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Health & Wellness

How Big Pharma Is Fooling You -- and Your Doctor -- with Junk Science

By Niko Karvounis, Health Beat. Posted August 11, 2008.


To the pharmaceutical industry, "research" is just a code-word for "smart-sounding marketing."
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This article originally appeared on Health Beat.

It's no secret that the pharmaceutical industry trades in junk science. Prescription drug companies distort research, fudge measures of drug effectiveness and generally control our knowledge of what works in medication. Big Pharma's track record of shady science is a serious problem, especially considering the fact that recent discussions about creating a Comparative-Effectiveness Research Institute currently hold a place for prescription drug companies on the organization's board.

The obvious problem is that, to the pharmaceutical industry, "research" is just a code-word for "smart-sounding marketing." If you really want a sense of how deep this deception runs, consider the fact that the prescription drug industry relies on so-called "research" not just to shill its drugs, but also to argue that it has a vital role to play in shaping the doctor-patient relationship for the better.

This dubious claim comes in the June 2008 issue of PharmaVoice where Meaghan Onofrey from CommonHealth, a pharma marketing consulting firm, pens a piece arguing that coaching from the prescription drug industry can make sure that "physicians and patients speak the same language" so that "everyone wins." According to Onofrey, "one case study illustrates [how marketers can help physicians improve their communication]: by videotaping primary-care physicians, who were struggling to assess migraine prevention candidacy with their migraine patients." According to Onofrey, it turned out that the doctors were actually asking the wrong questions of their patients. In working with key opinion leaders and advocacy groups, a simple solution was formulated to address the issue. These same physicians were taught to ask a single question to help them more simply and clearly identify the patients' candidacy for migraine prevention."

You might be wondering what this oh-so-effective single question is -- and so am I. Even GlaxoSmithKline's online "headache quiz," which users can take to see if they might have migraines (and thus might be a good target for prescription drugs) asks eight separate questions of patients. When it comes to migraines, it's tough to imagine a silver bullet question.

Yet Onofrey provides no specifics about the "study," leaving the reader with a load of unanswered questions. Under what conditions was the study executed? What were the patient profiles? What was the patient-physician dialogue specifically like before and after the "single question" solution? All we get is some PR spin concluding that it's important to better identify "prevention candidates" (a.k.a. potential customers) through "leveraging ... dialogues."

CommonHealth's research is paradigmatic of pharmaceutical industry science: talk a big game, but ensure that there's enough ambiguity so that the really meaningful results are hidden. This is exactly what we get in direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising. Ads for Pfizer's Lipitor, for example, claim that the drug reduces the risk of heart attacks by 36 percent because studies show that two patients out of every hundred on the drug get heart attacks, versus three out of every hundred on placebos (which is a difference of one patient, or about one-third of the heart attacks that would have happened without Lipitor). This data obscure the fact that the drug only helps one out of every one hundred people who take it.

But there's something particularly bald-faced about claiming that marketers can feed doctors a script for the benefit of all involved. As John Mack, publisher of the Pharma Marketing Newsletter, points out on his blog, "Although the research is billed as a way that pharmaceutical companies can help improve physician-patient communications by helping physicians and patients 'speak the same language,' it obviously may be more useful to CommonHealth's pharma clients, who can 'demonstrate value to physicians beyond just the benefit of the brand, potentially creating an unexpected, yet mutually beneficial relationship.' i.e., sell more drugs.


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See more stories tagged with: health, drug companies, big pharma, prescription drugs, pharmaceutical companies, dtc marketing

Niko Karvounis is a Program Officer with The Century Foundation in New York City, where he works on issues of socioeconomic inequality and health care. He is a regular contributor to Health Beat, the Foundation's health care blog.

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Big (fill in the blank)
Posted by: Romans1 on Aug 11, 2008 12:36 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am so tired of the Liberals' villain of the week. Big Tobacco, Big Oil, Big Pharma.

How about Big Global Warming? Al Gore is taking us to the cleaners.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Big conservatives Posted by: chaoslegs
» The perfect response. Posted by: EJLima
Amen!
Posted by: SpiderWoman on Aug 11, 2008 3:00 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Big Pharma is simply corporations. And corporations exist for one reason alone - to make money, as much as possible. It's their raison d'ĂȘtre. They are beholden to their stockholders.

Anyone who stands to benefit from research is engaged in an obvious conflict of interest. It's about time that fact is being brought out. To think that a pharmaceutical corporation's research is worth a plug nickel to anyone outside the company - except others who stand to profit from the resulting products - is nothing short of laughable. To assume that there is any truth in any of their studies is equally laughable. The track record of their products should make that abundantly clear. Drugs that are ballyhooed as the latest and greatest thing are routinely, with use, documented to be both ineffective and dangerous, often killing hundreds and thousands of people.

Yet, these murdering corporations are allowed to continue doing the same old thing, with each new drug praised, until the truth starts to come out - a truth that is suppressed for as long as possible by the manufacturers. No one ever gets punished, at least not in any significant way, in spite of the fact that people die and suffer through destroyed health.

It's crazy, simply crazy, that this goes on.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Amen! Posted by: spikeyone
» SO..........your point? Posted by: walldodger1969
» RE: Her solution is homeopathy Posted by: Liberty G
Who really pays for the research?
Posted by: carolcarre on Aug 11, 2008 4:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If anyone would care to research this (hah) you will find out that the drug companies do almost no original drug research. Most of it (like 95%) is done via grants from NIH, NIMH and other government agencies on college campuses, by underpaid graduate students and post-docs. If these students are lucky, their advisers are semi-honest, and when the advisers set up their independent company to market the drugs to Big Pharma, the students get some of the BIG money that big Pharma pays the advisers.

Most of the money Big Pharma spends on so-called research is to figure out how to use these drugs in as many ways as possible, in order to not have to develop anything new. And researching how to market the drugs to MDs for off-label use.

And if you don't think this is true, go to a university hospital (I do) and listen to the interns and their advisers talking in the hallways about their research. Very eye opening.

Plus I was a graduate student once and I have talked to other graduate students. Don't kid yourself, Big Pharma's main aim is to make money, and they don't need incentives to develop mew drugs, because they have suckered the American taxpayer to pay for the development.

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HARRY TRUMAN ONCE SAID, "BIG BUSINESS WILL BE THE DEATH OF
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Aug 11, 2008 9:52 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the United States yet." That would, of course, include big pharma.

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understanding the term "research"
Posted by: ted2 on Aug 13, 2008 10:27 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Because pharma is based on science and medicine, many people have a fundamental problem with the industry's marketing. We all want it to be fact, evidence and science-based. In truth, much of it is. But in the modern age, if you don't apply marketing principles, you are not seen, or perceived at all. This very much includes communications to physicians, who are inundated with even more information than you or I.
2. "Research" does not necessarily equal clinical studies. In this case, I assume the CommonHealth writer was referring to MARKET research. While there is a form of science involved, this is really about gaining insights with the customer to improve communication.
3. OF COURSE they're trying to help doctors better identify candidates for their treatment! Duh! How is this deceptive? Pharma companies are publicly held, for-profit entities. And they often have 7 years or less left on their patents by the time a treatment is approved, after investing hundreds of millions of dollars to get it approved.
4. Pharmaceuticals are the most regulated industry in the USA.
This doesn't mean we shouldn't examine practices and call the industry out when they are being deceptive. And the point of 1 additional patient on Lipitor out of a hundred is an important one to understand and debate. But the statistical math is true nonetheless.
For the record, yes I am a pharmaceutical marketer working for a company like CommonHealth. And yes I am a progressive. And no, I don't see a contradiction.

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» RE: "Research" & "Regulation" Posted by: Liberty G