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How Big Pharma Learned To Seduce You

By Alicia Rebensdorf, AlterNet. Posted June 19, 2007.


As recent legislation shows, drug companies and their direct-to-consumer marketing campaigns need diligent monitoring -- especially when it looks like they need it the least.
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Ten years after the FDA first approved pharmaceutical direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising, the Senate has finally resolved to step up DTC regulation. Sponsored by the bi-partisan coalition of Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.), the bill passed by a resounding 93-1. The House has a similar bill on its calendar and a full vote is expected in July.

Problem is, although the legislation has been touted as a victory over the big, bad drug companies, the success is actually Big Pharma's.

At first glance, drug company influence on the recent legislation can be hard to see. The bill raises fees on pharmaceutical patents to beef up FDA staff and speed review. It also gives the FDA power to fine companies for ads that fail to list risks in a "clear and conspicuous neutral manner."

However, compared to the recommendations made by the Institute of Medicine back in September, this bill replaces a steak knife with a spoon. The Senate bill ignores their suggested two-year moratorium on advertising new medication. It fails to require FDA approval before ads go on air and allows the FDA to assess fines only after the fact.

Even then, many critics doubt the fines will be much a deterrent. As Bill Vaughan, a policy analyst at Consumers Union, points out points out, "When a company can make more than a million dollars a day in drug sales, a $150,000 fine for running a misleading advertisement won't have much impact."

In fact, the bill is so soft that even Billy Tauzin, former Republican congressmen and current president of the powerful drug group, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), praised the bill, saying it "will no doubt make a good system even better."

Tauzin should be so congratulatory. In many ways, the bill is his success. When he took the reigns of PhRMA after the Vioxx debacle in 2004, he spearheaded an aggressive campaign to improve Big Pharma's image.

The campaign's formula: Lobby hard behind the scenes. Play very nice in public. And promise any changes that need to happen. We can regulate ourselves, thank you very much.

By the time the Democrats took Congress and made it clear they were gunning for stricter DTC regulation, Tauzin and his industry had several year's worth of marketing practice to perfect their defense.

The drug companies' effort to recast themselves as friends of the FDA and champions of patient rights is not in itself surprising. Nor is their PR campaign -- lobbying, playing friendly, self-regulating -- particularly novel.

But considering how this campaign affects public debate, and how images of their products influence our ideas about health and the promises of modern medicine, it's a campaign deserving scrutiny.

It all began 10 years ago with a preternaturally green field and blue sky. Details were vague: We were told to ask our doctor. But never fear, Claritin was here. And soon that drug was not alone. Our airwaves slowly filled with more commercials of cloudless skies and the people who enjoyed them -- happy people who swung on rope tires and performed slow motion somersaults. Over those first early years, the active people's afflictions gradually multiplied. They suffered hair loss and got herpes. The guy couldn't always perform up to par. Through it all though, the people seemed to genuinely like holding hands, and they aged really well. Their seven-day forecasts were never short of spectacular.

Those first few antinasal drop ads have since exploded into a $4.5 billio-a-year industry, encompassing almost every imaginable ailment: depression, arthritis, cholesterol, PMS, HPV, restless legs, irritable bowels, toenail fungus and what, as the ads told it, seems to be an insomnia epidemic.

As the popularity of these ads grew, so did the media debate about their ethical and medical implications. Op-ed columnists, doctors and consumer watch groups all weighed in, with many arguing that DTC ads exploit consumers by "selling sickness" and emphasizing drugs' benefits while downplaying their risks.

But it wasn't until six years later, when drug giant Merck withdrew Vioxx from the market, that the issue came to a head.

Determined to keep its customers -- and its ad spots -- the drug industry responded with a makeover. In the spring of 2005, PhRMA launched a 15-point guideline for reforming DTC advertising. Along with submitting ads to the FDA for review and "more directness," the guide called for an end to reminder ads: short spots that name a product but not its purpose or risks. Some critics pointed out that most of the bulleted points duplicated laws already on the books. Others noted that the rules were voluntary, vague and unenforceable. Republican Senate majority Bill Frist, who was pushing for a two-year moratorium at the time, limited his praise to "a good first step," but talk of a moratorium soon after stalled. PhRMA's token gesture ensured their ads were -- if only for profit's sake -- safe.


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See more stories tagged with: advertising, marketing, direct-to-consumer, drug companies, big pharma

Alicia Rebensdorf is a freelance writer and author of the recently published, Chick Flick Road Kill: A Behind the Scenes Odyssey into Movie-Made America.

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4
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Jun 19, 2007 3:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting history.

There is no greater evil than the Pharm business. But as far as the ads go, let the buyer beware. If you're getting your medical advice from those goofy commercials, no amount of regulation can protect you from your bad judgement.

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» RE: 4 Posted by: VannaLaRoche
» RE: 4 Posted by: sasquuatch55
» RE: 4 Posted by: sasquuatch55
Barely touches on the criminality of Big Pharma
Posted by: heid on Jun 19, 2007 5:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article barely touches on the harm Big Pharma does or the insidious techniques it uses in promoting its products.

The key is that pharmaceutical firms exist to sell, to make profits. Their purpose is not to make us healthy. We forget that at risk to our health and even our lives.

Drugs have a constellation of effects, and pharmaceutical firms promote only a single one among many, ignoring the rest or calling them "side effects". Just take a look at the over the counter cold medications with the "side effect" of sleepiness, which are also sold under different names for precisely that "side effect" of sleepiness as aids for sleep.

Pharmaceuticals do almost no real frontline research. Most of the money for that comes from you and me - the taxpayers. Most research done by pharmaceuticals is on slight moderations of existing drugs to allow their repatenting, or for finding different uses for existing drugs. Worse, most of it is done for so-called ailments that never existed until Big Pharma "discovered" and promoted them, or for relatively mild but common conditions. In other words, what little research they do is focused on the bottom line - not on helping really sick people get better.

Big Pharma does its own testing, an obvious conflict of interest, and frequently hides its negative results, redoing and refining trials until they get the results they want. Then, the drugs are approved by the FDA, which is now beholden primarily to Big Pharma, and they are released on an unsuspecting public, and those who are unfortunate enough to be prescribed these drugs become the real guinea pigs.

Big Pharma has extended its influence into the medical world itself by outright bribing doctors, giving them gifts, providing nearly all the Continuing Education seminars doctors go to, and using the cheapest and tackiest of sales methods - such as using former cheerleaders as their primary sales people - imaginable.

In the patient support arena, Big Pharma has managed to distort even these groups by providing funding to them and often even creating them.

None of this even touches on some of the worst abuses, but does cover a fair amount of the techniques used by Big Pharma.

Now, we have a new bill that not only allows all this to continue, but makes it worse. It will now be possible for the FDA itself to start making and selling drugs. Even more money will be given to the FDA by pharmaceutical firms - and there can be little doubt that following the money shows what's really going on, so this addition of funds from Big Pharma to the FDA simply places the FDA even deeper into the pharmaceutical pockets.

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Connection?
Posted by: Uncle Crabby on Jun 19, 2007 5:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I sense yet another conspiracy!!

Why do we get such drivel masquerading as news on the broadcast channels at 6:30 PM every night? You'd think there'd be a few moments for some real stuff.

Why is this "news" interrupted every minute or so by advertising for the latest "you must have this symptom" fishing expedition by Big Pharma?

Are we being drugged into complacency? Is this a coordinated 1-2 punch from Big Media/Big Pharma to permanently put us all to sleep?

I think that if a significant number of us would stop taking the drugs and stopped listening to the puff pieces for a year, things would begin to change.

By the way, I'm going to be the one flying my flag upside down on July 4th.

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» RE: Connection? Posted by: pcushniesr
Health in a pill
Posted by: snowhound on Jun 19, 2007 6:17 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The problem is that we Americans have beocme so reactive in nature. It's such a fear based society that we live in, mostly because of the media propeganda. The Pharma industry preys on that fear to satisfy their greed for more profits. When it comes to health, one must be proactive and do their own research. Your doctor is not going to make you healthy. He is going to treat your preceived symptoms with drugs. Unfortunately as time goes on we will become increasingly diseased and have shorter life spans. Studies show that our children will not grow as old as their parents due to the obesity epidemic. Until the people are able to take back their government, these corporations will continue to destroy all that Nature has provided to nurture our health.

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The Celebrex ad was a winner
Posted by: VannaLaRoche on Jun 19, 2007 6:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Very beautiful and compelling to watch, great color choice (blue and white), flowing text makes you want to see where the flowing line is going to resolve and end up; even with the sound off it was attractive. I watched most of it and would watch it again to see if I could get all the text going by.

Very effective ad. Softened my attitude a bit: "Hm, it would seem that the company is at least trying to act responsibly."

That's all they need. Now when I hear of someone I know taking Celebrex, I can believe that the person made, probably, a reasoned choice. Because, see, there's this ad on TV that clearly spells out the risks, so it's okay.

If you follow the dictates of the TV ad, you can't go wrong, see? Because the ad says Ask your doctor.

It's not like they're saying anything else, is it, like "trust the pharmaceutical company to tell you everything you need to know"?

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» I vote for the butterfly! Posted by: mirimac
Good article.
Posted by: mjabele on Jun 19, 2007 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
However, as a doctor I'd say that direct-to-consumer advertising, though irksome, strikes me as holding far less potential to cause harm than the direct-to-physician marketing which pharmaceutical companies rely on more generally to sell their wares.

Patients do come to me at times with questions about drug ads they've seen on TV or in magazines, but in my own experience they generally accept the explanations I present to them as to why I think a particular medication may or may not be suitable for their particular condition. In other words, there's a certain "safety factor" built in as a result of the doctor-patient relationship, which forces the patient to seek advice (and, in most cases, a prescription) from their provider after absorbing information from a drug ad.

The real danger, in my view at least, comes when providers themselves are corrupted by Big Pharma, meaning that the advice they give ceases to be impartial and based on what is truly best for their patients. For anyone working in a doctor's office, it's pretty easy to see how this can happen. Our own community health center - state-funded to a significant degree, and run mostly for the benefit of un- and under-insured patients - nevertheless receives daily visits from pharmaceutical marketing reps, who leave sample medications and curbside physicians during patient visits ("just one or two minutes, doc") in order to make their selling points. We have to put up with the spiel in order to get the samples, which we often rely on to treat our un-insured patients - those who don't have enough money to purchase medications on their own, or whose medical problems require expensive, non-generic drugs.

An even more pernicious practice consists of paying a physician in general practice a large sum of money - often amounting to as much as $1000 or more - to give a series of after-dinner talks to colleagues about a particular medication. Usually these "seminars" are advertised as something more general - i.e., the topic may purportedly be something like "Effects of Oral Diabetic Medications on Lipid Metabolism" - but everyone who attends knows that the real theme is how a particular medication - i.e., the one manufactured by the sponsor of the talk - should be viewed as superior to competitors because of, say, a particular beneficial effect on cholesterol levels. The talks are usually given after an expensive dinner in a fine restaurant, accompanied by fine wine and elaborate desserts. Any potential negative points about a particular medication are, of course, played down - it's up to the attendees to raise any concerns they might have, something which they may not always be so eager to do given the "hospitality" extended to them, and the desire to receive future invitations.

Of course, the key point here is that the "seminar leader" is usually simply a colleague rather than a true expert on the subject in question. Often he or she is talking from slides provided directly by the pharmaceutical company itself. A few months ago, one of my former colleagues gave a series of talks on Actos (pioglitazone), to which I was invited, and which I attended more or less for old time's sake. It was clear to me that he knew nothing more about the drug than I did, but I have no doubt he was paid handsomely for his time. I recently found out that he's embarking on a second "tour", this time for the new anti-smoking drug, Chantix. I don't think I'll bother to attend this time around.

I should add that this colleague recently purchased a new McMansion in New Hampshire, and sends his kids to private school. No doubt his patients think he gives them wonderful advice, but personally, I somehow don't believe his therapeutic recommendations are entirely unbiased...

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One piece of info missing
Posted by: chaoslegs on Jun 19, 2007 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is the bill number? I have checked out Enzi and Kennedy's web pages for mention of this bill. I have done a quick search in bill summaries on THOMAS. I have checked the Senate Roll Call lists (not updated since June 14), and I can't seem to find this bill that was voted on 93-1.

The reporting while very good, would have been better with the bill number. Some of us are the policy geek folks of the world. I would like to see who voted against it. Was it Bernie Sanders, Russ Feingold, or Byron Dorgan? Or maybe Demint, McCain, Kyl? That matters to me.

What is the language of the bill? Sometimes it is hard to figure out, but other times you can gleam what is doing from the text of the bill.

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Stop buying Big Pharma's petroleum manufactured drugs and look towards natural cures.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jun 19, 2007 8:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It should have been obvious 70 years ago when natural plants faced bans due to false propaganda.

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But We Still Buy Into Some of It
Posted by: Gravitas on Jun 19, 2007 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But even progressives still buy into some of it while claiming to reject it. For instance, there was an above comment that our children will have shorter lifespans due to obesity. In fact, that is speculation without evidence. They have been saying that for decades. I wonder how many people know that BigPharma is behind most of the major scare studies regarding obesity. And that they only control for age, weight and smoking? So that all the side effects of risky weight loss practices, such as fen-phen, weight loss surgery (which has almost too many side effects to mention) yo-yo dieting gets attributed to obesity? That many don't control for social class. Since the poor are statistically fatter than the rich or middle class, the effects of poverty and environmental racism (the poor are more exposed to pollution) also gets lumped in with obesity. And that there are studies that show that exercise is far more important than weight, and if we became fitter we would be much healthier whether we lost weight or not!

We buy into the "obesity epidemic" because we want to. It is not that hard to go to a medical journal and read a study. Or even read about it from a second hand source. But we sit back and let them spoon feed us. And it is not just obesity. I have so many relatives who seemed to be relieved when they are diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome or some other BS. They want their problems pathologized. It affords them a certain amount of social legitimacy. They also think it is easier to take a pill for what ails them than to ever consider it could the result of a complex mixture of emotional, psychological and social causes that just manifests itself in the physical. The above was a great article and I despise BigPharma. But we can't fail to see that we are buying into what they are selling! Now I must go. My restless leg syndrome prevents me from sitting at the computer too much longer.

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INDICT AND CONVICT
Posted by: drricklippin on Jun 19, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Good article AlterNet

I'm glad some used the word criminality as it relates to Big PhRMA practices

In 2002 I published my forecast below which unfortunately has mostly become manifest.

The next step are indictment and jail time for some of Big PhRMA's CEOs. It is coming soon.

Here is my 2002 forecast

“Major Trouble ahead for Pharmaceutical firms”

1)Classical example of how greed and arrogance and the excesses of the free market takes something that is truly miraculous (life saving drugs/vaccines) and moves it to excess which then "backfires" See Teller -"When Technology Bites Back" or Dutton “ Worse Than The Disease"

2)Direct marketing to consumers on TV is a real debacle- the pharm companies come across as bone-fide drug pushers which they have become!

3)Science will show an increasing number of pharm products do more harm than good. They may be "efficacious" BUT THEY ARE NOT SAFE- grossly underestimated as contributing to cancer for example-see prempro story recently


4)Polypharmacy is running rampant- too many drugs for too many conditions in an individual- will get MUCH WORSE as naive boomers age and take more and more mixed meds

5)Psychotropics, analgesics and sedating antihistamines are contributing to serious safety problems on America’s highways and workplaces and who knows what other errors in judgment by leaders with this stuff swirling around their brains

6Medications, especially psychotropics and analgesics are migrating in alarmingly large quantities to illicit market (eg. Oxycotin)


7)Yet politically, denying NEEDED drugs to elderly is hottest political issue going-another one is denying affordable drugs to millions dying of aids especially in Africa. So some populations are UNDERMEDICATED. Many in US are OVERMEDICATED

8)In high density populations there is the issue of ultimate ENVIRONMENTAL FATE in soil and water of human excreted medicines and/or their metabolites

9)Congressional Hearings ahead with tone of Tobacco and Asbestos

Rick Lippin, MD
Health Sector forecaster-July 2002
http://medicalcrises.blogspot.com

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» RE: INDICT AND CONVICT Posted by: fearless flower
» RE: INDICT AND CONVICT Posted by: drricklippin
The Senate - Bought and paid for.
Posted by: aussidawg on Jun 19, 2007 9:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" former Republican congressmen and current president of the powerful drug group, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), praised the bill, saying it "will no doubt make a good system even better.""

Ain't that just like a congressman (Republican OR Democratic)? At least now he is officially on the payroll of a pharmaceutical lobby rather than pretending to be a representative of the people.

A bill passed earlier in the year allowed the big pharmaceuticals to double the amount of money it gives the FDA and prohibits the import of much less expensive (and probably safer) prescription drugs from countries such as Canada. With the legislation described in this article, it makes clear that the big pharmaceutical corporations (along with other major corporate industries such as big oil) own "our" government. "Our" elected representatives don't really even get all that much money from the pharmas (although it would seem like a lot to any of us more than likely), but this simply illustrates how little it takes to sell out the public while giving the pharmaceutical industry a monopoy on drugs in this country. Oh yes, and it isn't just congress...look at the Medicare Prescription plan touted by the Bu$h Admin. Medicare cannot negotiate prices?

I saw a documentary recently on the pharmaceutical industry which discussed the amount of money spent on advertising. They actually spend far more money peddling their product than they do on research, with somewhere in the neighborhood of 73% of all drugs being marketed known as "me too" drugs or drugs which have been around for quite some time now but are used for different purposes (Sarafem (?) prescribed for PMDD is exactly the same thing and prescribed in exactly the same doses as Prozac, just marketed in a different colored capsule at a far higher price.) It was explained that the drug companies spent around $35,000/year per physician marketing ther drugs, and that they are now even creating diseases for their drugs to treat (ie "social anxiety disorder"=shyness.) Even controlled substances such as Ambien are sold via TV advertising. We can sit down and watch a series of commercial ads on TV and in the same series see an ad touting the Drug War and another pushing sleeping pills! What a country! (Anybody wishing to see the documentary may find it on Information Clearinghouse's website under video's. The title is "Big Pharma, Big Bucks." Sorry for not providing the link but it is very long and I'm being lazy today.)

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More Choices Please
Posted by: fearless flower on Jun 19, 2007 12:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dr. Rick,

Your list of what is ailing the health care system is right on, but I have one more thing to add:

Why don't doctors study nutrition or alternative treatments in medical school? Or how to diagnose deficiencies and food intolerances? The simple things they miss costs their patients hundreds, even thousands of dollars and untold suffering.

Where will it all end? It just gets worse and worse. Many people harmed or disillusioned with their health care end up at my health food store, finally willing to try some natural solutions. I can't tell you how many "miracles" I've witnessed from cheap, natural, safe alternatives to medications.

Medical doctors need to work in tandem with holistic practitioners, organic producers and health food stores for the benefit of their patients.

I've enjoyed your comments here and on Tom Degan's "The Rant". It's great to see a physician taking such a stand. Wish there were more like you.

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» RE: More Choices Please Posted by: aussidawg
Do ya want fries with that?
Posted by: Paxmana1 on Jun 19, 2007 1:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"With numbing regularity good people were seen to knuckle under the demands of authority and perform actions that were callous and severe. Men who are in everyday life responsible and decent were seduced by the trappings of authority, by the control of their perceptions, and by the uncritical acceptance of the experimenter's definition of the situation, into performing harsh acts. A substantial proportion of people do what they are told to do, irrespective of the content of the act and without limitations of conscience, so long as they perceive that the command comes from a legitimate authority"
Stanley Milgram, 1965 .. 'Obedience to Authority'..

Implicit in that statement is the boot licking and the wanting to please authority .. its built in .. disabling this piece of mental malaware involves some serious de-programming ..

Medical Science is an oxymoron and the priests who oversee the rituals are heir to those crafty characters who were also heirs to mankinds common heritage, the healing plants .. It was hardly ever about healing .. but almost always about making money.

Behind the facade of the white coats stethoscopes and stainless steel stands an edifice of remarkable crudity and cruelty for example Cancer and its instruments of torture .. the survivors survive not because of medical science but in spite of it .. to attack a compromised immune system with further immune compromising treatments is Frankenstein insanity.

The fancy pills that are swallowed like 'Twinkies' for breakfast are crude manipulated molecules which are modified natural entities .. Science does not know how these synthetics will behave once released into the human economy .. clinical trials are a scientific fraud upon the people .. given the interactive complexity of the human frame, science posits to use 4 or 5 variables to predict how these alien molecules will behave .. this is laughable and flies in the face of common sense.

At one time the money grubbers would rip out an appendix or set of tonsils because they were an evolutionary throw back and serve no useful purpose .. Oops! They turned out to be an essential part of the immune system.

The junk DNA turns out to have a function after all .. These examples are just more detrius that covers the bodies of untold millions who have paid the price of medical science. The white coat jump ups have no fear that their lucrative living will fade away any time soon ..

Take responsibility for your own health and that of your loved ones .. think .. live and breathe .. "Health Freedom'

Ivor Hughes

http://www.herbdatanz.com/death_by_meds.htm

http://www.herbdatanz.com/ClinicalTrials.pdf

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» RE: Drug ...Herbs are not useless! Posted by: sasquuatch55
I cannot but notice some ironies in all of this.
Posted by: Oppland on Jun 19, 2007 3:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I loved this article, it was spot on about everything. It's funny to me however that while this article rails against big pharma (and rightfully so) at the same time this website is plastered with ads for "Crest White Strips" and "Armorall" car shining spray, foam and cleaners.

This article nails big pharma to the wall for its use of deceptive practices and careless marketing of drugs, some of which are very dangerous indeed but at the same time this website is actively pitching the sale of other types of drugs and chemicals.

I understand that in order for there to be a website like this you have to advertise and generate some form of revenue but to me, I don't see you do the public any more good than these drugs companies are. I will admit that "Crest White Strips" aren't your most dangerous drug on the market but it is nonetheless chemicals and chemicals which people are putting into their mouths.

I'm just curious why on one hand this website hosts a great article about Big Pharma and its potential dangers, but then it actively peddles chemical products like "Armorall" and "White Strips", clearly the message is "better living; in a chemical world."

I don't mean to personally attack AlterNet on this one but I call them as I see'em. People have the right to go out and buy Crest white strips and Armorall car shining spray, but it doesn't mean they are healthy for human beings or our environment.

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Lack of Adequate and Effective Regulation: Price Controls Needed
Posted by: sofla100 on Jun 19, 2007 5:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Big pharma is a lot like big oil and big agriculture. The differences are more in degree than in kind. They all manipulate the Congress for favorable legislation and engage in massive PR campaigns to sell their wares. But, let's turn now to Big pharma. Interestingly, other countries, like the European states, have been much more effective than the USA in controlling Big pharma. They have succeeded at this mostly with price controls and buying in bulk (to reduce prices). This could be a very effective way to control Big pharma, if implemented properly in the USA. Other ways include anti-trust (breaking up Big pharma) and limiting patent protections. Now, Big pharma will scream that this will end all drug development and hurt drug research for drugs that help people with diabetes, heart conditions, etc. Therefore, the matter must be carefully studied. However, I am quite convinced, if done properly, a reasonable profit could be assured. And, if the FDA regulated properly as well, then it would be fair for the government to restrict liability in some form or another. However, that would be down the road after implementing strict price controls and more effective monitoring.

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» I'm continually amazed..... Posted by: mjabele
OTHER MEDIA TO CHECK OUT
Posted by: chamela on Jun 19, 2007 9:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More old news... may as well get it fresh...

http://www.sandersresearch.com
http://www.globalresearch.ca
http://www.onlinejournal.com
http://www.larouchepub.com
http://www.danielestulin.com/?op=noticias&idioma=en
http://www.carolynbaker.org

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