- Tue Jan 16, 2018 6:22 pm
#42990
Hi KM,
The stimulus gives us two drugs, Y and Z, that treat heart attacks. Y definitively does not treat heart attacks better than Z, and Z treats heart attacks at least as well as Y, and possibly better. However, Z is more expensive than Y. The information about Z's marketing is a red herring. Question 18 asks us to justify a conclusion to always use drug Z over drug Y.
Answer choice (A) is an attractive wrong answer, but fails us in that it gives us another conditional relationship, one not present in the stimulus, about patient finances and treatment. We are concerned with cost,irrespective of who pays that cost, and effectiveness of treatment. Moreover, we are looking for a principle that would justify always using Z over Y when that option is present, not one that justifies that treatment under certain circumstances.
Answer choice (B) is irrelevant. The only thing mentioned in the stimulus relating to doctor compensation is the drug Z marketing scheme, which as mentioned above is a red herring.
Answer choice (C) is also irrelevant. The stimulus's argument is concerned with medical effectiveness versus cost, not shady marketing practices. Still a red herring.
Answer choice (D) clearly irrelevant. Nobody is even criticizing the studies.
Answer choice (E) finally justifies using Z over Y by making Z's drawback, cost, irrelevant and making even the possibility of being more effective determinant in which treatment to use.
Hope this helps!