After Chen Xia came back, the first thing he did was to contact his elder sister and Zheng Haisheng.
When Zheng Haisheng and Chen Chun hurried to Minglu Villa, their eyes popped out when they saw the many experimental instruments placed in the hall.
"Oh my god, Chen Xia, where did you buy all these instruments? This, this, this is from Japan? This is from Germany? Wow, they are all imported, and they are more advanced than the laboratories in our school and hospital."
Zheng Haisheng was already a little incoherent. For a "research monk" like him, owning a set of advanced experimental instruments was simply the happiest and most joyful thing.
This is like a martial arts master who has obtained a peerless magic weapon. He is like a tiger with wings and a fish in water. He can master magical skills with just a snap of the sword.
Chen Chun was also very surprised. "Second brother, where did you get all these experimental instruments? It must have cost a lot of money, right?"
"They were all bought in Hong Kong. This cost me over 1 million Hong Kong dollars. Brother-in-law, you have to take good care of it. If you damage it, my eldest sister will not forgive you."
Zheng Haisheng nodded firmly: "Don't worry, with these advanced instruments, the drug reverse engineering you want will be no problem. If you can't do it, I will go back to Juzhou to grow sweet potatoes."
All three of them laughed.
As long as Zheng Haisheng was confident, it would be fine. Chen Xia was most afraid that he would frown and then spread his hands and say, "I can't do it. I can't do it."
That would be the end of Chen Xia’s life.
I have already discussed with my sister-in-law about exporting 666 Weitai. Needless to say, the effectiveness of this medicine is obvious. As long as it enters the Hong Kong medical market, it will surely become famous.
By then, someone with an interest will definitely study the ingredients in it, so Chen Xia must obtain the patent for omeprazole before then, so that he can be invincible.
As long as omeprazole is successfully reverse-engineered, upgraded versions of similar drugs, such as rabeprazole sodium, pantoprazole sodium, lansoprazole, esomeprazole and ilaprazole, can be reverse-engineered at once and all applied for patents.
By then, similar manufacturers will be left with no way out and will be forced to pay patent fees.
Originally, the first-generation proton pump inhibitor omeprazole was launched on the market in 1988, and Chen Xia had about five years to prepare. Now the plan has changed, and he must reverse-engineer it immediately.
Chen Xia’s idea was to first allow 666 Weitai to enter the Hong Kong market as a traditional Chinese medicine and apply for a patent for omeprazole.
Once the patent application is approved, we can promote the therapeutic effect of omeprazole in treating gastric diseases caused by Helicobacter pylori.
This operation is actually very simple. You just need to find a domestic or foreign hospital and then spend money to invite some experts and professors to speak on the platform.
Then promote this medicine at an academic conference and apply it clinically. Of course, before that, Chen Xia also has to prepare all the experimental materials and attach detailed instructions.
This work is quite complicated and lengthy, but Chen Xia has a ready-made instruction manual. He doesn't need to study anything at all, he can just copy it.
As for the specific data, I have to make it up myself with a pen.
For example, the "Thalidomide Incident" in Germany.
In everyone's impression, Germany is a very rigorous country, known worldwide for its old-fashioned and serious nature.
Is this really the case?
In the 1950s, the German Grünenthal Group began to launch a drug called "Thalidomide" on the European market, which could significantly inhibit pregnancy reactions in pregnant women. Its chemical name was "Thalidamide".
Once launched, thalidomide was an immediate hit, with pregnant women flocking to use it to alleviate the pain of pregnancy reactions. Within a year, thalidomide became a global phenomenon.
During this period, experts and professors from various hospitals and medical schools in Germany came out one after another to brag about how miraculous "Thalidomide" was and how effective it was in treating pregnancy reactions such as vomiting and nausea in pregnant women.
As a result, "Thalidomide" was produced and sold in large quantities. In West Germany alone, 1 million people had taken "Thalidomide", and the monthly sales of "Thalidomide" reached 1 ton.
Then, in the 1960s, European doctors discovered that the birth rate of deformed babies among pregnant women who took thalidomide increased significantly. These deformities manifested as limb deformities, cleft palate, blindness, deafness, or internal organ deformities. They were called "seal babies."
So, let's think about it: how was such a harmful drug developed in the first place? Were those biopharmaceutical researchers rigorous enough?
Similarly, were the experts who reviewed and approved this patent rigorous enough? Was the experimental data submitted true or false?
Why do professors in hospitals and medical schools vigorously promote the miraculous effects of thalidomide?
This shows that medicine is like a big cake. There are too many people who want to get a piece of it. Everyone is an interest group. If there is money, everyone shares it. If there is cake, everyone eats it.
To put it bluntly, it's all caused by academic corruption, so no one should blame anyone else.
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