Drug Giants Forced to Reveal Secrets
Thanks
to Amazing Power of the Internet
Dear
friends,
The
below article from the Observer, one of England's top newspapers,
clearly demonstrates the amazing power all of us have through the use of the
Internet. As the article's subtitle says, "The web has helped consumers
turn tables on the drug giants." In case you don't have time to read the
entire article, here is a key excerpt on past practices of the drug
companies:
"Bit by bit, health activists in Britain
and America have uncovered the core of pharma might: a sinister mesh of
hidden influences in the regulation and practice of medicine. In both
countries, clinical drug tests are paid for by the pharmas, who tweak the
trials' design for the best possible results. Until recently, only the most
favourable findings got published in the 20,000-odd biomedical journals, many
of them dependent on pharmas for funding. The drugs are approved for
marketing by regulators, whose salaries are mostly financed by [the pharmaceutical
companies]. The medicines are then prescribed by doctors routinely courted
with pharma gifts - from free pens to family skiing holidays - meant to
persuade them to change their prescribing habits."
This
article shows how the Internet has forced the drug companies to begin to
report the all the facts on their studies and funding. It is
through the Internet, and more specifically through email that we
are spreading news rapidly to all of our friends and colleagues and forcing those
in power to take responsibility. Together, we are helping
to pressure the world's decision makers to think less about money
and special interests, and more about the good of all who share this
planet. Each of us is much more powerful than we might think, especially when
we forward this kind of information to our friends, and they forward it on to
their friends, etc... Thanks for caring, and thanks for helping to build a
better future by spreading the news far and wide!
With
very best wishes,
Fred
PS
For an incredibly revealing summary of information along these lines, www.WantToKnow.info/deception10pg
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,,1312765,00.html
Big Pharma snared by net
The web has helped consumers turn tables on the drug
giants, says Cheryll Barron
Sunday September 26, 2004
The Observer
What if ants could
turn the microscopes on the scientists studying them and, after beady-eyed
surveillance, demand a revolution in their scrutinisers' accustomed ways?
This is more than a variation on Lilliputians for a new Jonathan Swift to
consider; it's a metaphor for a real-life reversal of multinational power
that has no precedent.
Management
tomes of the late 1990s - like Bill Gates's droning Business, the Speed of
Thought - explained how the internet might be used to study customer
behaviour minutely, through, for instance, 'data mining'. Companies, they
said, could use the intimate understanding so acquired to address customers'
needs and preferences, on the companies' terms.
What
no one foresaw was the shocking extent to which the internet would change the
terms of trade between corporations and society. Certainly not that one of
the world's largest drug companies, which is among the richest and most
influential industries of all time, would be the first victim of the shift.
The
crisis that began the containment of pharma power is a runaway rate of drug
injury. In England alone, reactions to drugs that led to hospitalisation
followed by death are estimated at 5,700 a year and could actually be closer
to 10,000, according to a study in The British Medical Journal in July. The
researchers reckon that adverse drug reactions are costing the NHS £466m [US$
850 million] a year.
Drug
injury has been worrying experts for decades. But after the thalidomide
tragedies of the 1950s, the subject failed to catch fire for politicians and
the public until the recent antidepressant controversy. Last month, that
debate made headlines when Britain's GlaxoSmithKline, the world's
second-largest pharma, denied any wrongdoing, but agreed to pay $2.5m to
settle a lawsuit filed by the State of New York accusing it of fraud for
concealing evidence of its antidepressant Seroxat's potential for harming
children, while doing them no measurable good. In a sequel last week, a group
of about two dozen American parents sued GSK seeking refunds for treatment of
their children with the drug.
The
GSK suit created the tipping point in the pharmas' change of fortune and has
revealed the force behind it. The formal complaint drew heavily on research
by public health campaigners and consumer advocates about the hazards of
antidepressant use. These activists had toiled in deepest obscurity - some of
them, for a decade - until their discoveries were featured on a Panorama
programme, 'Secrets of Seroxat', in autumn 2002. A follow-up broadcast the
next spring, 'Emails from the edge', analysed 1,370 messages from viewers
about the first programme, mostly from people reporting antidepressant
withdrawal reactions including shock-like sensations in their heads, and
thoughts about self-mutilation, violence and suicide.
The
outcry that followed forced GSK to make a stunning admission. In June 2003,
it corrected its prescribing instructions for Seroxat, revising its
estimate of the risk of withdrawal symptoms from one in 500 to one in four.
Infinitely
more frightening than that reluctant confirmation of a drug's potential for
harm was that in the years GSK spent denying it, this pharma had the backing
of institutions that we, the public, rely on to protect us from poisoning by
prescription. The Royal College of Psychiatrists had insisted only a year
earlier that 'there is no evidence that antidepressant drugs can cause
dependence syndromes'; a patient information leaflet approved by a regulatory
body also said as much.
The
events that led to Seroxat's exposure would seem to suggest that it was
television power that forced GSK to recant. But it was really the internet
that allowed public health activists to do an end run around GSK's and the
medical authorities' denials of the drug's risks. An explosion of websites
dedicated to vivid accounts of antidepressant reactions told these
campaigners about hundreds of thousands affected by a problem that officially
did not exist.
The
internet was 'groaning with evidence'; over time, the 'cover-up became more
obvious as the weight of scientific evidence got stronger and public protest
grew'. Those are quotations from a magisterial history and analysis of the
antidepressant crisis by two leading campaigners, Charles Medawar and Anita
Hardon, in Medicines Out of Control?, a new book recommended by the
Lancet as essential reading for members of the parliamentary committee
examining pharma influence on health policy, whose hearings began last week.
Health
campaigners trying to decide what the pharmas could reasonably be blamed for
shared vast stores of data by - among other means - encyclopaedic technical
postings on their websites. Some of these sites also feature open access to
years of correspondence between the activists and regulatory officials and
pharma executives. Postings like these have allowed rapid international
co-ordination between the campaigners.
Pharmas
bent on redeeming their reputations have suddenly begun to use the internet
to publish what they once fought for the right to conceal. GSK's first
notable response to the filing of the recent lawsuit was to start posting
both negative and positive findings from drug tests on its web site. But it
is far from the only pharma with a history of secretiveness about trials, and
at least three of its rivals have copied its turnabout, with Eli Lilly and
Merck making the most radical moves towards transparency.
Bitter pills
Bit
by bit, health activists in Britain and America have uncovered the core of
pharma might: a sinister mesh of hidden influences in the regulation and
practice of medicine that is painstakingly dissected in Medicines Out of
Control? In both countries, clinical drug tests are paid for by the
pharmas, who tweak the trials' design for the best possible results. Until
recently, only the most favourable findings got published in the 20,000-odd
biomedical journals, many of them dependent on pharmas for funding. The drugs
are approved for marketing by regulators, whose salaries are mostly financed
by the subjects of their evaluations - since pharmas pay to have their products
vetted. The medicines are then prescribed by doctors routinely courted with
pharma gifts - from free pens to family skiing holidays - meant to persuade
them to change their prescribing habits.
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