Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 From Wolff http://www.prwatch.org/spin/index.html Not-So-Public Relations The standard treatment for sepsis, an infection of the blood, costs $50 per day, but Eli Lilly has a new drug out called Xigris, which may not be any better than older treatments but costs $6,800 per treatment. That’s not exactly an easy sell, but Lilly has hired a PR firm to launch a campaign called " The Ethics, the Urgency and the Potential, " whose premise is that it is " unethical not to use the drug. " " To reinforce the point, " writes Carl Elliott, " Lilly has funded a $1.8 million project called the ‘Values, Ethics & Rationing in Critical Care Task Force,’ in which bioethicists and physicians from various American medical schools will examine the ethics of rationing certain drugs and services. It is a brilliant strategy. There is no better way to enlist bioethicists in the cause of consumer capitalism than to convince them they are working for social justice. ... It’s no mystery, then, why pharmaceutical companies want to brand themselves with bioethics. But do bioethicists really want to brand themselves with Pharma? To take only one example: The pharmaceutical sponsors of the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics and its faculty’s projects are now facing multimillion dollar fraud sanctions (AstraZeneca), a Nigerian lawsuit for research abuse (Pfizer), massive class-action payouts (Wyeth-Ayerst), a criminal probe into obstruction of justice (Schering Plough), an ongoing fraud lawsuit (Merck and Medco), and allegations of suppressing research data on suicide in children (GlaxoKline). " Source: Slate, December 15, 2003 -- Wulff Coalition for a Safe Lab P.O. Box 1803 Hamilton MT 59840 http://www.oiruco.com -------------------------------------------------------- Sheri Nakken, R.N., MA, Classical Homeopath Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Nevada City CA & Wales UK $$ Donations to help in the work - accepted by Paypal account vaccineinfo@... voicemail US 530-740-0561 (go to http://www.paypal.com) or by mail Vaccines - http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/vaccine.htm Homeopathy On-Line course - http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/homeo.htm ANY INFO OBTAINED HERE NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION TO VACCINATE IS YOURS AND YOURS ALONE. ****** " Just look at us. Everything is backwards; everything is upside down. Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, governments destroy freedom, the major media destroy information and religions destroy spirituality " .... Ellner Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 On the same page...but further down: http://www.prwatch.org/spin/index.html (pardon me if this is a repeat) Kimberley Saturday, December 13, 2003 Drug Companies Fund Patient Advocacy Groups " Pharmaceutical companies are pouring millions of dollars into patient advocacy groups and medical organisations to help expand markets for their products. They are also using sponsorships and educational grants to fund disease-awareness campaigns that urge people to see their doctors. Many groups have become largely or totally reliant on pharmaceutical industry money, prompting concerns they are open to pressure from companies pushing their products. An investigation by The Age newspaper has found: An awareness campaign run by the National Asthma Council was spearheaded by a cartoon dragon that was the registered trademark of a drug company used to promote one individual asthma medication. A drug company used a public relations firm to set up an expert medical board to persuade people they needed hepatitis A and B vaccinations. The company was not interested in raising awareness about hepatitis C because it did not sell a vaccine for the disease. " Source: Sydney Morning Herald, December 13, 2003 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Kimberley Medlin Full text: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/12/12/1071125652945.html Drug firms fund disease awarenessBy and Liz Minchin December 13, 2003 Pharmaceutical companies are pouring millions of dollars into patient advocacy groups and medical organisations to help expand markets for their products. They are also using sponsorships and educational grants to fund disease-awareness campaigns that urge people to see their doctors. Many groups have become largely or totally reliant on pharmaceutical industry money, prompting concerns they are open to pressure from companies pushing their products. An investigation by The Age newspaper has found: An awareness campaign run by the National Asthma Council was spearheaded by a cartoon dragon that was the registered trademark of a drug company used to promote one individual asthma medication. A drug company used a public relations firm to set up an expert medical board to persuade people they needed hepatitis A and B vaccinations. The company was not interested in raising awareness about hepatitis C because it did not sell a vaccine for the disease. Treatment guidelines issued by Australian doctors for some diseases are being modelled by those developed by international groups entirely funded by pharmaceutical companies selling drugs for those same diseases. Groups funded by pharmaceutical companies are helping lobby the federal Government to have new drugs added to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. The health policy officer with the Australian Consumers' Association, Martyn Goddard, who is a former member of the federal Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee, said pharmaceutical companies had far too much influence over many consumer groups. " Drug companies find it very easy to recruit consumer groups and they do it very cheaply, " he said. " There's almost no such thing as clean money for most consumer organisations. " The total amount of money flowing into patient groups and medical bodies in Australia is unclear. The most recent figure available from the industry body Medicines Australia shows that drug companies spent between $20 million and $25 million on philanthropic causes in 1999, which mostly covered payments to such groups. One medical specialist involved in an organisation totally sponsored by drug companies described the situation as like " dancing with the devil " . There are no independent regulations covering drug company sponsorship deals and grants with patient groups in Australia. Voluntary guidelines developed by Medicines Australia are now being independently reviewed by Swinburne University. The review is being funded by Medicines Australia and individual drug companies. A South Australian general practitioner, Dr Mansfield, who runs the internationally renowned Healthy Skepticism website, which exposes pharmaceutical marketing techniques, said the hijacking of patient groups had become a huge problem. " To be an advocate for people with those conditions, those organisations ought to be free to criticise the drug companies - just as they ought to be free to criticise doctors if we are not doing our jobs properly, " he said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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