Drugsters in Academia: How Big Pharma "Educates" American Doctors
Monday 28 June 2010
by: James Ridgeway | The Unsilent Generation | Op-Ed

(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Seattle Municipal Archives, Thom Watson, WonderMike)
The pharmaceutical industry has wormed its way into the hearts and minds of the medical professions in any number of ways—wining and dining doctors, sending them off to vacation in splendid spas, and even buying their names to put on industry-written articles promoting different drugs.
One little known facet of this drugster-doctor relationship is Big Pharma’s role in continuing medical education (CME) programs, which are important in keeping medical professionals informed and up to date on the fast developing profession. Of the $2 billion-odd spent on these programs every year, nearly half comes from the drug business, which not-so-subtly uses the education programs to push new drugs.
Last week a conference at Georgetown University called “Prescription for Conflict” pulled together experts from academia, government, and industry to discuss the question: Should industry fund continuing medical education? The main instigator here is a former colleague of mine named Adriane Fugh- Berman, a doctor and teacher at Georgetown University Medical School. Fugh-Berman long ago became the nemesis of Big Pharma with a stream of articles and talks questioning the different aspects of liaison between the drugsters and the medical profession. I worked with her helping to set up PharmedOut.org, a website that seeks to educate the public on these liaisons, in part through exposes, both written and on video.
The conference at Georgetown included few critics as candid as Fugh-Berman. Those gathered included polite academics with hedged criticism of industry funding, and regulators like Joshua Sharfstein, principal deputy commissioner at the FDA, and Julie Taitsman, chief medical officer the Department of Health and Human Services, who presented a list of the different laws protecting the public. By the time they finished, I was so frustrated with government bureaucrats that I was about ready to join the Tea Party (except that they, of course, would want to do even less to control the greedmeisters at Big Pharma).
One blunt critique came from Paul Thacker, an investigator for Senate Republican Charles Grassley, who has been the most visible Congressional muckraker on the doctor-drug company love-in. Thacker bluntly told the docs to get off their supercilious “who me?’’ attitude and come to grips with the scarcely believable conflicts of interest existing between the medical profession and the drug industry–conflicts that more often than not have been to the detriment of their patients.
The industry, as always, insists it isn’t doing anything bad–far from it. Big Pharma, its representatives would have you believe, is really performing a public service, trying to educate docs so they can do a better job. This conference, however, offered a different point of view, in the statement of an anonymous “pharmaceutical executive,’’ who admitted industry involvement in “CME has the potential for inappropriate promotional messaging and influence.’’
The anonymous exec went on to state: “Typically,companies make CME investment decisions at annual budget meetings. The Sales and Marketing divisions dominate deliberations.and distribution of CME cash.’’ In deciding what institutions are to get money, he continued, “large volume, influential institutions are not likely to be rejected…Friendly institutions, as defined by access and volume, are more likely to receive grants than those that favor another company’s products. Grants may also be made in support of programs including particular KOLs [key opiniong leaders] whose opinions resonate with the promotional plan…Similarly, those known for positions antithetical to the company’s promotional plan are less likely to be supported.’’
In conclusion, the exec said, “CME contributions are commercial decisions,’’ and, finally, “CME is not compatible with commercial intervention.’’ Too bad it takes a drug company whistleblower to make this statement of the obvious, rather than the medical organizations and government regulatory agencies who are supposed to be looking out for us.
Unsilent Generation is a site for people who don’t believe that getting old means getting dumb, getting conservative, getting complacent, or getting used to spending your days driving a golf cart to early bird dinner specials. Founded in 2008 in response to a gap in both the mainstream and alternative media, Unsilent Generation features information and commentary on a variety of timely issues and subjects, from a no-nonsense, progressive point of view. Most importantly, Unsilent Generation is not meant for any particular generation: It’s for everyone who is old or plans on some day becoming old.
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Comments
This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.
If you are interested in
Tue, 06/29/2010 - 15:20 — AnonymousDV (not verified)If you are interested in learning more about how the medical profession has been corrupted by big pharma read OUR DAILY MEDS by Melody Peterson. It is depressing but very well documented.
I have lost all faith in the
Wed, 06/30/2010 - 16:16 — KAC (not verified)I have lost all faith in the medical profession. As soon as you walk out of that exam room with the MD he or she has forgotten all about you. All they do is throw drugs at you. That's what big Pharma does. Every other commercial on TV is a drug commercial trying to scare you into taking more drugs. I am just sick to death of the Big Pharma. I am also afraid to go to a doctor for they will surely find something wrong with you and say here take this drug. By the time you are 60 you are taking 15 different drugs. that is what big Pharma wants $$$$$$$$,
I have worked in the medical
Thu, 07/01/2010 - 20:33 — Anonymous (not verified)I have worked in the medical field for doctors for 25 years. Take it from me they could care less about you.
Oh and to the "I have lost faith" commenter, you are absolutely correct. But it is not 60 year olds that are on 15 different medications it is 30 year olds on 15 different medications! It is absolutely out of control and there is no "hope" that Obama's healthcare reform will change any of this. Pharmaceutical companies and their contribution to the problem of rising healthcare costs was a virtual "hands off" topic during the healthcare debate...
I only go to do blood tests
Sun, 07/11/2010 - 00:56 — Anonymous (not verified)I only go to do blood tests twice a year. From those I see what I need. I don't trust them, don't listen to them, don't do the tests they ask (what? a cat scan for a bump I've had in my throat since I was a kid? screw you, vampire in white coat!).
They will find something wrong with you, whatever your age is. Do you often feel like a package on a conveyor belt when you go see them? in and out, quick! next!
Take my advice: go vegan, eat whole organic foods, do veggie juiced and smoothies, get out and take walks, laugh often, quit television and enjoy your life. That will be your road to health and a fit body and mind.