There is no Free Lunch

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There is no Free Lunch

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Title: There is no Free Lunch


1
There is no Free Lunch
  • Hrach Ike Kasaryan MSIV

2
Introduction
  • Pills, who would have ever figured things so
    small could have a tremendous influence on
    medicine and could hold so much power

3
Introduction
  • The Pharmaceutical industry has a tremendous
    influence over a variety aspects of Modern
    Medicine
  • Sometimes the influence is very obvious and other
    times the influence is purposely hidden not to
    let any one know

4
There Long Reach
  • Economy
  • Government
  • The Doctors
  • The Journals
  • The Public

5
Economy
  • With their financial growth pharm companies have
    had a tremendous influence on the economy
  • Stock markets have risen and dropped at news of
    what each company does
  • Pharm Cos contributed heavily to the stock
    market boom and volatility of the nineties.

6
Economy
  • Pharmaceuticals again ranked as the most
    profitable sector in the United States, topping
    the annual Fortune 500 ranking of America's top
    industries
  • The pharmaceutical industry topped all three of
    Fortune magazine's measures of profitability for
    2001, making this decade the third in which the
    industry has been at or near the top in all the
    magazine's measures of profitability.

BMJ 20023241054
7
Economy
  • Overall profits of Fortune 500 companies
    declined by 53 in 2001, while the top 10 US drug
    makers increased profits by 32 from 28bn to
    37bn, according to Public Citizen's analysis of
    the Fortune 500 data.
  • the 10 drug companies in the list had the
    greatest return on revenues, reporting a profit
    of 18.5 cents for every dollar of sales, eight
    times higher than the median for all Fortune
    500 industries, which was 2.2 cents

BMJ 20023241054
8
Economy
  • Their response
  • The drugs industry says it needs extraordinary
    profits to fund risky research and development of
    new drugs and to absorb the high cost of drug
    failures in clinical trials.

9
Economy
  • From the same previous article
  • The time spent to develop a drug, not counting
    the months consumed by government review, has
    lengthened from about nine years in the 1980s to
    more than 11 years, according to the Tufts Center
    for the Study of Drug Development, and the cost
    has more than doubled, after adjustment for
    inflation, to 800m.
  • Public Citizen notes that the Tufts Center gets
    money from drug companies and maintains that the
    centre's figures are inflated to justify high
    drug costs.

10
Economy.
  • So what this infact means is the profits are
    greater than they are
  • They fund those who are going to scrutinize the
    drug approval process
  • This way they can force them to make the numbers
    inflated to justify the outrageous prices
  • And incase there is someone their who wants to
    print other wise, they will just pull funding and
    have them fired
  • Pretty convenient for them.

11
Economy
  • In an article from the Associated Press in 2003,
    titled Roche Cuts Prices of AIDS Drug to
    Nations they were bragging about how they
    reduced there price of AIDS drugs to poor
    countries
  • Mean while the journalist reveals that
  • In some countries, such as Guatemala and
    Ukraine, the cost of Viracept was higher than in
    rich Switzerland.
  • Almost 2000 more per year in a poor country

Associated Press, 13 February 2003
12
Economy
  • Because market prospects, not health needs,
    drive production lines, drugs are developed for
    Western diseases while diseases of the developing
    world are ignored.
  • Lack of profits dictated that eflornithine, a
    lifesaving drug needed by hundreds of thousands
    of people with sleeping sickness in Africa, was
    withdrawn from production in the 1990s this left
    doctors with a 50 year old, arsenic based
    drug-which is becoming increasingly ineffective
    and whose side effects kill 1 in 20 patients.

New York Times 2001 February 9.
13
Economy
  • The nations four largest pharmacy benefit
    managers (PBMs) have used a pattern of illegal
    and secret dealings with major drug makers that
    have forced health plans and health care
    consumers to pay inflated prescription drug
    prices, according to a suit filed in March by
    AFSCME and the health care advocacy group
    Prescription Access Litigation Project.
  • PBMs manage prescription drug benefit programs
    for employers, unions, health plans and other
    payers. They process hundreds of millions of
    pharmaceutical claims per year and manage drug
    benefit programs for more than 200 million
    Americans as a broker between these payers and
    the drug companies to help control the cost of
    drug coverage.

American Federation of Labor Website
14
Economy
  • The suit, filed under Californias Unfair
    Competition Law, says the four PBMs have
    negotiated rebates from drug manufacturers and
    discounts from retail pharmaciesbut havent
    passed those savings on to health plans and
    consumers. Instead, they have used those savings
    to secure exploitative profits. In addition, the
    complaint says the PBMs developed a pricing
    system based on the Average Wholesale Price,
    widely considered an inflated sticker price set
    by the drug manufacturer.
  • Justified profits indeed

15
There Long Reach
  • Economy
  • Government
  • The Doctors
  • The Journals
  • The Public

16
Government
  • Besides making outrageous amounts of money at the
    expense of the public, they have the influence to
    protect their money making processes
  • Tremendous amount of effort is spent by the Pharm
    Cos to keep politicians and governments in their
    back pocket

17
Government
  • A USA TODAY study revealed just how far their
    reach in the govt. goes
  • More than half of the experts hired to advise
    the government on the safety and effectiveness of
    medicine have financial relationships with the
    pharmaceutical companies that will be helped or
    hurt by their decisions

USA Today September 25, 2000
18
Government
  • These experts are hired to advise the Food and
    Drug Administration on which medicines should be
    approved for sale, what the warning labels should
    say and how studies of drugs should be designed.
  • The experts are supposed to be independent, but
    USA TODAY found that 54 of the time, they have a
    direct financial interest in the drug or topic
    they are asked to evaluate.
  • So even the FDA is in on the deal?

19
Government
  • Federal law generally prohibits the FDA from
    using experts with financial conflicts of
    interest, but the FDA has waived the restriction
    more than 800 times since 1998.
  • These experts, about 300 on 18 advisory
    committees, make decisions that affect the health
    of millions of Americans and billions of dollars
    in drugs sales.
  • Everything these committee members say are taken
    as end all be all and are followed by the FDA
    to a T.

20
Government
  • The article also showed that the FDA reveals when
    financial conflicts exist, but it has kept
    details secret since 1992, so it is not possible
    to determine the amount of money or the drug
    company involved.
  • So what we know is only the tip of the iceburg

21
Government
  • Some more facts USA TODAY uncovered
  • At 92 of the meetings, at least one member had a
    financial conflict of interest.
  • At 55 of meetings, half or more of the FDA
    advisers had conflicts of interest..
  • At the 102 meetings dealing with the fate of a
    specific drug, 33 of the experts had a financial
    conflict.
  • The blind trust of the public in the FDA being
    blatently abused.

22
Government
  • From the same issue of USA Today another article
    describes the Pending approval process of the FDA
    to make Levaquin, Johnsons and Johnsons drug,
    the first line drug against Penicillin resistant
    Strep. Pneum.
  • the FDA's Anti-Infective Drug Advisory Committee
    included some familiar faces to Johnson and
    Johnson
  • At least two of the experts were paid
    consultants to the drug company and had worked on
    the very same medicine that they were being asked
    to evaluate for approval in an important new
    market

USA Today September 25, 2000
23
Government
  • The committes consumer representative, Keith
    Rodvold, whose job it was to protect the
    consumers interest had the most extensive
    financial relationship with Johnson Johnson
  • Rodvold advised the company on how to design and
    analyze the clinical trials that got the drug
    approved

24
Government
  • When Rodvold and JJ were confronted by USA Today
    about these conflicts both parties declined to
    discuss any part of these topics.

25
Government
  • Top 10 Recipients of Drug Company Contributions
    1999  2003In New Jersey Only
  • NJ REPUBLICAN STATE COMMITTEE 348,300
  • REPUBLICAN NATIONAL STATE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE
    315,000NJ
  • DEMOCRATIC STATE COMMITTEE 262,600
  • ASSEMBLY REPUBLICAN MAJORITY 155,850
  • SENATE REPUBLICAN MAJORITY (2001-2003)112,250
  • SENATE PRESIDENTS COMMITTEE (1999-2000) 77,050
  • SENATE DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY 2001 68,500
  • DORIA DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP FUND 51,350
  • NEW DEMOCRATIC ASSEMBLY LEADERSHIP PAC 50,425
  • ASSEMBLYMAN PAUL DIGAETANO (R-36)28,800
  • SENATOR JOHN O. BENNETT (R-12)20,100

26
Government
  • ..drug and nutritional supplement manufacturers
    ranked ninth among more than 80 industry groups
    in direct contributions to congressional
    candidates and political parties, according to
    Federal Election Commission records compiled by
    the Center for Responsive Politics.
  • On top of that, drug manufacturers consistently
    rank among the top two industry groups in money
    spent to lobby Congress.
  • 400 registered lobbyists -- nearly one for each
    of the 535 members of Congress

November 8, 2002 Los Angeles Times
27
Government
  • In the months before Tuesday's elections, they
    used photographs of sick children and frail
    seniors to suggest that generic drugs would make
    them worse.

28
There Long Reach
  • Economy
  • Government
  • The Doctors
  • The Journals
  • The Public

29
Doctors
  • Doctors have been a major target of Pharm Cos.
  • Especially by the infamous PHARM REP!!

Hey Big boy Perscribe any Zocor lately??
30
Doctors
  • Some Physicians take everything the rep says as
    truth
  • A study in Journal of General Internal Medicine
    in 1996
  • Their objectives were to describe material
    distributed to physicians by pharmaceutical
    companies to describe characteristics of the
    drugs discussed in the material to determine
    whether the material complies with Food and Drug
    Administration (FDA) regulations and whether it
    contains promotional and educational
    characteristics.
  • .

31
Doctors
  • They found
  • Forty-two percent of the items failed to comply
    with at least one of three FDA regulations
    assessed, including 17 items that discussed
    unapproved uses for drugs
  • Only Thirty-nine percent of the items offered
    scientific support for their claims.

32
Doctors
  • JAMA article The accuracy of drug information
    from pharmaceutical sales representatives
  • Their objectives were to provide quantitative
    data about the accuracy of the information about
    drugs presented to physicians by pharmaceutical
    sales representatives
  • Eleven percent of the statements made by
    pharmaceutical representatives about drugs
    contradicted information readily available to
    them.
  • Physicians generally failed to recognize the
    inaccurate statements.

JAMA 273 (16) 1296
33
Doctors
  • Chest article The effects of pharmaceutical firm
    enticements on physician prescribing patterns.
    There's no such thing as a free lunch
  • They looked at the impact on physician
    prescribing patterns of pharmaceutical firms
    offering all-expenses-paid trips to popular
    sunbelt vacation sites to attend symposia
    sponsored by a pharmaceutical company

CHEST 1992 120 1270-1273
34
Doctors
  • They tracked prescribing before and after the
    symposia
  • significant increase in the prescribing pattern
    of both drugs occurred following the symposia.
  • These changed prescribing patterns were also
    significantly different from the national usage
    patterns of the two drugs by hospitals with more
    than 500 beds and major medical centers over the
    same period of time

35
Doctors
  • Influences on GPs' decision to prescribe new
    drugs-the importance of who says what.
  • In the study, researchers asked 107 GPs in
    northwest England to explain how they made the
    decision to prescribe certain new drugs.
  • The doctors were asked to describe the context in
    which they prescribed the new drugs, the reasons
    why the chose one drug instead of another, and
    how they obtained the information that influenced
    their decision

Fam Pract. 2003 Feb20(1)61-8.
36
Doctors
  • They found most often GPs were initially
    introduced to new drugs through sales
    representatives
  • Drug companies were also the greatest influence
    on the GPs decisions of which drugs to
    prescribe, followed by consultants and patient
    requests for specific treatments

37
Doctors
  • While the doctors were generally wary of the drug
    industrys objectives, they tended to believe
    that its information would be selective but
    accurate.
  • The GPs reported that they could generally spot
    misleading information, however, according to
    study findings only 17 percent of GPs sought out
    evidence from peer-reviewed journals before
    making prescribing decisions

38
Doctors
  • Here is an exerpt from PharmRep.com a web site to
    help pharm reps sell
  • How should a rep present a reprint using
    evidence-based medical findings? We know that all
    studies are imperfect. In fact, most are far from
    perfect because science is imperfect. Part of
    presenting our reprints is helping the physician
    determine whether the information in the study
    can be applied to his or her practice. In other
    words, translate statistical significance into
    clinical significance. Use the appropriate terms
    to talk with physicians about clinical
    significance. Our job is to use the information
    learned in the studies and to influence physician
    prescribing behavior

39
Doctors
  • Right there in black and white is their mission
    statemet to influence physician prescribing
    behavior
  • They are trained how to spot the lamb, the
    doctor with little time to read up or who doesnt
    want to read up and feed them what they want to
    hear
  • They are trained to spot the male or female who
    would change pattern of perscribing simply to get
    the social interaction with the pharm rep (wink
    wink)

40
Doctors
  • Here is another exerpt from pharmrep.com
  • Transitions help you sell because they give you a
    chance to "slip in" a benefit. Suppose you start
    off by talking about the efficacy of Drug A. At
    the end of the first section, you can say "It not
    only has greater efficacy, but because patients
    only have to take it once a day, this translates
    into greater compliance."
  • Where are all the resources for doctors to
    realize that they are just trying to sell?

41
Doctors
  • I have personally witnessed a Dr perscribe a drug
    simply for the reason that the rep bought them
    lunch that day
  • They did not consider price
  • They did not consider indication
  • They did not even consider if this was actually
    the drug they needed
  • So the Reps are doing there job right, are the
    doctors doing theirs?

42
Doctors
  • The CAGE Questionnaire for Drug Company
    Dependence
  • Have you ever prescribed CelebrexTM?
  • Do you get Annoyed by people who complain about
    drug lunches and free gifts?
  • Is there a medication loGo on the pen you're
    using right now?
  • Do you drink your morning Eye-opener out of a
    LipitorTM coffee mug?
  • If you answered yes to 2 or more of the above,
    you may be drug company dependent.

43
Doctors
  • Are gifts from pharmaceutical companies ethically
    problematic? A survey of physicians
  • Survey of 42 residents and 52 faculty at a
    university-based IM training program.
  • 21 item questionnaire. 4 point Likert scale.
  • 90 response rate (105/117 residents).
  • 93 of residents, 73 faculty responded.

Arch Intern Med. 20031632213-2218
44
(No Transcript)
45
Doctors
  • They concluded that physicians at a single
    institution tended to hold fairly lenient views
    on the ethical propriety of a wide range of gifts
    and activities sponsored by the pharmaceutical
    industry

46
Doctors
  • Most residents who considered a promotion to be
    appropriate had accepted that gift or would have
    done so had it been available
  • residents who considered a promotion
    inappropriate reported having accepted it
    nonetheless.
  • Every resident who considered conference lunches
    and pens inappropriate had taken these items at
    least once.
  • Similarly, half of those who felt
    industry-sponsored recreational events were
    inappropriate had either participated in such
    events or intended to do so.

Am J Med 2001110551
47
Doctors
  • Most obtusely they found the following
  • Most residents believed that interactions with
    pharmaceutical representatives have no impact on
    their own prescribing practices, whereas only 16
    believed that the prescribing behavior of other
    physicians is similarly unaffected
  • But they will be those physician when they are
    done with their training.

48
There Long Reach
  • Economy
  • Government
  • The Doctors
  • The Journals
  • The Public

49
Journals
  • I have fallen victim to imfallabilizing journal
    articles
  • Where do we go when we have questions on medical
    decisions?
  • We do a article search, and we believe it will be
    objective and influece free
  • However, the Pharm Cos influence spreads there
    as well

50
Journals
  • From the British Paper The Observer
  • Revealed how drug firms 'hoodwink' medical
    journals, Pharmaceutical giants hire ghostwriters
    to produce articles - then put doctors' names on
    them
  • Estimates suggest that almost half of all
    articles published in journals are by
    ghostwriters.
  • While doctors who have put their names to the
    papers can be paid handsomely for 'lending' their
    reputations, the ghostwriters remain hidden.

Sunday December 7, 2003 The Observer
51
Journals
  • In February the New England Journal of Medicine
    was forced to retract an article published last
    year by doctors from Imperial College in London
    and the National Heart Institute on treating a
    type of heart problem
  • It emerged that several of the listed authors had
    little or nothing to do with the research.
  • The deception was revealed only when German
    cardiologist Dr Hubert Seggewiss, one of the
    eight listed authors, called the editor of the
    journal to say he had never seen any version of
    the paper.

52
Journals
  • An article published in the Journal of Alimentary
    Pharmacology involved a medical writer working
    for drug giant AstraZeneca - a fact that was not
    revealed by the author.
  • The article acknowledged the 'contribution' of Dr
    Madeline Frame, but did not admit that she was a
    senior medical writer for AstraZeneca.
  • The article essentially supported the use of a
    drug called Omeprazole - which is manufactured by
    AstraZeneca - despite suggestions that it gave
    rise to more adverse reactions than similar
    drugs.

53
Journals
  • A letter written to BMJ by whistle blower Susanna
    Rees an editorial assistant with a medical
    writing agency until 2002
  • Medical writing agencies go to great lengths to
    disguise the fact that the papers they ghostwrite
    and submit to journals
  • 'There is a relatively high success rate for
    ghostwritten submissions
  • She goes on to say that part of her job had been
    to ensure that any article that was submitted
    electronically would give no clues as to the
    origin of the research.

British Medical Journal Website Published Letters
54
Journals
  • 'One standard procedure I have used states that
    before a paper is submitted to a journal
    electronically or on disc, the editorial
    assistant must open the file properties of the
    Word document manuscript and remove the names of
    the medical writing agency or agency ghostwriter
    or pharmaceutical company and replace these with
    the name and institution of the person who has
    been invited by the pharmaceutical drug company
    to be named as lead author, but who may have had
    no actual input into the paper

55
Journals
  • A recognised doctor will then be found to put
    his or her name to it and it will be submitted to
    a journal without anybody knowing that a
    ghostwriter or a drug company is behind it.

56
Journals
  • The observer journalist also unconvered that Dr
    David Healy, of the University of Wales, was
    doing research on the possible dangers of
    anti-depressants, when a drug manufacturer's
    representative emailed him with an offer of help.
  • The email, seen by The Observer, said 'In order
    to reduce your workload to a minimum, we have had
    our ghostwriter produce a first draft based on
    your published work. I attach it here.
  • The article was a 12-page review paper ready to
    be presented at an forthcoming conference.
  • Healy's name appeared as the sole author, even
    though he had never seen a single word of it
    before

57
Journals
  • But he was unhappy with the glowing review of
    the drug in question, so he suggested some
    changes.
  • The company replied, saying he had missed some
    'commercially important' points.
  • the ghostwritten paper appeared at the conference
    and in a psychiatric journal in its original form
    - under another doctor's name

58
Journals
  • Healy went on to say to the observers reporter
  • the evidence I have seen would suggest there are
    grounds to think a significant proportion of the
    articles in journals such as the New England
    Journal of Medicine, the British Medical Journal
    and the Lancet may be written with help from
    medical writing agencies,
  • They are no more than infomercials paid for by
    drug firms.

59
Journals
  • In the United States a legal case brought against
    drug firm Pfizer turned up internal company
    documents showing that it employed a New York
    medical writing agency.
  • One document analyses articles about the
    anti-depressant Zoloft.
  • The articles with no doctors name on it had in
    the margin the initials TBD, which Healy assumes
    means 'to be determined'.

60
Journals
  • Even Dr Richard Smith, editor of the British
    Journal of Medicine, admitted ghostwriting was a
    'very big problem
  • Smith went on to say The articles come in with
    doctors' names on them and we often find some of
    them have little or no idea about what they have
    written
  • 'When we find out, we reject the paper, but it
    is very difficult

61
Journals
  • In another letter published by the editor of BMJ,
    Dr. Smith entitled Medical journals and
    pharmaceutical companies uneasy bedfellows
  • In doing their best for patients, doctors will
    need to use the products the pharmaceutical
    industry makes, and it's reasonable that the
    industry should be able to promote its products.
  • But surely doctors should be looking also to
    independent sources of information

BMJ  20033261202-1205 
62
Journals
  • how did we reach a point where so many doctors
    won't attend an educational meeting unless it's
    accompanied by free food and a bag of "goodies"?
  • Something's wrong, and medical journals are part
    of what's wrong.

63
Journals
  • When the editor of a respectable journal admits
    that journals are now a problem how do we
    continue the persuit of EBM?
  • Very effectively the Cos have deceived
    physicians believing they are doing what is best
    for their patient.

64
Journals
  • Ok, so what about the dr who really care?
  • In a case last year, researchers at the
    University of California at San Francisco defied
    a corporate sponsor by publishing a study
    concluding that Remune, a vaccine-like product
    developed as an HIV therapy, did not benefit
    patients who were already receiving standard
    treatments.
  • The company, Immune Response Corp. of Carlsbad,
    Calif., is seeking 7 million to 10 million in
    compensatory damages from the university for
    harming its business.

Washington Post August 5, 2001
65
Journals
  • University of Toronto physician Nancy Olivieri
    lost her research contract with Apotex Inc., a
    Canadian drug company, after she spoke out and
    published an article in 1998 about a serious side
    effect of deferiprone, a drug for a blood
    disorder.
  • In the early 1990s, UCSF pharmacologist Betty J.
    Dong found that cheaper generic versions of
    thyroid hormone worked as well as Synthroid, the
    brand-name drug whose maker had funded the
    research.

66
Journals
  • The company, Knoll Pharmaceuticals, successfully
    blocked publication of Dong's findings for seven
    years.
  • In 1999, Knoll agreed to pay 37 states almost 42
    million to settle a suit alleging that it had
    made false claims that Synthroid was superior to
    competing brands and had interfered with the
    publication of the study.

67
Journals
  • So even when a physician tries to do the right
    thing, the pharm cos do absolutely everything
    with in their power to either stop, alter or
    eliminate the facts that would alter profits
  • So now, how do we know what we are reading is not
    a ghost written?

68
Journals
  • The New England Journal of Medicine, the Lancet,
    the Annals of Internal Medicine and the Journal
    of the American Medical Association (JAMA) are
    among the journals that have agreed to publish a
    joint editorial in mid-September outlining the
    new policy, which was drafted by a committee of
    editors over the last several months.
  • The unprecedented move could have a significant
    impact on how medical research is conducted and
    reported by giving researchers more leverage in
    their dealings with the pharmaceutical industry.

69
Journals
  • Editors said the new policy is a response to
    companies' increasingly tight hold over how
    research is done
  • in many cases, over whether and how the results
    are made public

70
There Long Reach
  • Economy
  • Government
  • The Doctors
  • The Journals
  • The Public

71
The Public
  • The number one person they need is the public.
  • They buy their drugs
  • Their wallet fills their pockets

72
The Public
  • Pharm Cos filter everything the public sees
  • A professor asked Bayer for a supply of Cipro to
    conduct a study and this is what they sent him to
    sign
  • We declare that we will inform Bayer AG in
    writing of our test results and will not publish
    or commercialize them without written permission
    of Bayer AG

Lancet April 14, 2001 3579263
73
The Public
  • The Lancet recently came under pressure to remove
    a sentence from the discussion of a research
    paper, which raised questions over the safety of
    a drug.
  • The lead author had shown the report to the
    company after final journal pages were passed for
    publication.
  • The best way for the journal to support her was
    to promise to publish an editorial naming the
    company and describing its attempts to manipulate
    the study's conclusions, if the offending
    sentence was removed.
  • In the end thanks to the editors promise to
    publish the editorial, the report remained
    unchanged

74
The Public
  • Most of the organizations that are supposed to be
    independent resources for the public are in the
    cos pay roll
  • The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI)
    bills itself as "a grassroots organization of
    individuals with brain disorders and their family
    members.
  • NAMI is widely viewed as an independent advocate
    for the mentally ill, and an influential voice in
    mental health debates

Nov/Dec Issue of Mother Jones News Magazine
75
The Public
  • According to internal documents obtained by
    Mother Jones, 18 drug firms gave NAMI a total of
    11.72 million between 1996 and mid-1999.
  • Janssen (2.08 million)
  • Novartis (1.87 million)
  • Pfizer (1.3 million)
  • Abbott Laboratories (1.24 million)
  • Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceuticals (658,000)
  • Bristol-Myers Squibb (613,505)
  • The top contributor made Prozac, which is a huge
    mentally ill used drug

76
The Public
  • "They appear to be a completely independent
    organization, but they parrot the line of the
    drug companies in saying that drugs are the
    essential thing."
  • NAMI's approach "reduces human distress to a
    brain disease, and recovery to taking a pill,"
    says Sally Zinman of the California Network of
    Mental Health Clients.
  • "Their focus on drugs obscures issues such as
    housing and income support, vocational training,
    rehabilitation, and empowerment, all of which
    play a role in recovery."

77
The Public
  • 2001 DATA SHOW BIG DRUG COMPANIES SPENT ALMOST
    TWO-AND-ONE-HALF TIMES AS MUCH ON MARKETING,
    ADVERTISING, AND ADMINISTRATION AS THEY SPENT ON
    RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
  • spent a total of 45.4 billion on marketing,
    advertising, and administration and only 19.1
    billion on RD last year
  • Since 1995, RD staff of U.S. brand name drug
    companies have decreased by 2, while marketing
    staff have increased by 59.
  • Currently, 22 of staff are employed in research
    and development, while 39 are in marketing

Families USA (non profit health care organization)
78
The Public
  • They invest more of their money in marketing the
    public than developing drugs
  • Try to turn on a radio or TV with out seeing a
    Drug add

79
The Public
  • Last July, Schering-Plough became the first
    pharmaceutical company to use a celebrity in a
    direct-to-consumer national television campaign.
  • It tapped Lunden, former Good Morning America
    anchor, to promote its prescription allergy pill,
    Claritin.
  • The aggressive advertising campaign for Claritin
    helped worldwide sales soar by 35 percent last
    year to 2.3 billion, including 1.9 billion in
    U.S. sales

Houston Chronicle Mar 7, 1999
80
The Public
  • Drug companies use different types of celebrity
    pitches to sell their products. In some
    instances, they use those who can give a
    firsthand testimonial to the effectiveness of the
    drug, as Lunden did with her hay fever treatment
  • But they get even more creative to reach the
    public
  • Schering-Plough advertises Claritin on United
    Airlines baggage tags
  • Merck offers patients a money-back guarantee on
    its cholesterol-lowering drug, Zocor

81
The Public
  • They even create disease states
  • Pfizer, maker of Viagra - the only pill available
    in the United States for treatment of impotence -
    launched an educational campaign on the disorder
    last month featuring former Senate Majority
    Leader Dole.
  • Now Erectile Dysfunction is a household term
    and every one has it
  • AND THEY WANT THEIR PILLS!!!

82
The Public
  • In 2000, Merck spent 161 million on advertising
    for Vioxx.
  • That is more than Pepsico spent advertising
    Pepsi. (125 million), and more than
    Anheuser-Busch spent advertising Budweiser.(146
    million).

National Institute for Health Care
ManagementResearch and Educational Foundation
83
The Public
  • April 16, 2001, the U.S. Food and Drug
    Administration (FDA) had approved the
    antidepressant Paxil, made by British
    pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline, for the
    treatment of generalized anxiety disorder
  • But GAD was a little-known ailment according to
    a 1989 study, as few as 1.2 percent of the
    population merited the diagnosis in any given
    year
  • If GlaxoSmithKline hoped to capitalize on Paxil's
    new indication, it would have to raise GAD's
    profile.

Mother Jones Magazine july/august issue
84
The Public
  • On April 16--the date of Paxil's approval--a
    patient group called Freedom From Fear released a
    telephone survey according to which "people with
    GAD spend nearly 40 hours per week, or a
    full-time job,' worrying."
  • Local newscasts around the country reported that
    as many as 10 million Americans suffered from an
    unrecognized disease.
  • Viewers were urged to watch for the symptoms
    restlessness, fatigue, irritability, muscle
    tension, nausea, diarrhea, and sweating, among
    others

85
The Public
  • Many of the segments featured sound bites from
    Sonja Burkett, a patient who'd finally received
    treatment after two years trapped at home by the
    illness, and from Dr. Jack Gorman, an esteemed
    psychiatrist at Columbia University.
  • Their testimonials were intercut with peaceful
    images of a woman playing with a bird, and
    another woman taking pills.

86
The Public
  • Now their tactic is getting FDA indication for
    diseases
  • Originally approved solely as antidepressants,
    the SSRIs are now prescribed for a wide array of
    heretofore obscure afflictions--GAD, social
    anxiety disorder, premenstrual dysphoric disorder
  • The proliferation of diagnoses has contributed to
    a dramatic rise in antidepressant sales, which
    increased eightfold between 1990 and 2000

87
The Public
  • For pharmaceutical companies, marketing existing
    drugs for new uses makes perfect sense
  • A new indication can be obtained in less than 18
    months, compared to the eight years it takes to
    bring a drug from the lab to the pharmacy
  • Once they get the indication, nauseate the public
    with adds in repetition of the signs and symptoms
    so when they go to the Docs office, they are not
    asking, but demanding for the pill they saw on
    TV

88
The Public
  • Try telling the patient that comes into your
    office seeking a pill they need that they dont
    need it
  • In most cases the Dr doesnt have time to explain
    why
  • And they will just go to someone else who will
    just fill the script
  • Very effective marketing strategy

89
Conclusion
  • So I hope from now on we will all think twice
    before we swallow the pill of information we
    get
  • I hope we will at least scrutinize studies
    objectively
  • Realize that if we perscribe the way they want,
    in the end we are just puppets

90
THE END
91
The Public
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