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Roy Vagelos on healthcare education

From Roy Vagelos | 09-06-24 · · Red Apple Podcast Network

“We support scholarships to support the students who have financial needs can come to Columbia Medical School and they will have all expenses paid if they have financial need tuition living expenses everything so our students graduate from medical school with no debt at all.”

Roy Vagelos
Former Chairman, Regeneron
Policy Impact healthcare educationstudent debtphilanthropy

On , Roy Vagelos, Former Chairman at Regeneron, spoke about healthcare education during Roy Vagelos | 09-06-24 on Red Apple Podcast Network.

Roy Vagelos | 09-06-24
Watch on YouTube at 13:54
Roy Vagelos | 09-06-24
Red Apple Podcast Network
Watch on YouTube at 13:54
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Roy Vagelos

About Roy Vagelos

Former Chairman · Regeneron

Roy Vagelos, former CEO and chairman of Merck and former chairman of Regeneron, has continued to speak publicly about his career and the pharmaceutical industry. In a September 2024 interview, he discussed Merck's decision in 1987 to donate ivermectin free of charge to treat river blindness, stating that the company made the drug available to anyone in the world for as long as it was required. He also described a program in which Merck trained Chinese scientists and engineers to manufacture a recombinant hepatitis B vaccine, with the company making no profit from the effort. Vagelos has also commented on drug pricing, saying in a 2017 forum that he is not opposed to high prices for drugs that provide significant value, such as a hepatitis C cure, but criticized price increases after launch, citing Gleevec's rise from $26,000 to $146,000. He has advocated for transparency in pricing and for price increases to be tied to inflation. Vagelos has also reflected on his approach to drug discovery, emphasizing the importance of understanding basic science and disease mechanisms. In a 2020 fireside chat, he said that scientific leaders should find intersections where new science reveals something about a disease and technology exists to affect that molecule. He noted that during his tenure at Merck, he was closely involved with research even as CEO, and that the company's decision to stop clinical studies of lovastatin for two years after a rumor of tumors in animals was driven by a commitment to patient safety. Vagelos has also discussed the role of financial incentives in the industry, stating in a 2020 interview that while profit is important, the industry must be careful not to reduce pricing to a point where people lose interest in drug development.

Profile compiled from Roy Vagelos's verified public interviews and appearances. See all quotes & transcripts →

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