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synlie
synlie @Synlie
5 hours, 10 minutes ago
Trending now in 🇮🇹 Italy

The so-called 'Butterfly Children Disease' is a cruel joke on humanity.

20 people already took a side

Global Consensus

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What happened?

Epidermolysis bullosa, or EB for short, leaves children with skin as fragile as butterfly wings. The slightest friction can cause painful blisters and sores all over their bodies. Despite ongoing research, there's little hope on the horizon.

How do we continue to let this happen?

Oppose

Some might argue that medical advancements are happening too fast for us to fully grasp them yet. Others claim funding goes towards diseases with a higher mortality rate or greater financial impact.

Risk

The risk is in underfunding rare conditions like EB, leaving sufferers without adequate care and treatment options.

Future

In the future, we might see more public outcry pushing for better funding and awareness around rare diseases like EB. However, it's likely to be an uphill battle against established norms in healthcare allocation.

Predict

'Butterfly Children Disease' will continue to draw attention but may not receive substantial change unless there is a dramatic shift in how we allocate medical resources. Will the public demand more from our research institutions?

Context

Pulse Insight

This disease, known as epidermolysis bullosa or EB for short, turns kids into delicate beings who suffer from painful blisters and sores at the slightest touch. It's a cruel reminder of how little we've done to help these innocent victims despite years of research.

Why is it that diseases like this still exist? Do our priorities need an overhaul?

AI Insight is generated based on real-time global trends and contextual data analysis.

Hidden Trade-off

While big pharmaceutical companies pour money into common illnesses that affect millions, diseases affecting fewer people often get sidelined. This hidden trade-off means rarer but equally devastating ailments suffer from lack of attention.

Why should the fate of a few hundred children determine our medical research priorities?

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