situations damage progress and hinder the advance of new medical technology from laboratory to clinic.

    Medical research funding in the US is approximately 30-40% public, 50-60% private for-profit and 10% philanthropic; most to the hard work of bringing science from laboratory to market is accomplished with private funding. So best to learn a little about how that process and culture works, no? A good place to start, with respect to recent private investment in healthy life extension and related research, might be the book "The Quest for Human Longevity."

    Most other popular books on human longevity are focused almost exclusively on scientific ideas and breakthroughs in life-extension research, and they typically avoid any money talks as inappropriate subject. ... This somewhat idealistic perspective is challenged in a new book, which describes in a great detail how important money is in modern entrepreneurial world of life-extension and anti-aging research business. The book provides an alternative, more realistic perspective that financial incentives are driving scientific innovations in anti-aging studies by stimulating researchers to take risks and to work really hard.

    While thinking along these lines, I bumped into a short article on venture investment in biotechnology today that gives some insight into the way in which investors think.

    While the public markets for biotechnology companies have historically been an opportunity for very significant returns, the recent past markets have not been as attractive. With significant downward pressure on public valuations for many biotechnology companies, venture capital investors have had to evolve some of their thinking.

    ...

    With the markets valuing many new public companies in the range around $150 million (as opposed to $300 million), investors can no longer invest in companies that require $80-100 million to mature to the point where they can go public. This has forced companies and investors to be much more capital efficient and to pursue creative paths to product development and ultimately commercialization. This might manifest in the pursuit of more developed assets or the adoption of clinical development plans that can be abbreviated.

    Investment environments are something like the weather - too many variables to predict well at the smaller scale, but big storms rarely come out of the blue. Investors react to this weather, which can make all the difference in funding of early stage companies, more speculative research, or research that will take longer to mature.

    This is just a small slice of life from a broad, changing culture, however. I'm not familiar with the breadth of venture investment and private research funding, and neither do you need to be - the general basics, incentives and practicalities of venture investment, growth of companies and commercialization of products are all you need to gain a much better understanding of the world around you. This, like an understanding of money in the context of personal finance, is really nowhere near as hard as you might think. Much of it is intuitive, and the more you look at it, the easier it becomes to figure out the rest.

    Technorati.com: ,

    Posted by Reason at May 13, 2006 12:13 AM | TrackBack (0)

    Post a comment; thoughtful, considered opinions are valued. Please note that comments incorporating ad hominem attacks, advertising and other forms of inappropriate behavior are likely to be deleted.










    Remember personal info?