- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#35037
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the government health service and PharmCo, a drug manufacturer, appear to be at
odds. The health service’s position is that if PharmCo does not provide detailed information about
the cost-effectiveness of Antinfia, an influenza medication, then it will not pay for patients to take it.
PharmCo’s response is that it will not be able to provide the data the government wants unless the
health service pays for Antinfia, because the massive clinical trials required to obtain the data cannot
happen until the drug is in widespread circulation, which can only happen if the government pays for
patients to take it.
Although the question stem is worded strangely, this is a Must Be True question. However, notice
that the reason the language in the question stem seems strange is that it announces a weaker
standard of proof than we normally have for Must Be True questions. This means that the correct
answer choice may contain language that we may typically consider inappropriate for a Must Be
True question. Given the conditional language of the positions taken by both the government service
and PharmCo, we can infer that the government health service will not pay for patients to take the
influenza medicine. This is because the health service’s requirement and PharmCo’s requirement are
incompatible. They both are demanding that the other take the first step.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because it is overly broad. The facts in the
stimulus dealt only with Antinfia, so we cannot make any inferences about what the government
health service does generally.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because we were able to infer that the
government will not pay to put Antinfia into widespread circulation, and PharmCo’s statement told
us that the only way for the drug to be in widespread circulation is for the government to pay for it.
Answer choice (C): There is no indication from the stimulus that the patients will pay for the
Antinfia themselves. Although the stimulus mentioned patients, it made no mention of their
willingness or ability to pay for the drug. To the contrary, PharmCo told us that the drug will go into
widespread circulation only if the government pays for it.
Answer choice (D): The operative word in this answer choice is should. The use of “should” implies
the application of a rule to the facts. Since the stimulus did not contain a rule, we cannot conclude
that the government should pay for patients to take the drug.
Answer choice (E): The issue in the stimulus was who was going to pay for the widespread
distribution of the Antinfia, which was required before we could answer the question of the drug’s
cost-effectiveness. Since the widespread distribution will not occur, we cannot say whether or not the
drug is cost-effective.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the government health service and PharmCo, a drug manufacturer, appear to be at
odds. The health service’s position is that if PharmCo does not provide detailed information about
the cost-effectiveness of Antinfia, an influenza medication, then it will not pay for patients to take it.
PharmCo’s response is that it will not be able to provide the data the government wants unless the
health service pays for Antinfia, because the massive clinical trials required to obtain the data cannot
happen until the drug is in widespread circulation, which can only happen if the government pays for
patients to take it.
Although the question stem is worded strangely, this is a Must Be True question. However, notice
that the reason the language in the question stem seems strange is that it announces a weaker
standard of proof than we normally have for Must Be True questions. This means that the correct
answer choice may contain language that we may typically consider inappropriate for a Must Be
True question. Given the conditional language of the positions taken by both the government service
and PharmCo, we can infer that the government health service will not pay for patients to take the
influenza medicine. This is because the health service’s requirement and PharmCo’s requirement are
incompatible. They both are demanding that the other take the first step.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because it is overly broad. The facts in the
stimulus dealt only with Antinfia, so we cannot make any inferences about what the government
health service does generally.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because we were able to infer that the
government will not pay to put Antinfia into widespread circulation, and PharmCo’s statement told
us that the only way for the drug to be in widespread circulation is for the government to pay for it.
Answer choice (C): There is no indication from the stimulus that the patients will pay for the
Antinfia themselves. Although the stimulus mentioned patients, it made no mention of their
willingness or ability to pay for the drug. To the contrary, PharmCo told us that the drug will go into
widespread circulation only if the government pays for it.
Answer choice (D): The operative word in this answer choice is should. The use of “should” implies
the application of a rule to the facts. Since the stimulus did not contain a rule, we cannot conclude
that the government should pay for patients to take the drug.
Answer choice (E): The issue in the stimulus was who was going to pay for the widespread
distribution of the Antinfia, which was required before we could answer the question of the drug’s
cost-effectiveness. Since the widespread distribution will not occur, we cannot say whether or not the
drug is cost-effective.