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We're All Patients Now

By Kelly Hearn, AlterNet. Posted September 14, 2005.


The authors of 'Selling Sickness' explain how pharmaceutical companies make everyday life into an illness. Now the backlash against Big Pharma has begun.

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Last month, the state of California sued 39 drug companies for price gouging. A week earlier, a jury hit Merck & Co. with a $253 million verdict over its painkiller Vioxx, which was linked to patient deaths.

Each story of buried evidence, bogus research, physician kickbacks and other dubious marketing ploys ticks up public outrage. Feeling pressure, the Federal Drug Administration, harshly criticized as a minion of the $500 billion pharmaceutical industry, may now raise standards for new drug approvals. In September, at least four major drugs -- each potentially worth $1 billion in annual sales -- will go before FDA's expert panels, and observers say they could take a tougher line than ever before. What's more, having spent billions of dollars marketing minor variants of hot-selling drugs instead of developing novel ones, Big Pharma is short on innovative drugs as lucrative patents near their end.

Now a new book, Selling Sickness: How the World's Biggest Pharmaceutical Companies Are Turning Us All Into Patients, examines how the drug industry makes new markets by creating and expanding the definition of disease, from depression to attention deficit disorder, social anxiety to high cholesterol. Alan Cassels, a Canadian science writer, co-authored the book with Ray Moynihan, a medical writer for the Milbank Memorial Fund in New York and a contributor to the British Medical Journal. Cassels spoke to AlterNet from his home.

You use the term "the worried well." Can you describe that in the context of your book's thesis?

I think we would define the worried well as people who are relative healthy but have had the seed of concern or anxiety planted, whether it's over cholesterol level, density of bones or whether they have problems paying attention, that sort of thing. You're taking something perhaps that wasn't worried about in the past and ramping it up and doing it in a number of ways. It is a kind of fear-mongering to create a sense of worry.

Can you talk about some of those ways?

One simple way is for companies to feature celebrities on television or being interviewed talking about a type of test he or she might have undergone. They say this or that saved their life and everyone should be getting it.

Books like yours help confirm many people's suspicions that the pharmaceutical industry pathologizes much of the unpleasant parts of the human experience in order to sell more medicines --

Well, also it's just pathologizing what's normal or what in the past was considered normal. Years ago, for example, a child who behaved a certain way would be considered boisterous. Today, those kinds of kids are being diagnosed with ADD and prescribed stimulants to calm them down.

The pharmaceutical industry has obviously done well at selling sickness. With so much money at stake, is there any hope for reform, for stopping or at least tempering this trend?

Yes, I think the seeds are planted. People are more skeptical and there's a backlash to the massive increase in direct-to-consumer marketing, that in your face marketing barrage. The political and legislative climate may be turning on direct marking. This is the post-Vioxx world. Vioxx is as big of an event as the thalidomide disaster was 40 years ago and now the FDA is using a bit of teeth.

Recently, for example, drugs for female sex dysfunction were refused by the U.S. FDA. They said, we are not going to approve this because we are not sure it is even a disease. They were concerned about not having any long-term safety data on treating with testosterone. Why are they doing it? They are probably feeling stung by previous regulatory failures.


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Kelly Hearn is a former UPI staff writer who lives in Montana and Latin America. His work has appeared in the Christian Science Monitor, American Prospect, and other publications.

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Ask your Doctor!
Posted by: churchofone on Sep 14, 2005 3:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I started watching TV again, after a fairly long break, the first thing I noticed was all the ads (particularly during the news) exhorting you to "Ask your Doctor!"

Everything from e.d. to hayfever to female arousal was covered. Or no disease or disorder was mentioned, just some "happy pictures" of people enjoying life, due to Drug X (side effects be damned). Shortly afterward, I starting noticing commercials featuring pets telling you to "Ask your Veterinarian!"

No WONDER we have a drug problem in America - it is pushed at us constantly! If you say something loud enough and long enough.........

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» RE: Ask your Doctor! Posted by: BigWiggs
» RE: Ask your Doctor! Posted by: churchofone
» RE: Ask your Doctor! Posted by: smuney
Poor example
Posted by: bettsoff on Sep 14, 2005 4:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The side effects of low dose testosterone in females are neglible compared to those of many other drugs that are already on the market. This was a poor example to use. Then again, why else but money would big pharma try to patent and sell something to women that is identical to the testosterone replacement gel used in men--except not as concentrated? We mustn't have women taking nips of hubby's Androgel, no, no, they must have their own expensive patch to deliver the exact same medication!

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» RE: Poor example Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: Poor example Posted by: BigWiggs
Advertising in general.
Posted by: Colin on Sep 14, 2005 4:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the comment made by the above poster regarding the effects of saying 'something loud enough and long enough' is particularly true.

You never know though, there may be a way to use that. If, for example, you could prove scientifically that the 'loud enough and long enough' approach was true - i.e. that ultimately human beings are naturally gullible, susceptible creatures (something I don't find that hard to believe), then perhaps you have a case to say that aggressive advertising campaigns are infringing your human rights by exploiting your innate 'weaknesses' to your detriment and their gain.

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» gullability Posted by: 2rivers
agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Sep 14, 2005 5:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pharmaceutical advertizing should go the same way cigarette ads went: off the TV and onto print media.

Print ads offer long lists of side effects and one then has the opportunity to weigh facts rather than be emotionally manipulated by actors.

As a nurse married to a Dr, I know ALL meds have side effects and there are always chances to experience an adverse reaction.

American society has been propagandized to take a pill for everything and dependency on prescription drugs is rampant.

Multi-million dollar jury awards to grieving widows is one way to bankrupt pharmaceutical companies and prevent further research.

Just as the military industrial complex made bedfellows of capitalistic business and production of weapons of destruction,
patients who insist on receiving a perscription for every ache and discomfort and willing physicans who write them are also culpable.

When ever there is demand there will always be a supplier.

As always the ultimate choice to medicate or not remains with the individual.
Pharmaceutical advertizing is propoganda directed at the consumer to create a sense of need when perhaps the real need is to shut the TV off and go out for a walk or do something to help another, for then we get our minds off of ouselves.

www.wearewideawake.org

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Truth in advertising
Posted by: stickist on Sep 14, 2005 7:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although I rarely watch television anymore, I have always believed that if these companies (regardless of whether they are selling cars, drugs, or breakfast cereals) need to work so hard and spend so much money to get me to buy their products, then these products most likely are not worth buying.

There is also the blowback of actually using these drugs. I was put on an antidepressant for treatment of a stomach ailment. I have been spending the past 7 months trying to ween myself off of it. With the vertigo that occurs every few days, it is proving a bit difficult.

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Heal Yourself
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Sep 14, 2005 7:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've talked to enough healthcare types in my life and when I'd ask them about curing disease instead of treating symptoms,their response was universal. "There is no profit in it.". So I started looking else where for 'curitive' measures. Truth is there are many,mostly plants,and,some vitamins. You've got to talk to the Elder's.Herbalists have been around since the first plant. It's as much about 'Preventive' medicine as it is about healing. Echinacia in the spring and fall prevents colds and flu. With 500mg vitaminE dialy you keep the bronchial tubes clear. Eating hemp seed sprouts gives you ALL the essintial amino acids for our bodies,plus, the essential amino acids that rebuild the Human immune system. Everyone who stayed awake in health class knows a healthy immune system means you never get sick. The Pharm companies are drug dealers plainand simple.They promose you something good and give you crap. No better,probably worse than the crackhouse at the end of the street. Pharm will treat your symptoms,and swap you something worse for the bargin. Nature,at least, can restore your health,with a little research Nature can restore you.

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» RE: Heal Yourself Posted by: churchofone
What accounts for Me?
Posted by: karyse on Sep 14, 2005 8:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What accounts for me? -- no matter the advertising push, the scientific studies, the general belief systems, the only pill I ever take is the occassional (less than once a month) headache drug (over-the-counter type) and if I have a cold, maybe some sympton relief (but rarely).

I always figured that the unpleasant aspects of having a cold or flu is your body's way of helping to get rid of it. If you get rid of the symptoms are you stopping your body from doing its job?

I don't go to quackerpracters, accupuncturists, nor, except for physicians, healers of any kind.

Lest you think I've never been in need of "medicine" I've had two surgeries. After the last one I stopped taking the "medicines" after two days because they made me feel awful. I've had many teeth repaired, and never fill the pain prescriptions because I know I will only take one or two so I don't waste the money.

I am probably like I am because my dad was military and assigned near my large Italian family (in Italy) who I never saw take a single pill for anything. Their idea of pain relief was a shot of grappa. : )

Or maybe I'm like I am because I never take anyone's word for anything -- I am a skeptic. I don't like pain, but I like fuzzy headed thinking even less.

Americans seem particularly gullible to psuedo science and to lying politicians -- why is that?

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» RE: What accounts for Me? Posted by: bornxeyed
Snake oil salesmen have always been here and always will be.
Posted by: Sojourner on Sep 14, 2005 8:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But they never before were able to peddle their stuff so easily.

I daily receive a lot of bad advice from friends and neighbors about health issues. And, yes, I also have had physicians who are clearly pill pushers.

All of which means that no one knows better than me how I feel. But I have also benefitted from regular health exams that caught a couple developing cancers when easily managed.

Yes, maybe I could still have lived much longer with my prostate and my large intestine ailing. But not without worrying whether today was the day that the cancers took control. Medicine is an art. Some have a greater gift than others.

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Humanectomy
Posted by: BobbyG on Sep 14, 2005 9:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The (mostly commercial) medicalization of of everyday life brings to mind the sarcastic jibe of psychiatric iconoclast Dr. Thomas Szasz regarding the final cure for what he viewed as non-existent "mental illness" -- the "humanectomy.

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Go Natural
Posted by: englehart on Sep 14, 2005 9:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If any of you or your family is currently on a prescription drug, you will notice that one drug leads to another and another and another. The first deals with whatever problem you have and the next with whatever problem you developed do to the side effects of the first and so on and so on. We eat and drink and breathe poison every day. There are 1400 chemicals legally NOT listed on the ingredients of foods. Most "illnesses" can be treated more effectively through diet and exercise than drugs. The side effects of prescription drugs are worst than the disease they treat. My father and mother both have had complications from prescription drugs that they will live with for the rest of their lives.

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The Fear Factor
Posted by: jobie1kno on Sep 14, 2005 10:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I never worried about my health until I moved to the US and realized how much it would cost to fix me if I had an accident or illness. Now I worry a lot, and whereas before I was very healthy, the stress is making me less so. The more I worry about medical bills, the more sick I get. It's part of being human, and it's great for the for-profit healthcare business.

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"Try the Paul Linde Prescription: "Eat...Your...Veggies!"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Sep 14, 2005 10:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with "Go Natural": many of our modern "maladies," depression, high cholesterol, social anxiety, mild attention deficit, bone density, flaccid penis (oops! I meant "E.D.". . .), can be helped immensely by two things – a balanced diet and exercise (get up and move and get off the fast food, knucklehead!).

Big Pharma doesn't want us to be healthy; they want our medicine cabinets to look like pharmacies by the time we're 40, so their bank accounts will look like Fort Knox. Want to get back at 'em? Eat well, exercise, and stop worrying; turn THEM into (financial) health patients.

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One of the Oldest Medicine Known to Man- Still Illegal!! WHY???
Posted by: stoney13 on Sep 14, 2005 10:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My mother died of bone cancer. Her weight went from 125 pounds to 73. The toxins the medicos gave her made her last days a living Hell of nausea and agonising pain.

The canabis that could have given her some relief was denied her by law. The pain medication that could have at least dulled the horrible pain was limited by law.

I wrote my Senator, Jesse Helms (R-NC). I got a form letter back from the good Senator stating that my mother had brought it all on herself because of, "choices in her life-style,".

My mother at the time was over eighty years old. She was a life-long tetotaler who never drank, smoked, and had been married to my father for sixty-plus years!!

After I read the letter, I had to hold my mother so she could vomit. I was as careful as I could be, but I could feel her weakened ribs breaking under my hands.

I at the time had been a life-long Republican at the time. Now I'm a recovering Republican.

I pray that none of the politicos who keep shooting down medical marijauna never have cancer touch their lives like I had it touch mine. If they did, it would be good enough for them!!

My mother died waiting for relief. How many more must???

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» The power of the Big Lie Posted by: Sojourner
Need a balanced approach
Posted by: Brucewxx on Sep 14, 2005 12:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would suggest people to use a balanced approach for their health care. You cannot deny that the modern medicnes have done many wonderful things for us and you also have to agree that there are many other ways to make us healthy. Taking any single way to extreme is not going to be good, and any single way which is good for someone may not and will not be good for everyone. Not just those bid pharm companies are pushing their drugs to us through the fear, many other so-called alternate meds companies are doing the same with the same tactic. Just don't believe it if someone tells you that their stuff (drug or herb or their secret formula) could solve all your health worry as it could never be true. A moderate and balanced life style is the key for a healthy life.

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self-medicate
Posted by: psychick_orgasm on Sep 14, 2005 2:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm sure if I went to a therapist they'd find something to diagnose me with, depending on the day and my mood - paranoia, social anxiety, bipolar, depression, delusions. Then again some days I'm the happiest and most friendly person you'll meet. Life is flux and process, not a stagnant state of mind. Is every shift of mood or thought now a new 'disorder'? Pharmaceuitcal companies are capitalizing on the very same feelings of alienation and anxiety that the media, government and religious institutions plant into our heads. Taussig called it the "nervous system" - our society is engineered to keep us all in a constant state of anxiety. Come on people, don't buy into that bullshit. Put some grow lights in your closet and take a bong hit when yr spirits need a lift.

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» RE: self-medicate Posted by: animalleaderisgreat
» RE: self-medicate Posted by: bornxeyed
The recent FDA decision was blatently SEXIST!
Posted by: raido on Sep 16, 2005 5:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Director of Women's Health within the FDA recently resigned over the FDA's refusal to approve Plan B (female morning after pill). This was due to 23 FDA experts recommending it be approved and then the FDA ruling NOT to approve it due to political bullshit! NO kidding! The medication is safe, and effective however the (apparently politically controlled) FDA gave a lame excuse that they disapproved the medication due to over the counter issues with age... NOT DUE TO IT BEING UNSAFE IN ANYWAY. The FDA approves Viagra like it was water, and then does NOT approve a NEEDED medication to thwart unplanned pregnancies, and/or help reduce the need for abortion. When you take into consideration that over 300,000 women are raped in this country on an annual basis, a medication like Plan B is desperately needed! This was not a decision based on public safety or need, but was instead a decision made by an FDA that is apparently very much sexist and politically controlled.

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