A rare disease, malicitis, is being diagnosed with increasing frequency. The number of cases reported this year is more than double the number reported four years ago. The government should now allocate more funds for treatment and prevention of malicitis.
All of the following, if true, would weaken the conclusion except
Premise: The question refers to malicitis, a rare disease, which is increasing rapidly. It says that number of reports this year is twice to that of our years ago.
Conclusion: ‘Should’ indicates that this is conclusion. It says that govt. needs to allocate more funds for the disease’s treatment and prevention.
To verify that our analyses is correct we can do the X → Y test where first two sentences equate to X and last sentence equates to Y.
Question stem asks for options which doesn’t weakens the argument conclusion. So, it may be something which is neutral to argument or strengthens the conclusion.
A. funds already available for research in malicitis are currently under-utilized – WRONG. Previous funds availability shows that new funding would be bad decision. So, it weakens straight forward and hence wrong.
B. a new test employed for the first time this year detects malicitis at a considerably earlier stage in the development of the disease – WRONG. It might be possible according to this option that new technology detects the disease at an early stage which was not possible 4 years ago. Usage of word ‘considerably’ modifies the early detection thus makes it extreme. And finally, logically also an external factor results in high detection rate. Hence this one is WRONG for various reasons.
C. the number of cases reported this year represents the same fraction of the population as reported in all of the last five years – WRONG. A ratio-wise distribution means population has increased accordingly. Personally, this is quite close as far correctness is concerned as it somewhat points towards increasing the funding(for the sole reason that population has increased – number of reported people has increased). But if that’s so does it mean that early detected people with the disease need similar amount of funding as others. All in all, here an additional assumption is required which makes the option wrong for that reason.
D. a committee of experts reviewed the funding four years ago – CORRECT. As it happened in past, it is irrelevant. It does strengthens the conclusion that increased cases of disease needs a relook on the funding part so that sufficient funds are available to prevent and treat the disease but that’s something we need to assume. If sufficient funds are available even though experts reviewed the funding four years ago, this becomes a neutral point to make.
E. a private foundation has committed sufficient funds to cover treatment and prevention needs as well as research for the next five years – WRONG. Funding data if analyzed by govt. would show fewer cases as a private foundation has funded ‘sufficiently’ for next five years. So, govt. might not need to further provide any funds.
Answer (D).