Guest guest Posted December 16, 2004 Report Share Posted December 16, 2004 > Re: Re: Busting Big Pharma > > is a movie producer that has also written several books and > had a TV show. His stuff is social reform in nature, he is very liberal. > Bowling for Columbine is his movie, it had some good points but I was > appalled at his treatment of NRA frontman Charlton Heston in that movie. > > He wrote a book Dude Where's My Country? that goes over the Patriot Act and > scared the crap out of me with that destruction of liberty legislation. > > He uses press for most of his research which is rather shoddy researching in > my opinion > but over all say some important things to say. His 911 movie was supposed to > unseat > Bush's re-election and was supressed by the book company who was supposed to > publish it. Librarians found out about it and raised such a stink that it > was published eventually. > > You can look him up on www.amazon.com or www.imdb.com for books and movies > respectively. > > > > Who is Micheal ? > > Is he the big guy with the beard that just recently did a movie > involving politics. Who made a mochery of the Republican party and > their issues? At the bottom of this post, it says that he is now > pointing a camera at Big Pharma. I would pay good money to see this > one. I can't wait. What a way to expose the injustices going on in > our counry. I love this man. It seems that American's don't believe > anything unless it's on the t.v. screen. > > Wake up America, > > Connie > > > > > > > > http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,1170159 > 5%5E28737,00.html > > > > Busting Big Pharma > > Lusetich > > December 16, 2004 > > WHAT happens when a slick sales force of 87,000 is set loose with > billions of dollars to wine and dine, entertain and educate the US's > 600,000 doctors? > > > > The short answer is that six years ago Americans spent $US89 > billion on prescription drugs. Last year the amount exploded to > $US149 billion. In the year to March 2004, Australia spent $5.8 > billion on prescription drugs. > > > > The US accounts for half of all global profits for Big Pharma, as > the pharmaceutical corporations are known. > > > > " The result of all those attractive women in short skirts armed > with pseudo-science invading the practices of doctors is that > Americans are over-medicated, taking far too many drugs, most of > which they don't even need, and they are paying too much for them, " > says Jerome Kassirer, a former editor of The New England Journal of > Medicine and prominent critic of Big Pharma. > > > > Beyond the skyrocketing profits, however, lies a darker picture of > a virtually unregulated omnipotent industry whose questionable > practices - some call them criminal - in the quest for higher > revenues has turned Big Pharma into the latest corporate villain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > As a growing army of critics - and the courts - fling open the > doors of the world's leading drug companies to reveal unfavourable > buried studies, the parallels to Big Oil, Big Banking and, the most > notorious of all, Big Tobacco are striking. > > > > " These guys and their ethics are precisely where Big Tobacco was > 20 years ago, " says Breggin, a prominent New York psychiatrist > who has campaigned against the spread of controversial > antidepressants. > > > > Scandals, such as US pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co yanking its > $US2.5billion ($3.3 billion) a year blockbuster painkiller Vioxx off > the market on September 30 after the company belatedly conceded it > was causing heart attacks and strokes, have led to an unprecedented > erosion in public trust. > > > > In the past year 300,000 Australians - about one-third of patients > suffering osteoarthritis - used Vioxx. Since its September > withdrawal more than 600 Australians who suffered heart attacks, > strokes and blood-related illnesses after taking the drug have > joined a multi-billion-dollar class action against Merck. > > > > " For decades both the public and physicians thought the > pharmaceuticals were looking out for the health and welfare of > society and never challenged what the industry claimed, " says Arnold > Relman, emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. > > > > " Now everyone is starting to wise up to an industry [that] is > hugely profitable and driven, obsessed with making more profits and > to do that by any means it can, even if it means stretching laws, > stretching ethics. " > > > > A flurry of new books by high-profile authors - including Kassirer > and Marcia Angell, another former editor at The New England Journal > of Medicine - as well as court cases, such as the one against the > antidepressant Paxil brought by New York's crusading Attorney- > General Eliot Spitzer, reveals the way in which Big Pharma has > managed to generate profits and cover up its skeletons. > > > > The system is enabled, say reform-minded doctors, by the US Food > and Drug Administration - which generates most of its budget from > drug companies and has proven to be " nothing but a lapdog " , Angell > says - as well as by physicians who blithely accept dubious studies > provided by drug company sales representatives. > > > > " Suppose you are a big pharmaceutical company. You make a drug > that is approved for a very limited use. How could you turn it into > a blockbuster? " Angell says. > > > > " You could simply market the drug for unapproved, or off-label, > uses even though it's against the law to do so. You do that by > carrying out 'research' that falls way below the standard required > for FDA approval, then 'educating' doctors about any favourable > results. That way you circumvent the law [because doctors can > prescribe whatever drugs they see fit]. > > > > " You could say you were not marketing for unapproved uses; you > were merely disseminating the results of research to doctors, who > can legally prescribe a drug for any use. But it would be bogus > education about bogus research. It would really be marketing. " > > > > Nowhere is this better illustrated than with the antidepressants > known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, a class of drug of > dubious benefit that, through savvy marketing, has become a multi- > billion-dollar cash cow. > > > > A staggering one in 10 women in the US are on these drugs. In > Australia, there was a 350 per cent increase in prescriptions for > SSRIs - such as Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil - between 1990 and 2002. > > > > Yet, says Breggin, who has appeared at trials on behalf of people > who commit crimes or of families who have lost a family member to > suicide while under the influence of SSRIs, " not only do these drugs > not work but they're [also] dangerous " . > > > > Barth Menzies, a Los Angeles lawyer who is perhaps the > leading antidepressant litigation attorney in the world, explains > the disease is marketed and sold in order to sell the drugs. > > > > " That's why it's been so successful, " she says. " The drug's a > narcotic, it's an upper, so no wonder you feel better. " > > > > Kassirer says drug companies - the most powerful special interest > in Washington, with an army of 700 lobbyists - have public relations > firms draw up " research papers " based on selective studies, > conducted by medical researchers who dare not go against the company > line, to promote their drugs and then have " experts " put their names > to them, often just parroting what the company wants disseminated. > > > > " These councils with the official sounding names, the alliance of > something or the foundation for something, what are they doing? " he > asks. " They're doctors who are being paid to promote awareness of > some condition [that] invariably is treated by a drug made by the > drug company [that] is bankrolling the council. > > > > " The system is awash in drug company money and it's corrupt. All > this money and favours is forcing doctors to do things that I think > are pretty terrible. It creates deception, erodes professionalism > and is destroying the profession. > > > > " If anybody is up to their ears in conflicts of interest, it's > psychiatrists. " > > > > Critics say some mental illnesses are invented by panels of > psychiatrists - who in turn are paid large sums by drug companies - > to sell drugs. Kassirer cites the example of executive dysfunction, > a new-found disease supposedly marked by fatigue, apathy, bad mood > and an inability to communicate clearly. Yet even those who diagnose > executive dysfunction say that it has no standard medical definition > and is better regarded as a concept, he says. > > > > " But it doesn't stop them prescribing drugs for the so-called > condition, " Kassirer says. > > > > Barth Menzies says she has seen evidence for years that the drug > companies knew their antidepressants not only didn't work but were > causing suicidal or violent tendencies among some users, yet tried > to hide the evidence for fear of financial loss. > > > > " The internal documents we've found through discovery show what a > total sham these antidepressants are, " she says. " The science is > bought and paid for, experts are willing to sell their names and > their souls, the whole thing's been an amazing web of lies and > fraud. > > > > " I used to think, 'How many people have to die before someone does > something about it?' And then I saw the answer. In their greed to > find new markets, they started pushing SSRIs on kids. I knew that > once kids started dying, someone would finally say enough is > enough. " > > > > Authorities in Britain were the first to ban the prescribing of > SSRIs - except Prozac, although even the FDA now agrees that Prozac > works in the same way and has the same inherent dangers - to > children and adolescents. > > > > In the US - where more than 1 million youngsters are on these > drugs - the FDA was forced to issue a black box warning on the > SSRIs, while Spitzer has filed fraud charges against > GlaxoKline, the world's second largest drug maker, for > blatantly hiding or trying to spin negative findings of clinical > trials of Paxil's effects on children and teenagers. > > > > GSK settled the suit but is facing an avalanche of lawsuits from > people whose children hurt or even killed themselves - or others - > while on the drugs. Part of GSK's settlement forced it to publish > findings of all trials on its website, though critics say this needs > to be independently monitored. Meanwhile, Big Pharma is fighting > efforts in Washington to force all trials, irrespective of their > results, to be made public. > > > > " I'm not that hopeful for any real change, " Angell says. " They > have bought politicians and doctors. They've looked at everyone and > anyone who could stand in their way and they've thrown money at > them. The only hope we have is a grassroots revolution that will > make the politicians decide they love votes more than drug company > money. " > > > > It is little wonder that , whose scathing films on > the gun lobby and President W. Bush have been among the most > successful documentaries in history, is pointing his lens at Big > Pharma. And the working title of his proposed documentary? Sicko. > > > > Lusetich is The Australian's Los Angeles correspondent. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2004 Report Share Posted December 16, 2004 > Re: Re: Busting Big Pharma > > is a movie producer that has also written several books and > had a TV show. His stuff is social reform in nature, he is very liberal. > Bowling for Columbine is his movie, it had some good points but I was > appalled at his treatment of NRA frontman Charlton Heston in that movie. > > He wrote a book Dude Where's My Country? that goes over the Patriot Act and > scared the crap out of me with that destruction of liberty legislation. > > He uses press for most of his research which is rather shoddy researching in > my opinion > but over all say some important things to say. His 911 movie was supposed to > unseat > Bush's re-election and was supressed by the book company who was supposed to > publish it. Librarians found out about it and raised such a stink that it > was published eventually. > > You can look him up on www.amazon.com or www.imdb.com for books and movies > respectively. > > > > Who is Micheal ? > > Is he the big guy with the beard that just recently did a movie > involving politics. Who made a mochery of the Republican party and > their issues? At the bottom of this post, it says that he is now > pointing a camera at Big Pharma. I would pay good money to see this > one. I can't wait. What a way to expose the injustices going on in > our counry. I love this man. It seems that American's don't believe > anything unless it's on the t.v. screen. > > Wake up America, > > Connie > > > > > > > > http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,1170159 > 5%5E28737,00.html > > > > Busting Big Pharma > > Lusetich > > December 16, 2004 > > WHAT happens when a slick sales force of 87,000 is set loose with > billions of dollars to wine and dine, entertain and educate the US's > 600,000 doctors? > > > > The short answer is that six years ago Americans spent $US89 > billion on prescription drugs. Last year the amount exploded to > $US149 billion. In the year to March 2004, Australia spent $5.8 > billion on prescription drugs. > > > > The US accounts for half of all global profits for Big Pharma, as > the pharmaceutical corporations are known. > > > > " The result of all those attractive women in short skirts armed > with pseudo-science invading the practices of doctors is that > Americans are over-medicated, taking far too many drugs, most of > which they don't even need, and they are paying too much for them, " > says Jerome Kassirer, a former editor of The New England Journal of > Medicine and prominent critic of Big Pharma. > > > > Beyond the skyrocketing profits, however, lies a darker picture of > a virtually unregulated omnipotent industry whose questionable > practices - some call them criminal - in the quest for higher > revenues has turned Big Pharma into the latest corporate villain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > As a growing army of critics - and the courts - fling open the > doors of the world's leading drug companies to reveal unfavourable > buried studies, the parallels to Big Oil, Big Banking and, the most > notorious of all, Big Tobacco are striking. > > > > " These guys and their ethics are precisely where Big Tobacco was > 20 years ago, " says Breggin, a prominent New York psychiatrist > who has campaigned against the spread of controversial > antidepressants. > > > > Scandals, such as US pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co yanking its > $US2.5billion ($3.3 billion) a year blockbuster painkiller Vioxx off > the market on September 30 after the company belatedly conceded it > was causing heart attacks and strokes, have led to an unprecedented > erosion in public trust. > > > > In the past year 300,000 Australians - about one-third of patients > suffering osteoarthritis - used Vioxx. Since its September > withdrawal more than 600 Australians who suffered heart attacks, > strokes and blood-related illnesses after taking the drug have > joined a multi-billion-dollar class action against Merck. > > > > " For decades both the public and physicians thought the > pharmaceuticals were looking out for the health and welfare of > society and never challenged what the industry claimed, " says Arnold > Relman, emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. > > > > " Now everyone is starting to wise up to an industry [that] is > hugely profitable and driven, obsessed with making more profits and > to do that by any means it can, even if it means stretching laws, > stretching ethics. " > > > > A flurry of new books by high-profile authors - including Kassirer > and Marcia Angell, another former editor at The New England Journal > of Medicine - as well as court cases, such as the one against the > antidepressant Paxil brought by New York's crusading Attorney- > General Eliot Spitzer, reveals the way in which Big Pharma has > managed to generate profits and cover up its skeletons. > > > > The system is enabled, say reform-minded doctors, by the US Food > and Drug Administration - which generates most of its budget from > drug companies and has proven to be " nothing but a lapdog " , Angell > says - as well as by physicians who blithely accept dubious studies > provided by drug company sales representatives. > > > > " Suppose you are a big pharmaceutical company. You make a drug > that is approved for a very limited use. How could you turn it into > a blockbuster? " Angell says. > > > > " You could simply market the drug for unapproved, or off-label, > uses even though it's against the law to do so. You do that by > carrying out 'research' that falls way below the standard required > for FDA approval, then 'educating' doctors about any favourable > results. That way you circumvent the law [because doctors can > prescribe whatever drugs they see fit]. > > > > " You could say you were not marketing for unapproved uses; you > were merely disseminating the results of research to doctors, who > can legally prescribe a drug for any use. But it would be bogus > education about bogus research. It would really be marketing. " > > > > Nowhere is this better illustrated than with the antidepressants > known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, a class of drug of > dubious benefit that, through savvy marketing, has become a multi- > billion-dollar cash cow. > > > > A staggering one in 10 women in the US are on these drugs. In > Australia, there was a 350 per cent increase in prescriptions for > SSRIs - such as Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil - between 1990 and 2002. > > > > Yet, says Breggin, who has appeared at trials on behalf of people > who commit crimes or of families who have lost a family member to > suicide while under the influence of SSRIs, " not only do these drugs > not work but they're [also] dangerous " . > > > > Barth Menzies, a Los Angeles lawyer who is perhaps the > leading antidepressant litigation attorney in the world, explains > the disease is marketed and sold in order to sell the drugs. > > > > " That's why it's been so successful, " she says. " The drug's a > narcotic, it's an upper, so no wonder you feel better. " > > > > Kassirer says drug companies - the most powerful special interest > in Washington, with an army of 700 lobbyists - have public relations > firms draw up " research papers " based on selective studies, > conducted by medical researchers who dare not go against the company > line, to promote their drugs and then have " experts " put their names > to them, often just parroting what the company wants disseminated. > > > > " These councils with the official sounding names, the alliance of > something or the foundation for something, what are they doing? " he > asks. " They're doctors who are being paid to promote awareness of > some condition [that] invariably is treated by a drug made by the > drug company [that] is bankrolling the council. > > > > " The system is awash in drug company money and it's corrupt. All > this money and favours is forcing doctors to do things that I think > are pretty terrible. It creates deception, erodes professionalism > and is destroying the profession. > > > > " If anybody is up to their ears in conflicts of interest, it's > psychiatrists. " > > > > Critics say some mental illnesses are invented by panels of > psychiatrists - who in turn are paid large sums by drug companies - > to sell drugs. Kassirer cites the example of executive dysfunction, > a new-found disease supposedly marked by fatigue, apathy, bad mood > and an inability to communicate clearly. Yet even those who diagnose > executive dysfunction say that it has no standard medical definition > and is better regarded as a concept, he says. > > > > " But it doesn't stop them prescribing drugs for the so-called > condition, " Kassirer says. > > > > Barth Menzies says she has seen evidence for years that the drug > companies knew their antidepressants not only didn't work but were > causing suicidal or violent tendencies among some users, yet tried > to hide the evidence for fear of financial loss. > > > > " The internal documents we've found through discovery show what a > total sham these antidepressants are, " she says. " The science is > bought and paid for, experts are willing to sell their names and > their souls, the whole thing's been an amazing web of lies and > fraud. > > > > " I used to think, 'How many people have to die before someone does > something about it?' And then I saw the answer. In their greed to > find new markets, they started pushing SSRIs on kids. I knew that > once kids started dying, someone would finally say enough is > enough. " > > > > Authorities in Britain were the first to ban the prescribing of > SSRIs - except Prozac, although even the FDA now agrees that Prozac > works in the same way and has the same inherent dangers - to > children and adolescents. > > > > In the US - where more than 1 million youngsters are on these > drugs - the FDA was forced to issue a black box warning on the > SSRIs, while Spitzer has filed fraud charges against > GlaxoKline, the world's second largest drug maker, for > blatantly hiding or trying to spin negative findings of clinical > trials of Paxil's effects on children and teenagers. > > > > GSK settled the suit but is facing an avalanche of lawsuits from > people whose children hurt or even killed themselves - or others - > while on the drugs. Part of GSK's settlement forced it to publish > findings of all trials on its website, though critics say this needs > to be independently monitored. Meanwhile, Big Pharma is fighting > efforts in Washington to force all trials, irrespective of their > results, to be made public. > > > > " I'm not that hopeful for any real change, " Angell says. " They > have bought politicians and doctors. They've looked at everyone and > anyone who could stand in their way and they've thrown money at > them. The only hope we have is a grassroots revolution that will > make the politicians decide they love votes more than drug company > money. " > > > > It is little wonder that , whose scathing films on > the gun lobby and President W. Bush have been among the most > successful documentaries in history, is pointing his lens at Big > Pharma. And the working title of his proposed documentary? Sicko. > > > > Lusetich is The Australian's Los Angeles correspondent. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2004 Report Share Posted December 16, 2004 > Re: Re: Busting Big Pharma > > is a movie producer that has also written several books and > had a TV show. His stuff is social reform in nature, he is very liberal. > Bowling for Columbine is his movie, it had some good points but I was > appalled at his treatment of NRA frontman Charlton Heston in that movie. > > He wrote a book Dude Where's My Country? that goes over the Patriot Act and > scared the crap out of me with that destruction of liberty legislation. > > He uses press for most of his research which is rather shoddy researching in > my opinion > but over all say some important things to say. His 911 movie was supposed to > unseat > Bush's re-election and was supressed by the book company who was supposed to > publish it. Librarians found out about it and raised such a stink that it > was published eventually. > > You can look him up on www.amazon.com or www.imdb.com for books and movies > respectively. > > > > Who is Micheal ? > > Is he the big guy with the beard that just recently did a movie > involving politics. Who made a mochery of the Republican party and > their issues? At the bottom of this post, it says that he is now > pointing a camera at Big Pharma. I would pay good money to see this > one. I can't wait. What a way to expose the injustices going on in > our counry. I love this man. It seems that American's don't believe > anything unless it's on the t.v. screen. > > Wake up America, > > Connie > > > > > > > > http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,1170159 > 5%5E28737,00.html > > > > Busting Big Pharma > > Lusetich > > December 16, 2004 > > WHAT happens when a slick sales force of 87,000 is set loose with > billions of dollars to wine and dine, entertain and educate the US's > 600,000 doctors? > > > > The short answer is that six years ago Americans spent $US89 > billion on prescription drugs. Last year the amount exploded to > $US149 billion. In the year to March 2004, Australia spent $5.8 > billion on prescription drugs. > > > > The US accounts for half of all global profits for Big Pharma, as > the pharmaceutical corporations are known. > > > > " The result of all those attractive women in short skirts armed > with pseudo-science invading the practices of doctors is that > Americans are over-medicated, taking far too many drugs, most of > which they don't even need, and they are paying too much for them, " > says Jerome Kassirer, a former editor of The New England Journal of > Medicine and prominent critic of Big Pharma. > > > > Beyond the skyrocketing profits, however, lies a darker picture of > a virtually unregulated omnipotent industry whose questionable > practices - some call them criminal - in the quest for higher > revenues has turned Big Pharma into the latest corporate villain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > As a growing army of critics - and the courts - fling open the > doors of the world's leading drug companies to reveal unfavourable > buried studies, the parallels to Big Oil, Big Banking and, the most > notorious of all, Big Tobacco are striking. > > > > " These guys and their ethics are precisely where Big Tobacco was > 20 years ago, " says Breggin, a prominent New York psychiatrist > who has campaigned against the spread of controversial > antidepressants. > > > > Scandals, such as US pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co yanking its > $US2.5billion ($3.3 billion) a year blockbuster painkiller Vioxx off > the market on September 30 after the company belatedly conceded it > was causing heart attacks and strokes, have led to an unprecedented > erosion in public trust. > > > > In the past year 300,000 Australians - about one-third of patients > suffering osteoarthritis - used Vioxx. Since its September > withdrawal more than 600 Australians who suffered heart attacks, > strokes and blood-related illnesses after taking the drug have > joined a multi-billion-dollar class action against Merck. > > > > " For decades both the public and physicians thought the > pharmaceuticals were looking out for the health and welfare of > society and never challenged what the industry claimed, " says Arnold > Relman, emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. > > > > " Now everyone is starting to wise up to an industry [that] is > hugely profitable and driven, obsessed with making more profits and > to do that by any means it can, even if it means stretching laws, > stretching ethics. " > > > > A flurry of new books by high-profile authors - including Kassirer > and Marcia Angell, another former editor at The New England Journal > of Medicine - as well as court cases, such as the one against the > antidepressant Paxil brought by New York's crusading Attorney- > General Eliot Spitzer, reveals the way in which Big Pharma has > managed to generate profits and cover up its skeletons. > > > > The system is enabled, say reform-minded doctors, by the US Food > and Drug Administration - which generates most of its budget from > drug companies and has proven to be " nothing but a lapdog " , Angell > says - as well as by physicians who blithely accept dubious studies > provided by drug company sales representatives. > > > > " Suppose you are a big pharmaceutical company. You make a drug > that is approved for a very limited use. How could you turn it into > a blockbuster? " Angell says. > > > > " You could simply market the drug for unapproved, or off-label, > uses even though it's against the law to do so. You do that by > carrying out 'research' that falls way below the standard required > for FDA approval, then 'educating' doctors about any favourable > results. That way you circumvent the law [because doctors can > prescribe whatever drugs they see fit]. > > > > " You could say you were not marketing for unapproved uses; you > were merely disseminating the results of research to doctors, who > can legally prescribe a drug for any use. But it would be bogus > education about bogus research. It would really be marketing. " > > > > Nowhere is this better illustrated than with the antidepressants > known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, a class of drug of > dubious benefit that, through savvy marketing, has become a multi- > billion-dollar cash cow. > > > > A staggering one in 10 women in the US are on these drugs. In > Australia, there was a 350 per cent increase in prescriptions for > SSRIs - such as Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil - between 1990 and 2002. > > > > Yet, says Breggin, who has appeared at trials on behalf of people > who commit crimes or of families who have lost a family member to > suicide while under the influence of SSRIs, " not only do these drugs > not work but they're [also] dangerous " . > > > > Barth Menzies, a Los Angeles lawyer who is perhaps the > leading antidepressant litigation attorney in the world, explains > the disease is marketed and sold in order to sell the drugs. > > > > " That's why it's been so successful, " she says. " The drug's a > narcotic, it's an upper, so no wonder you feel better. " > > > > Kassirer says drug companies - the most powerful special interest > in Washington, with an army of 700 lobbyists - have public relations > firms draw up " research papers " based on selective studies, > conducted by medical researchers who dare not go against the company > line, to promote their drugs and then have " experts " put their names > to them, often just parroting what the company wants disseminated. > > > > " These councils with the official sounding names, the alliance of > something or the foundation for something, what are they doing? " he > asks. " They're doctors who are being paid to promote awareness of > some condition [that] invariably is treated by a drug made by the > drug company [that] is bankrolling the council. > > > > " The system is awash in drug company money and it's corrupt. All > this money and favours is forcing doctors to do things that I think > are pretty terrible. It creates deception, erodes professionalism > and is destroying the profession. > > > > " If anybody is up to their ears in conflicts of interest, it's > psychiatrists. " > > > > Critics say some mental illnesses are invented by panels of > psychiatrists - who in turn are paid large sums by drug companies - > to sell drugs. Kassirer cites the example of executive dysfunction, > a new-found disease supposedly marked by fatigue, apathy, bad mood > and an inability to communicate clearly. Yet even those who diagnose > executive dysfunction say that it has no standard medical definition > and is better regarded as a concept, he says. > > > > " But it doesn't stop them prescribing drugs for the so-called > condition, " Kassirer says. > > > > Barth Menzies says she has seen evidence for years that the drug > companies knew their antidepressants not only didn't work but were > causing suicidal or violent tendencies among some users, yet tried > to hide the evidence for fear of financial loss. > > > > " The internal documents we've found through discovery show what a > total sham these antidepressants are, " she says. " The science is > bought and paid for, experts are willing to sell their names and > their souls, the whole thing's been an amazing web of lies and > fraud. > > > > " I used to think, 'How many people have to die before someone does > something about it?' And then I saw the answer. In their greed to > find new markets, they started pushing SSRIs on kids. I knew that > once kids started dying, someone would finally say enough is > enough. " > > > > Authorities in Britain were the first to ban the prescribing of > SSRIs - except Prozac, although even the FDA now agrees that Prozac > works in the same way and has the same inherent dangers - to > children and adolescents. > > > > In the US - where more than 1 million youngsters are on these > drugs - the FDA was forced to issue a black box warning on the > SSRIs, while Spitzer has filed fraud charges against > GlaxoKline, the world's second largest drug maker, for > blatantly hiding or trying to spin negative findings of clinical > trials of Paxil's effects on children and teenagers. > > > > GSK settled the suit but is facing an avalanche of lawsuits from > people whose children hurt or even killed themselves - or others - > while on the drugs. Part of GSK's settlement forced it to publish > findings of all trials on its website, though critics say this needs > to be independently monitored. Meanwhile, Big Pharma is fighting > efforts in Washington to force all trials, irrespective of their > results, to be made public. > > > > " I'm not that hopeful for any real change, " Angell says. " They > have bought politicians and doctors. They've looked at everyone and > anyone who could stand in their way and they've thrown money at > them. The only hope we have is a grassroots revolution that will > make the politicians decide they love votes more than drug company > money. " > > > > It is little wonder that , whose scathing films on > the gun lobby and President W. Bush have been among the most > successful documentaries in history, is pointing his lens at Big > Pharma. And the working title of his proposed documentary? Sicko. > > > > Lusetich is The Australian's Los Angeles correspondent. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2004 Report Share Posted December 16, 2004 > Re: Re: Busting Big Pharma > > is a movie producer that has also written several books and > had a TV show. His stuff is social reform in nature, he is very liberal. > Bowling for Columbine is his movie, it had some good points but I was > appalled at his treatment of NRA frontman Charlton Heston in that movie. > > He wrote a book Dude Where's My Country? that goes over the Patriot Act and > scared the crap out of me with that destruction of liberty legislation. > > He uses press for most of his research which is rather shoddy researching in > my opinion > but over all say some important things to say. His 911 movie was supposed to > unseat > Bush's re-election and was supressed by the book company who was supposed to > publish it. Librarians found out about it and raised such a stink that it > was published eventually. > > You can look him up on www.amazon.com or www.imdb.com for books and movies > respectively. > > > > Who is Micheal ? > > Is he the big guy with the beard that just recently did a movie > involving politics. Who made a mochery of the Republican party and > their issues? At the bottom of this post, it says that he is now > pointing a camera at Big Pharma. I would pay good money to see this > one. I can't wait. What a way to expose the injustices going on in > our counry. I love this man. It seems that American's don't believe > anything unless it's on the t.v. screen. > > Wake up America, > > Connie > > > > > > > > http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,1170159 > 5%5E28737,00.html > > > > Busting Big Pharma > > Lusetich > > December 16, 2004 > > WHAT happens when a slick sales force of 87,000 is set loose with > billions of dollars to wine and dine, entertain and educate the US's > 600,000 doctors? > > > > The short answer is that six years ago Americans spent $US89 > billion on prescription drugs. Last year the amount exploded to > $US149 billion. In the year to March 2004, Australia spent $5.8 > billion on prescription drugs. > > > > The US accounts for half of all global profits for Big Pharma, as > the pharmaceutical corporations are known. > > > > " The result of all those attractive women in short skirts armed > with pseudo-science invading the practices of doctors is that > Americans are over-medicated, taking far too many drugs, most of > which they don't even need, and they are paying too much for them, " > says Jerome Kassirer, a former editor of The New England Journal of > Medicine and prominent critic of Big Pharma. > > > > Beyond the skyrocketing profits, however, lies a darker picture of > a virtually unregulated omnipotent industry whose questionable > practices - some call them criminal - in the quest for higher > revenues has turned Big Pharma into the latest corporate villain. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > As a growing army of critics - and the courts - fling open the > doors of the world's leading drug companies to reveal unfavourable > buried studies, the parallels to Big Oil, Big Banking and, the most > notorious of all, Big Tobacco are striking. > > > > " These guys and their ethics are precisely where Big Tobacco was > 20 years ago, " says Breggin, a prominent New York psychiatrist > who has campaigned against the spread of controversial > antidepressants. > > > > Scandals, such as US pharmaceutical giant Merck & Co yanking its > $US2.5billion ($3.3 billion) a year blockbuster painkiller Vioxx off > the market on September 30 after the company belatedly conceded it > was causing heart attacks and strokes, have led to an unprecedented > erosion in public trust. > > > > In the past year 300,000 Australians - about one-third of patients > suffering osteoarthritis - used Vioxx. Since its September > withdrawal more than 600 Australians who suffered heart attacks, > strokes and blood-related illnesses after taking the drug have > joined a multi-billion-dollar class action against Merck. > > > > " For decades both the public and physicians thought the > pharmaceuticals were looking out for the health and welfare of > society and never challenged what the industry claimed, " says Arnold > Relman, emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. > > > > " Now everyone is starting to wise up to an industry [that] is > hugely profitable and driven, obsessed with making more profits and > to do that by any means it can, even if it means stretching laws, > stretching ethics. " > > > > A flurry of new books by high-profile authors - including Kassirer > and Marcia Angell, another former editor at The New England Journal > of Medicine - as well as court cases, such as the one against the > antidepressant Paxil brought by New York's crusading Attorney- > General Eliot Spitzer, reveals the way in which Big Pharma has > managed to generate profits and cover up its skeletons. > > > > The system is enabled, say reform-minded doctors, by the US Food > and Drug Administration - which generates most of its budget from > drug companies and has proven to be " nothing but a lapdog " , Angell > says - as well as by physicians who blithely accept dubious studies > provided by drug company sales representatives. > > > > " Suppose you are a big pharmaceutical company. You make a drug > that is approved for a very limited use. How could you turn it into > a blockbuster? " Angell says. > > > > " You could simply market the drug for unapproved, or off-label, > uses even though it's against the law to do so. You do that by > carrying out 'research' that falls way below the standard required > for FDA approval, then 'educating' doctors about any favourable > results. That way you circumvent the law [because doctors can > prescribe whatever drugs they see fit]. > > > > " You could say you were not marketing for unapproved uses; you > were merely disseminating the results of research to doctors, who > can legally prescribe a drug for any use. But it would be bogus > education about bogus research. It would really be marketing. " > > > > Nowhere is this better illustrated than with the antidepressants > known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, a class of drug of > dubious benefit that, through savvy marketing, has become a multi- > billion-dollar cash cow. > > > > A staggering one in 10 women in the US are on these drugs. In > Australia, there was a 350 per cent increase in prescriptions for > SSRIs - such as Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil - between 1990 and 2002. > > > > Yet, says Breggin, who has appeared at trials on behalf of people > who commit crimes or of families who have lost a family member to > suicide while under the influence of SSRIs, " not only do these drugs > not work but they're [also] dangerous " . > > > > Barth Menzies, a Los Angeles lawyer who is perhaps the > leading antidepressant litigation attorney in the world, explains > the disease is marketed and sold in order to sell the drugs. > > > > " That's why it's been so successful, " she says. " The drug's a > narcotic, it's an upper, so no wonder you feel better. " > > > > Kassirer says drug companies - the most powerful special interest > in Washington, with an army of 700 lobbyists - have public relations > firms draw up " research papers " based on selective studies, > conducted by medical researchers who dare not go against the company > line, to promote their drugs and then have " experts " put their names > to them, often just parroting what the company wants disseminated. > > > > " These councils with the official sounding names, the alliance of > something or the foundation for something, what are they doing? " he > asks. " They're doctors who are being paid to promote awareness of > some condition [that] invariably is treated by a drug made by the > drug company [that] is bankrolling the council. > > > > " The system is awash in drug company money and it's corrupt. All > this money and favours is forcing doctors to do things that I think > are pretty terrible. It creates deception, erodes professionalism > and is destroying the profession. > > > > " If anybody is up to their ears in conflicts of interest, it's > psychiatrists. " > > > > Critics say some mental illnesses are invented by panels of > psychiatrists - who in turn are paid large sums by drug companies - > to sell drugs. Kassirer cites the example of executive dysfunction, > a new-found disease supposedly marked by fatigue, apathy, bad mood > and an inability to communicate clearly. Yet even those who diagnose > executive dysfunction say that it has no standard medical definition > and is better regarded as a concept, he says. > > > > " But it doesn't stop them prescribing drugs for the so-called > condition, " Kassirer says. > > > > Barth Menzies says she has seen evidence for years that the drug > companies knew their antidepressants not only didn't work but were > causing suicidal or violent tendencies among some users, yet tried > to hide the evidence for fear of financial loss. > > > > " The internal documents we've found through discovery show what a > total sham these antidepressants are, " she says. " The science is > bought and paid for, experts are willing to sell their names and > their souls, the whole thing's been an amazing web of lies and > fraud. > > > > " I used to think, 'How many people have to die before someone does > something about it?' And then I saw the answer. In their greed to > find new markets, they started pushing SSRIs on kids. I knew that > once kids started dying, someone would finally say enough is > enough. " > > > > Authorities in Britain were the first to ban the prescribing of > SSRIs - except Prozac, although even the FDA now agrees that Prozac > works in the same way and has the same inherent dangers - to > children and adolescents. > > > > In the US - where more than 1 million youngsters are on these > drugs - the FDA was forced to issue a black box warning on the > SSRIs, while Spitzer has filed fraud charges against > GlaxoKline, the world's second largest drug maker, for > blatantly hiding or trying to spin negative findings of clinical > trials of Paxil's effects on children and teenagers. > > > > GSK settled the suit but is facing an avalanche of lawsuits from > people whose children hurt or even killed themselves - or others - > while on the drugs. Part of GSK's settlement forced it to publish > findings of all trials on its website, though critics say this needs > to be independently monitored. Meanwhile, Big Pharma is fighting > efforts in Washington to force all trials, irrespective of their > results, to be made public. > > > > " I'm not that hopeful for any real change, " Angell says. " They > have bought politicians and doctors. They've looked at everyone and > anyone who could stand in their way and they've thrown money at > them. The only hope we have is a grassroots revolution that will > make the politicians decide they love votes more than drug company > money. " > > > > It is little wonder that , whose scathing films on > the gun lobby and President W. Bush have been among the most > successful documentaries in history, is pointing his lens at Big > Pharma. And the working title of his proposed documentary? Sicko. > > > > Lusetich is The Australian's Los Angeles correspondent. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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