answer:That’s not how it works. That’s not how any of this works. Remedies and cures for disease do not “just happen” because “we need them”. Someone, probably some corporation – in fact, the kind of large pharmaceutical corporation with more money than God, which a lot of people hate for no more reason than that – will have to spend a lot of time, effort, manpower (in other words, “money, money and more money”) to discover, develop and satisfactorily prove a cure or remedy, and then spend millions more to promote it so that it becomes well known around the medical community, so that it can be prescribed. And it’s not even a certain outcome. It’s not like the Big Bad Pharmacorp can just dump a pile of money somewhere, wait long enough and have exactly what they need to make a huge return on their investment. They could lose it all if the development fails to find a cure in the first place, or if it proves to be ineffective or dangerous in testing, and never even makes it to market. Even worse, they could spend the time, effort, money in development, then spend millions more in testing to prove that it is effective and seems to have relatively benign side effects, spend millions more to promote and produce it – and then find out, too late! – that it is actually quite dangerous for reasons that had not been anticipated, and spend hundreds of millions in settling lawsuits. It’s a risky business. You don’t get drugs in the pipeline “just because it’s so badly needed”.