This issue is
dedicated to about 15 pages of quotations from exposé books, all clearly showing how the
pharmaceutical companies, FDA, and AMA lie to us and get both you and your doctors to
prescribe/use unsafe medicines. Clearly they have no intention of ever curing any
diseases; their single overwhelming goal is to get as deep into your wallet as possible
and stay there for the rest of your life. While I have touched on this subject a
couple times before, this one is pretty comprehensive. I do not really expect any of you to read this entire issue in one
sitting, but save it for future reference. Although I have put some serious editing into
this issue, the credit for compiling this list of quotes from various books goes to Dani
Veracity of News Target Insider fame. I provide her entire article here, rather
than sending you to their web site for a couple reasons: 1) most of you wouldnt go
there and read it all because it was 20 pages that subject you to a great deal of their
own advertisements (thats how they get their paychecks), and 2) I do not
wholly agree with many of the things they are pushing on that site because some of them
clearly lead you away from the logic I am trying to instill in you. They lean hard
toward the Naturopathic realm just as hard in that direction as JAMA leans toward
the pure chemical drug world (e.g., they push Soy products hard and that is a killer just
as much as Vioxx). Middle of the road is the safest path at this point. In any
case, they do occasionally have some good articles, which the following is one of. The Great Direct-to-Consumer
Prescription Drug Advertising Con: How patients and doctors alike are easily influenced to demand dangerous drugsby Dani Veracity A cute, animated ball bounces around very sadly until he takes a
magic potion; suddenly, it becomes happier than ever. No, that isnt the plot of a
new childrens movie. On the contrary, its the storyline of a Zoloft
commercial yes, Zoloft, a powerful antidepressant drug. In the 1990s,
direct-to-consumer advertising like this increased at a compoundedannually rate of
30 percent, according to Ian Morrisons book, Health Care in the New Millennium.
In fact, by 1995, drug companies had tripled the amount of money they formerly allotted to
consumer-direct advertising, writes to Gary Null in Death by Medicine. Since
then, pharmaceutical advertising has grown to an entirely new, pop culturesavvy
level. These days, its hard to tell the difference between
pharmaceutical commercials and car commercials. Both are almost always intended to look
cool. Car and pharmaceutical commercials use the same hooks popular
music, good acting and lofty promises to hook consumers and reel them in. Falling
prey to car commercials results in little more than hefty car payments; however, becoming
seduced by pharmaceutical companies can result in the consumer willingly taking powerful
drugs, at the risk of serious illness and even death. In spite of this tremendous risk,
pharmaceutical advertisements are becoming increasingly common and, unfortunately,
increasingly effective. In 2000, pharmaceutical companies spent $2.5 billion on mass
media pharmaceutical advertisements, according to Mike Fillon in Ephedra: Fact or
Fiction. This number increased to over $3 billion in 2003, according to Dr. John
Abramsons book Overdosed America. In his book, Death by Prescription,
Dr. Ray D. Strand looks at these high figures and poses the question: Why? Why do
pharmaceutical companies spend billions of dollars on direct-to-consumer advertising, when
consumers can only obtain prescriptions for these drugs through a doctor? Wouldnt it
seem that consumers have no influence whatsoever on the success of a prescription drug, so
advertising should be directed entirely toward doctors? That makes sense, but its not the way things work.
Pharmaceutical companies wouldnt spend billions of dollars on direct-to-consumer
advertising if it didnt work. In fact, the advertisements are working
too well. Fillon writes, The average number of prescriptions per person in
the United States increased from 7.3 in 1992 to 10.4 in 2000. Along with this increase in
demand, there has been a shift towards the use of more expensive medications. Its
more than a coincidence that many of the most expensive medications happen to be those
medications that are most heavily advertised. In fact, between 1999 and 2000,
prescriptions for the 50 most heavily advertised drugs rose six times faster than
prescriptions for all other drugs, according to Katharine Greiders book, The Big
Fix. So, how is direct-to-consumer advertising so effective in a system in which
doctors write out the prescriptions? Telling Clever Stories with Misleading Ads Well, first, lets explore direct-to-consumer advertising,
namely the television
commercial. Most prescription drug commercials follow the same script progression: First,
the commercial shows how bleak life was for a person or character before taking whatever
prescription medicine the commercial is advertising. Then, the protagonist demonstrates or
tells how wonderful life is while on the drug. Finally, a voiceover obligingly lists the
side effects, often speaking as quickly and inaudibly as possible. Take, for example, a Paxil commercial that was recently
popular. At the beginning of the commercial, the typical 30-something-year-old woman is
standing outside a house, looking through the window at the happy party going on inside.
She looks so lonely and depressed that it must break nearly every consumers heart.
Whats wrong with her? we compassionate humans gasp in unison. The
voiceover answers our question as we think it: The woman has social anxiety
disorder, a condition that can be treated with the prescription drug Paxil. Suddenly, the now-medicated woman rings the doorbell and, with a
huge smile on her face, joins the party. We see how much fun she is having and we are so
happy for her! Of course, the voiceover quickly goes through the list of Paxils
potential side effects, but how can we concentrate on that, when were so busy
rejoicing at the womans new happiness? Whoever wrote that commercial should write
Hallmark movies. After seeing it a few times, I was convinced that most of my
non-immediate family had social anxiety disorder and I even called one relative up to
suggest that she take Paxil. Im not even a gullible person, yet I was
persuaded by pharmaceutical company advertising. Doctors Prescribe Whatever the Patient Names We are what Dr. Strand calls a self-medicated
society. Consumers do not actually write their own prescriptions, but they practically do,
based on whatever drugs they see advertised on television. Strand writes, Surveys
reported in our medical literature reveal that when a patient comes into a doctors
office and requests a specific drug that he has seen advertised in the media, the doctor
writes the exact prescription the patient requested more than 70 percent of the
time! So, lets say that a consumer who has been feeling a little
sad lately sees a commercial for the antidepressant drug Zoloft. The commercial
demonstrates the symptoms for depression and the consumer identifies with them. Suddenly,
he or she thinks, Im not just sad. Im depressed, which is a
medical condition that can be treated by the prescription drug Zoloft.
With this in mind, the consumer goes to a medical doctor and says, Ive been
really depressed a lot lately. Ive been [the consumer recites the depression
symptoms listed in the Zoloft commercial]. I think I need Zoloft. So,
according to Strand, theres a 70 percent chance the doctor will prescribe Zoloft,
the exact prescription the consumer requested. Thats how pharmaceutical commercials
really work. They directly influence consumer behavior, yet drug companies claim they only
educate patients, but dont persuade them to do anything. (Im sorry, but I just have to throw in a loud
Bullshit! here before this education makes me barf!) Doctors are Easy to Manipulate, Drug Companies Discover You may be wondering why doctors base their prescriptions on the
requests of their patients, who usually have no medical training whatsoever. Thats a
good question with a simple answer. The pharmaceutical-advertising machine seduces
doctors, too. According to Burton Goldbergs book, Alternative
Medicine, paid
pharmaceutical advertisements are the main source of the Journal of the American
Medical Associations revenues. The American Psychological Association
is equally under the pharmaceutical companies spell, as 15 to 20 percent of the American
Psychological Associations (APA) income comes from pharmaceutical advertisements
in its journals. In Innocent Casualties, Elaine Feuer calls these
advertisements intentionally misleading because they promote the
pharmaceutical by exaggerating a drugs benefits while downplaying its hazards
in small print in the addendum. This is very similar to the obligatory side
effects voiceover recited at the end of a pharmaceutical television commercial;
neither consumers nor doctors pay much notice to the final voiceover or
fine print. Just in case advertisements in the Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA) havent properly seduced doctors, pharmaceutical
companies take an extra promotional step by aggressively detailing doctors,
which involves promoting drugs through door-to-door giveaways of free information and
samples, according to Health Care in the New Millennium. Morrison writes that
Pfizer alone has 4,500 people in its sales force, but these
employees salaries are small change compared to the increased revenue they
encourage. The next time you watch television or read a magazine, pay
special attention to pharmaceutical advertisements. Notice their promotional hooks and be
grateful that you, unlike most consumers, are no longer susceptible to their influence.
Thats what knowledge, unlike naiveté, brings you. The Experts Speak on Pharmaceutical Advertising: In the pharmaceutical area, DTC advertising has been
increasing in the late 1990s at a rate of around 30 percent compounded annually. Once
prevented by regulation from advertising aggressively, pharmaceutical companies now see
DTC advertising as a major source of stimulating demand for their product; they spent $1.3
billion on DTC advertising in 1998 alone. This has had two key effects: 1) it has built
brand awareness and product awareness in the minds of end users (consumers), who are
increasingly taking medications for chronic conditions in increasingly crowded and
competitive therapeutic categories cholesterol management, cardiovascular diseases,
asthma, allergy, and other forms of respiratory ailments; and 2) more directly, it has
encouraged users to visit their doctors and ask for the product by name. Health
Care in the New Millennium by Ian Morrison, page 44 In order to reach the widest audience possible, drug
companies are no longer just targeting medical doctors with their message about
antidepressants. By 1995, drug companies had tripled the amount of money allotted to
direct advertising of prescription drugs to consumers. The majority of the money is spent
on seductive television ads. Death By Medicine by Gary Null PhD, page 13 In 2000, pharmaceutical companies spent $2.5 billion on
mass media ads for prescription drugs. Admittedly, this is a small portion of the $101.6
billion spent on advertising of mainstream consumer products in the United States.
Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike
Fillon, page 75 The stage could not have been set more perfectly for
prescription drug advertising to become a major force in American medicine. And so it did.
In 1991, the drug companies spent a paltry $55 million on advertising drugs directly to
consumers. Over the next 11 years, this increased more than 50-fold to over $3 billion in
2003. The ads appeal to viewers as independent decision makers capable of forming
their own opinions about which drugs they need and resonate with the growing
concern that HMOs and managed care plans tend to withhold the best care to save
money. Overdosed America by John
Abramson MD, page 81 While $3 billion in
advertising may seem like an awful lot, rest assured that the drug companies arent
worried. Why? Americans are expected to spend over $500 billion on drugs this year
not including the extra $100 billion estimated for the Medicare drug benefit program.
Spending on prescription drugs is now the fastest growing portion of healthcare spending
in the United States. Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page
176 Many of us dont find the amount of money spent on
marketing prescription drugs to physicians surprising, but when considering the billions
of dollars spent on marketing prescription drugs to the public, dont you wonder why?
After all, you can obtain prescriptions only through a doctor. Pharmaceutical companies
are willing to spend this kind of advertising money on only their most recently approved
medication. Death By Prescription by
Dr. Ray D Strand, page 48 The average number of prescriptions per person in the
United States increased from 7.3 in 1992 to 10.4 in 2000. Along with this increase in
demand, there has been a shift toward the use of more expensive medications. Its
more than a coincidence that many of the most expensive medications happen to be those
medications that are most heavily advertised. Ephedra Fact And Fiction
by Mike Fillon, page 77 According to a report prepared by the National Institute
for Health Care Management, a nonprofit research foundation created by the Blue Cross/Blue
Shield health insurance plans, the fifty most-advertised prescription medicines
contributed significantly last year to the increase in the nations spending on
drugs. The increases in the sales of the fifty drugs that were most heavily advertised to
consumers accounted for almost half the $20.8 billion increase in drug spending last year,
according to the study. The remainder of the spending increase came from 9,850
prescription medicines that companies did not advertise, or advertised very little. The
study attributed the spending increase to a boost in the number of prescriptions for the
fifty drugs, and not from a rise in their price. Ephedra Fact And
Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 77 Pharmaceutical companies are in business to make money; with the
exception of over-the-counter medications that will be sold in great numbers, the only way
a pharmaceutical company can make lots of money is by developing medications that can be
patented. Natural herbs and foods, as well as medications that can no longer be
patented, wont be pushed in advertising because theres no real
money to be made on them. Attaining Medical Self Efficiency An
Informed Citizens Guide by Duncan Long, page 11 Not surprisingly the super aspirin have received
lots of favorable press on the TV since theres money to be made. With the dollars
pharmaceutical companies make, translating into greater advertising revenues for
broadcasters and publishers, the rush is to push the super aspirin and play up the dangers
of common aspirin. Attaining Medical Self Efficiency An Informed
Citizens Guide by Duncan Long, page 13 The cheap-but-effective medications that cant be
patented are also kept out of the limelight by the big companies paying for advertising
and the mass media intent on making money through advertising. Attaining
Medical Self Efficiency An Informed Citizens Guide by
Duncan Long, page 19 When you go into a pharmacy to get a prescription filled,
you can often pay considerably less by choosing a generic drug over a brand name. The
generic drugs are often made by the same manufacturer as the name-brand medication
the extra price is in the packaging and advertising. Even when a different company makes
the generic medication, it is every bit as good as the brand name because it is required
to meet certain standards before it can be sold in the U.S. Attaining
Medical Self Efficiency An Informed Citizens Guide by
Duncan Long, page 183 In contrast, most physicians are unaware of the
considerable risks and limited benefits of commonly used prescription cholesterol-lowering
agents. In addition, since niacin is a widely available generic agent, no
pharmaceutical company stands to generate the huge profits that the other lipid-lowering
agents have enjoyed. As a result, niacin does not enjoy the intensive advertising
that the HMG CoA reductase inhibitors and gemfibrozil enjoy. Despite the
advantages of niacin over other lipid-lowering drugs, niacin accounts for
only 7.9 percent of all lipid-lowering prescriptions. Encyclopedia
Nutritional Supplements by Michael T Murray MD, page
90 In 1996, Russia spent about $1.75 million on testing. But
1997 opened with a smaller HIV/AIDS budget, unpaid doctors and nurses countrywide, and
hospitals with empty pharmaceutical shelves. Far from being able to afford $10,000 to
$40,000 a year to treat HIV patients in ways that met U.S. standards, or to continue a
nearly $2 million testing program, Russia couldnt even find the wherewithal to buy
television advertising time on national television to promote AIDS education.
Betrayal Of Trust By Laurie Garrett, page 205 According to the study, Vioxx, an arthritis drug
sold by Merck & Company, was the most-heavily-advertised prescription drug and also
accounted for more of last years increased drug spending than any other single drug.
Merck spent $160.8 million to promote Vioxx to consumers more than PepsiCo
spent to advertise Pepsi or Budweiser spent to advertise its beer, the study said. With
the help of the advertising, Vioxx sales quadrupled to $1.5 billion last year from
about $330 million in 1999. Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 77 And if that werent enough, the British
pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline spent more on consumer advertising
than any other company. It spent $417 million on advertising last year an increase
of 40 percent from the previous year. Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 178 Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent by
pharmaceutical companies to research and then advertise their patented medical drugs to
physicians and consumers. No such bankroll exists for nutritional supplements. Thats
because nutritional supplements, based on vitamins, minerals, herbs, and natural
substances such as MSM, are not patentable. The Miracle Of MSM by Stanley W Jacob, page 13 The reason drugs cost more in America than in any other
country boils down to one simple factor: the pursuit
of maximum profit.
The pharmaceutical industry has taken every opportunity, used every ploy, to deceive the American people.
To derail efforts at making pharmaceutical benefits an integral part of Medicare, they
spent tens of millions of dollars on an advertising campaign to discredit the Canadian
system, and even created a bogus organization, Citizens for Better Medicare,
to try to lend credibility to their efforts. And now they are introducing piecemeal
discount card programs in an effort to defuse efforts for more comprehensive change.
Health Care Meltdown by Robert H Lebow
MD, page 263 But Canadas system
has born the brunt of negative advertising campaigns in the U.S., campaigns which have
been successful in coloring Americans perceptions of the Canadian system. The
American Medical Association spent several million dollars in the early 90s to
discredit the Canadian system and create doubts in the mind of the American public about a
government-managed system for universal coverage. And in 2000, in a somewhat less
successful ad campaign that cost perhaps $60 million, the American pharmaceutical industry
tried to discredit the Canadian system. A ubiquitous bus from Canada appeared
in a plethora of TV spots and full-page newspaper ads across the U.S. The goal was to
derail efforts to make pharmaceutical benefits an integral part of Medicare. Health Care
Meltdown by Robert H Lebow MD, page 149 Most, but not all, megasites support themselves with ads
for prescription drugs, vitamins, and medical sundries, as well as laptops, life
insurance, and books typical Internet commerce. Therefore, advertisers may
influence the information you find on the site. Healthcare Online for
Dummies by Howard and Judi Wolinsky, page 23 With annual U.S. revenues of about $100 billion and
worldwide revenues of $300 billion, the pharmaceutical industry is one of the largest,
most powerful industries, producing some of the most sophisticated marketing and
advertising anywhere. Marketing is the economic equivalent to waging war sizing up
your own forces, your enemys (the competition), and emphasizing your own strengths
and your enemys weaknesses. Marketing strategy meetings are akin to war rooms where
generals map out their plans for attack and defense. Syndrome X by Jack Challem Burton Berkson MD and Melissa Smith, page 55 The reason that prescription drugs are not recognized as
one of the biggest killers in America is complex. Drug companies who make huge profits
from the sale of drugs spend more than $10 billion a year promoting drugs, and spend next
to nothing warning the public about potential risks. Drug companies also engage in misleading
advertising campaigns which make outright false or unrealistic claims, but which
convince that vast majority of the public that most or all prescription drugs are not only
safe, but the key to better health and a better life. The doctors themselves are also a
part of the problem. Doctors chronically under-report and even ignore the deaths or
adverse reactions to the drugs they prescribe because it is not in their professional
self-interest to raise public awareness to the danger. Doctors are afraid of being sued,
they maintain a culture of denial, and they also profit from their relationships with the
big drug companies. The government is also part of the problem because it does not have
the resources or the political will to do more about the dangers of prescription drags.
Also, powerful members of the American government, from the President on down, are all
lobbied heavily by the cash-rich drug companies. Prescription
Medicines, Side Effects and Natural Alternatives by
American Medical Publishing, page 16 First of all, consider the fact that the American
prescription drug industry the giant pharmaceutical companies is the most
profitable industry in the world. Drug companies make more money than banks, more
money than oil companies, more money than Ford or GM, more money than anybody. Drug
companies spend billions of dollars on advertising and promotion some $10 billion
every year. This advertising is directed at both doctors, and directly to the
public. Prescription Medicines, Side Effects and Natural Alternatives by American Medical Publishing, page 11 The United States is currently the only country in the
world that allows drug companies to advertise prescription drugs directly to the consumer.
It used to be that prescription drugs could only be touted to physicians. But now consumer
ads on TV tantalize you with great promises of health and well-being, skim through the
side effects as quickly as possible and then suggest you contact your physician or a drug
company hotline for more information. The drug companies are also responsible for the
expensive, slick, four-color ads you now see in consumer magazines and newspapers. You are
bombarded with $3 billion worth of advertising for prescription and over-the-counter drugs
every year. That should give you an idea of how valuable you are as a drug consumer and of
the staggering profits the drug companies rake in every year. Prescription
Alternatives by Earl Mindell RPh PhD and Virginia
Hopkins MA, page 531 Pharmaceutical companies spent $2.5 billion in 2000
promoting prescription drugs, an increase of nearly 45 percent over 1999. These
advertisements contribute to rising costs by inducing consumer demand for newer,
higher-priced drugs, when the older ones may work just as well. Prescription
For Dietary Wellness by Phyllis A Balch, page 285 Claritin, a formerly prescription antihistamine
used to control allergic symptoms, was far and away the most heavily advertised
prescription drug in the two years following the FDAs 1997 rules change. They
resisted the idea that there were equally good and perhaps even better ways to relieve
their allergy symptoms than a new (and therefore less well-tested) drug. Moreover, they
were unconcerned about Claritins cost (more than $2.10 per day): most had
prescription drug coverage as part of their health insurance. With an advertising budget
greater than that of Budweiser beer or CocaCola, Claritin took off: sales
grew from $1.4 billion in 1997 to $2.6 billion in 2000. Overdosed
America by John Abramson MD, page 153 Thus, it is not surprising that direct-to-consumer prescription drug
advertising is expected to increase to $7.5 billion by 2005, a 1,200% increase over a
decade, as drug manufacturers decide, as Vodra put it, to fight fire with fire in
the marketplace. Its only a small step from that to the adoption of an offense
is the best defense policy as marketing pressures intensify. Overdose by Jay S Cohen, page 162 The medication marketplace is a very competitive world. At pharmaceutical companies, doctors usually dont make the final decisions business people make them. In order to sell medications, good and bad, elaborate marketing and advertising strategies are necessary, and impressive rates of effectiveness are essential. Overdose by Jay S Cohen, page 35 A SelfMedicated Society Not only are we an overmedicated society, we are a
self-medicated one. Its true, physicians are prescribing more drugs than ever
before, but not only is the pharmaceutical industry effective in advertising prescription
medications, it has overwhelmingly persuaded the American public to buy tons of
over-the-counter medications. Death By Prescription by Ray D Strand, page 169 Surveys reported in our medical literature reveal that
when a patient comes into a doctors office and requests a specific drug that he has
seen advertised in the media, the doctor writes the exact prescription the patient
requested more than 70 percent of the time! Death By Prescription by Ray D Strand, page 49 But, again, there is a problem. While TV ads for drugs do
indeed list potential harmful side effects, the slickly produced ads gloss over them so
fast, and with such finesse, it creates an overwhelming impression among the public that
these potential dangers are all but nothing to worry about. Also, TV ads do not list all
of the potential side effects, but rather, just the most common side effects. So in
effect, advertisements for
prescription drugs on television are literally lying by omission. Prescription
Medicines, Side Effects and Natural Alternatives by
American Medical Publishing, page 13 Thirty percent of consumers reported having talked with
their doctor about a drug theyd seen advertised. Nearly half of those who asked for
an advertised drug 13 percent of all consumers came away with a script. In
another Kaiser study, co-sponsored by The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, nearly half of American consumers said they trust advertisements to
provide them with accurate information. But perhaps most telling are these
results of a recent NIHCM study: Between 1999 and 2000, prescriptions for the fifty most
heavily advertised drugs rose at six times the rate of all other drugs. Sales of those
fifty intensively promoted drugs were responsible for almost half the increase in
Americans overall drug spending that year. Makers of the new arthritis
drug Vioxx spent $160 million pushing it to consumers in 2000, more advertising
dollars than were dropped on Pepsi Cola, Budweiser beer, Nike shoes, or Campbells
soups. Vioxx sales shot up 360 percent. The Big Fix by Katharine Greider, page 30 This practice of massive advertising campaigns for drugs
in order to convince us and our doctors that we need various drugs and
specifying which drugs we do need should be a great concern for us. CONSUMER REPORTS
discussed this issue at length in two articles, which ran concurrently in the February and
March 1992 issues entitled, Pushing Drugs to Doctors and Miracle Drugs
or Media Drugs? They estimate a figure of 5 billion dollars was spent in 1991 for
this type of advertising and add, Though doctors insist their scientific training,
high intelligence, and sophistication enable them to resist manipulation, the truth is
that skillful marketers can influence M.D.s just as easily as they can sway the rest of
us. The pharmaceutical companies spend more on this advertising than they spend
in research and development of products. PROZAC Panacea or Pandora
by Ann Blake Tracy PhD, page 43 Merrell Dow pharmaceuticals mounted a massive advertising
campaign admonishing, If you want to quit smoking for good, see your doctor. ... Now
your doctor can provide a treatment to help control nicotine withdrawal symptoms.
The smoking industry is too vast and the number of smokers wishing to quit too lucrative
for smoking to be overlooked as a medical problem. Diseasing Of
America by Stanton Peele, page 119 The unnecessary surgery figures are escalating just as
prescription drugs driven by television advertising. Media-driven surgery such as gastric
bypass for obesity modeled by Hollywood personalities seduces obese people to
think this route is safe and sexy. There is even a problem of surgery being advertised on
the Internet. A study in Spain declares that between 20 and 25% of total surgical practice
represents unnecessary operations. Death By Medicine by Gary Null PhD, page 19 Since the mid-1990s, pharmaceutical companies have tripled
the amount of money they spend on direct-to-consumer advertising prescription drugs. From
1996 to 2000, totals rose from $791 million to nearly $2.5 billion. And despite the huge
increase, drug
companies spend even far more dollars in advertising their products to physicians, not
consumers. The $2.5 billion figure for consumer ads is concentrated on a relatively
small handful of medications. Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 176 Eli Lillys advertisements in the general media for Prozac
specifically state: Like other antidepressants, it
isnt habit forming. (Biggest lie I
ever heard) No wonder so many patients are not
informed either about serious withdrawal syndromes or dependence. Obviously such
statements by pharmaceutical companies and drug advocates are attempts to
educate the public out of their healthy concerns about drugs in general,
including Prozac-type medications. Although aggressively advanced, such
pronouncements are at odds with the clinical reality for many patients on the drugs.
Prozac Backlash by Joseph Glenmullen
MD, page 89 Yet the healthcare industry as with most other
industries is slow to recognize the Internets potential business
opportunities and threats. In addition, there is strong and irrational Internet resistance
from physicians, who control about 80 percent of healthcare resources. Not surprisingly,
pharmaceutical companies are switching their advertising budgets to target consumers
rather than physicians in an attempt to influence how consumers determine their medical
treatment needs. Future Consumer com by Frank Feather, page 190 The pharmaceutical companies have been quick to realize
the potential of this expanding market and are beginning to target advertising for
prescription medicines directly to consumers, on television and in print. These
developments can be positive, but they do require more effort and responsibility from all
of us. Graedons Best Medicine by
Joe Graedon & Dr Terasa Graedon, page 111 Among the wealthy nations that support the global
pharmaceutical industry, the United States is by far the most permissive in its regulatory
scheme. As other countries move to control prices and sharply limit advertising, the
industry increasingly turns to American consumers for its profits. The
Big Fix by Katharine Greider, page 172 The Kaiser Family Foundation reports that with thousands
of drugs on the market, 60 percent of DTC spending in 2000 went to plug just twenty
products. This intensive exposure creates what ad people call brand awareness.
A recent survey by market research firm Insight-Express found that, for example, 74
percent of respondents knew Claritin by name. More than half recognized Paxil,
45 percent knew the cholesterollowering Zocor, and nearly 80 percent were
aware of the pharmaceutical phenomenon Viagra. All have been among the most heavily
advertised drug products. The Big Fix by Katharine Greider, page 91 This translates to a likelihood that prescriptions are being given
for drugs that are more dangerous and less effective than patients or even doctors
realize. Until changes are made, both physicians and patients will be harmed by
prescribing decisions based on all-too-frequently generalized and misleading information
from advertisements. Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 178 Pharmaceutical companies have overcome the obstacles of
managed care. They have sophisticated pharmacoeconomic teams to negotiate the presence of
their products on the formulary, and they have understood how to use both legislative
action and sophisticated marketing to ensure that their products are not cut out of either
Medicaid or private sector formularies. They have been significantly investing in DTC
advertising as well as expanding their sales forces for detailing physicians. This is the
business model for the pharmaceutical industry in the late 1990s, and industry leaders
anticipate that these good times will continue rolling into the future. Health
Care in the New Millennium by Ian Morrison, page 48 Yet the mainstream media operate with somewhat of a double
standard. They are willing, even eager, to use the video news releases from the
pharmaceutical and medical technology industry. The morning talk shows are full of medical
technology miracles; they cover the wonders of new drugs and medical devices and
technology using the canned television images provided by the industry. More recently the
media have been given further conflicting incentives with the enormous explosion of
direct-to-consumer advertising; page after page of pharmaceutical industry supplements
appear in popular media. For example, pharmaceutical giant Pfizer purchased all of the
advertising space in an entire issue of Time magazine on the Future of
Medicine. Similarly, Johnson and Johnson purchased the advertising space of an
entire issue of Newsweek. Health Care in the New Millennium by Ian Morrison, page 79 Another issue associated with the cultural view of
menopause has to do with issues of youth and femininity. As Dr. Andrew Weil writes in his
Self Healing newsletter, there is an unstated selling point that is quite clear in
pharmaceutical company advertisements: that it is a chemical fountain of youth offering
persistent beauty, attractiveness, and satisfying sexuality in the face of advancing
age. Herbal Defense by Ralph T
Golan ND, page 210 Anyone who watches television cannot but help notice a new
trend in the past couple of years suddenly our TV programs are flooded with
advertisements for dozens of new prescription drugs. And they seem to promise everything.
Night after night, television commercials paid for by drug companies are promising to fix
or cure everything from depression and sleeplessness, to arthritis and allergy problems.
You name it, theyve got a drug for it, be the problem as serious as cancer, or as
trivial as baldness and unattractive toenails. Prescription Medicines,
Side Effects and Natural Alternatives by American
Medical Publishing, page 12 The 1997 change unleashed an unprecedented onslaught of
commercials. By 1999, the average American was exposed to nine prescription drug
advertisements on television every day. The number of television ads increased 40-fold
between 1994 and 2000. Suddenly it became a normal part of our everyday experience to be
confronted with the idea that we, or a loved one, might be suffering from ED (erectile
dysfunction, for those not in the know), arthritis pain, high cholesterol, nasal
congestion, osteoporosis, heartburn, or even the heartbreak of toenail fungus. In the
teachable moments created by these skillfully raised concerns, consumers are
educated about readily available drugs to solve the problem. Overdosed
America by John Abramson MD, page 152 Pharmaceutical Advertising in
Medical Journals and though Detailing Seduces Doctors By 1900, there were 22 homeopathic medical schools and
nearly 100 homeopathic hospitals in the U.S. In fact, 15% of all American physicians
practiced homeopathy at the turn of the century, according to Trevor Cook, Ph.D., D.I.
Horn, President of the British Homeopathic Medical Association. However, by the same
time, the bond between the AMA and the pharmaceutical companies was firmly established.
Paid advertisements from pharmaceutical companies in the AMAs journal were the
AMAs main source of revenue (as it is today). Prominent physicians were paid to
endorse proprietary drugs and doctors were deluged with free samples of pharmaceutical
drugs. Through a series of maneuvers including a new rating system for medical schools
aimed at eliminating homeopathic colleges, the practice of homeopathy had nearly
disappeared as a force in American medicine by 1930. Alternative
Medicine by Burton Goldberg, page 520 Drug company money influences every aspect of modern-day
psychiatry. The American Psychiatric Association is literally built on a foundation of
drug money: millions of dollars of pharmaceutical advertising money are poured into the
APAs publications, conferences, continuing education programs, and seminars. In
return, the APA bends over backward to help drug companies promote their products. And 15
to 20 percent of the APAs income in recent years has come directly from drug company
advertising in APA journals another means of guaranteeing good press for new
drugs. A Dose of Sanity by Sydney
Walker III MD, page 230 Pharmaceutical ad campaigns and the distribution of free
samples usually determine the drugs doctors use to treat patients with. Advertisements
in prominent medical journals are intentionally misleading, exaggerating a drugs
benefits while downplaying its hazards in small print in the addendum. Although the
FDA requires advertisers to present a fair balance, Cheryl Graham, Acting
Director of the FDAs Marketing Division, admits that one-half of
the journal ads violate this standard. And since the FDA screens only 10 to 20
percent of all drug promotions, physicians are forced to take drug companies at their
word. Innocent Casualties by
Elaine Feuer, page 73 Direct-to-consumer marketing increased 30 percent in 1998
alone. Through TV, magazine, and newspaper advertising, pharmaceutical companies are
taking their message directly to the public. If it werent for pharmaceutical
advertising supplements, Newsweek would be only three pages long. Similarly,
pharmaceutical companies have focused on detailing physicians very
aggressively (that is, promoting products through sales calls to doctors to provide
information and free samples). Pfizer alone has forty-five hundred people in its sales
force. Bristol-Myers Squibb and Hoffman-La Roche, for example, added over one thousand
salespeople over the last couple of years. Drug companies know that putting sophisticated
detailing teams in the field to promote their products to doctors makes a difference in
prescribing behavior. Doctors may find this offensive, but detailing works. Health
Care in the New Millennium by Ian Morrison, page 30 The FDAs bias is further shown by its selective
implementation of policy directives. Its duty, by law, is to set standards for drug
advertisements. Yet, according to a study conducted at the University of California and
published in The Wall Street Journal, 60% of the
pharmaceutical ads from medical journals violated FDA guidelines. But the FD, to this day,
has done nothing about these violations. Alternative
Medicine by Burton Goldberg, page 48 Such results can be reported by medical journalists
which are also hired by these PR firms in unsuspecting medical journals. Healthcare
PR firms also undertake conventional lobbying strategies, such as opposing restrictions on
direct-to-consumer advertising, which allows companies to market prescription
and OTC drugs using the same techniques as toiletry items. They can also move very quickly
and deftly to squash any negative news about their clients, as well as to
promote damaging news about others. Could it be this is a strategy being deployed against
the dietary supplement industry? Ephedra Fact And Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 146 Furthermore, physicians
who abide by a conventional Western medical perspective are more likely to publish papers
and be on editorial boards of scientific journals than their peers who hold to different
philosophies. There is kind of a selfselection process where physicians
who are against alternative medicine end up being on the editorial boards of the
journals, Dr. Gaby says. Its important to bear in mind that many medical
journals receive a substantial amount of revenue from the advertising dollars they get
from the pharmaceutical industry, whose interests would not be served by articles and
studies that recommended the use of alternative medicine over drugs and surgery.
Alternative Medicine by Burton
Goldberg, page 51 We are fully aware that what stands
in the way of change are powerful pharmaceutical companies, medical technology companies,
and special interest groups with enormous vested interests in the business of medicine.
They fund medical research, support medical schools and hospitals, and advertise in
medical journals. With deep pockets they entice scientists and academics to support their
efforts. Such funding can sway the balance of opinion from professional caution to
uncritical acceptance of a new therapy or drug. You only have to look at the number of
invested people on hospital, medical, and government health advisory boards to see
conflict of interest. The public is mostly unaware of these interlocking interests. For
example, a 2003 study found that nearly half of
medical school faculty, who serve on Institutional Review Boards (IRB) to advise on
clinical trial research, also serve as consultants to the pharmaceutical industry.
Death By Medicine by Gary Null PhD,
page 10 Yet doctors repeatedly make new drugs bestsellers within
months. Drug reps fill doctors cabinets with free samples, knowing that if
patients do well on them, they wont want to switch. Drug advertising seizes upon any
difference, no matter how trivial, to sway doctors to prescribe expensive new drugs with
no track records, and doctors readily oblige. Youd think that after recent disasters
with Baycol,
Rezulin, Lotronex, Duract, Redux and Fen-Phen, doctors would learn, but they keep
prescribing new drugs like Clarinex, Nexium, and Bextra at greater risk and cost. These
repeated problems compelled Drs. Marcia Angell and Arnold Relman, another former editor of
the New England Journal of Medicine, to warn, Few Americans appreciate the
full scope and consequences of the pharmaceutical industrys hold on our health care
system. Disease Prevention And Treatment by Life Extension Foundation, page 725 At first, pharmaceutical companies stepped up advertising, some of
which ran for four pages, in the medical journals and weekly magazines sent to
doctors offices. Soon, such ads constituted the medical journals major source
of funding, and while they continue to deny it, publishers are influenced by the
pharmaceutical industry in choosing which articles to print. Articles concerning
alternative treatments, such as the use of nutritional supplements, are few in number in
clinically oriented journals, and usually are routinely rejected in favor of articles
extolling the virtues of a prescription drug or surgical procedures. Health
and Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page
344 Recently, pharmaceutical companies have launched an even
cleverer plan. Whereas, in the past they depended on frequent visits to the doctors
offices by drug reps to convince doctors to use their drugs, now theyve bypassed
doctors altogether and advertise directly on television and the radio, urging people to
tell their doctors they want to try the advertised drug. Health and
Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 366 If you scan most clinical journals, you will see that they
are filled from cover to cover with ads from pharmaceutical companies and medical supply
dealers. These are very expensive ads. In addition, many of these companies give grants to
the journals in which they advertise. Unfortunately, this is also true of many nutrition
journals as well. Doctors tend to read the articles that deal with new drugs being
developed, new surgical techniques, and advances in diagnosis. The scattered nutritional
or biochemical articles are rarely read. Health and Nutrition Secrets by Russell L Blaylock MD, page 367 This subtle type of bias sometimes becomes more blatant.
For example, a former editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association
(JAMA) alleged that Pfizer, a major pharmaceutical company, had withdrawn $250,000
worth of advertising because an article appearing in JAMA had cast one of their
drugs in an unfavorable light. Preventing and Reversing Osteoporosis by Alan R Gaby MD, page 249 Another area in which pharmaceutical companies wield
enormous influence is medical education. Most doctors in this country are
visited on a regular basis by representatives, salesmen from large
pharmaceutical companies. In surveys, doctors list
pharmaceutical salesmen as one of their most important sources of information about new
drugs. Salesmen and drug company literature are where doctors first
learn about things like serotonin imbalances and serotonin
selectivity. Lavish advertisements in medical journals carry similar
messages. Prozac Backlash by
Joseph Glenmullen MD, page 226 Doctors have access to many other sources of medical
information. Some invite pharmaceutical representatives into their offices and
conferences, and some attend industry-sponsored conferences. Some avidly read free
pamphlets and journals sent to them by pharmaceutical companies. By contrast, some read
only the journals that come as part of membership in a professional society, and pay their
own money to subscribe to sources that are not dependent on pharmaceutical company
support, contain no advertising, and are funded entirely by subscription fees.
On The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D.,
page 84 Dr. Richard Smith, editor of the British Medical
Journal, has raised the concern that lucrative advertising and reprint sales can be a
corrupting influence. One experience at the Annals of Internal Medicine in 1992
sent a chill down the spines of editors and publishers alike. When the (then) editors,
Drs. Suzanne and Robert Fletcher, published a
study sharply critical of the pharmaceutical industry, pharmaceutical advertising in the
journal declined substantially, and remained lower than usual for months thereafter.
For editors of many journals whose profit margins are not robust, that experience
might lead them to be chary about criticizing the advertisers who support their
publications. On The Take by
Jerome P Kassirer M.D., page 91 Drug companies often claim that they are just helping the
public by providing physicians the best information possible. They admit that they might
make friends and generate goodwill for their companies in the process, but their primary
goal, they claim, is education, not marketing. One provider of medical education, Joe
Torre, the chief executive of an advertising agency that owns its own clinical
research company, said, Very often doctors are more influenced by what
other doctors say than what pharmaceutical companies have to say. So companies work
through medical education companies to have doctors who support their products talk about
their products in a favorable way. Thats called medical education.
On The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D.,
page 93 In effect, the publication is more a paid advertisement
for industry than a publication of a learned medical society. In fact, the misleading
headings are only part of the deception. The title, Symposia Excerpts, misleads the
reader to thinking that he is reading selected summaries of key talks on the formal
schedule of the conference. In fact, they are summaries of after-hours conferences
sponsored by pharmaceutical companies. Despite the assertion on the cover that the Symposia
Excerpts is a publication of the ATS, the ATS carefully disavows responsibility with a
disclaimer that reads: The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the
speakers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or recommendations of their
affiliated institutions, the publisher, the American Thoracic Society, or any other
persons. On The Take by
Jerome P Kassirer M.D., page 121 The PDR, free meetings and gifts, and direct contact by drug-company
representatives constitute three major ways that drug companies influence physicians
choices of medications. A fourth way is advertising. Most of this advertising is done in
medical journals, which also serve as an important source of information for
physicians. Overdose by Jay S
Cohen, page 56 In fact, pharmaceutical companies spend more than 21
billion dollars a year on promoting and marketing their products, of which about 88 percent
is directed at physicians. With approximately 600,000 physicians in active practice
this amounts to more than $30,000 spent on each physician. Although industry market
research data are unavailable, studies of physicians show what common sense predicts,
namely that physicians are influenced by all kinds of marketing tactics. On
The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D., page 78 Beyond these direct influences, drug companies exert broad
influence over the drug information received by doctors and consumers. The vast majority
of everything physicians and consumers read and know about medications comes from the drug
companies. Medication package inserts, drug advertising toward physicians and consumers,
and the information in the ubiquitous Physicians Desk Reference come directly from
the drug companies. Where do most doctors turn for medication and dosage information? To
the PDR, to drug company representatives who make the rounds of doctors offices, and
to advertising in medical journals. Yet, the medication information offered by these
drug-company-supported sources is often biased, incomplete, and sometimes
inaccurate. Overdose by Jay S
Cohen, page 16 A cursory look at almost any medical journal will reveal
dozens of advertisements by the drug companies. Glossy ads promote the efficacy or ease of
usage of drugs. Some ads boast that physicians dont have to bother reducing the
drugs dosages for older people, not even for those with other disorders or taking
other medication. The content of these ads is based on the information in package inserts,
with the same limitations or omissions of important side effects and/or lower, safer
doses. Overdose by Jay S Cohen,
page 56 Historical Perspective of Pharmaceutical Advertising One may guess that papers taking advertising dollars from
poppers pharmaceutical source were in no hurry to dig up the unflattering history of
animal experiments that did see immune damage stemming from use of the drug. AIDS:
A Second Opinion by Gary Null PhD with James Feast,
page 200 Back in the World War II era, it was the same for tobacco.
Page through a few magazines of the day to look at the advertisements for Pall Mall or
Lucky Strike and you will find that smoking is not only proclaimed to be safe but even
said to promote health! Moreover, everybody was lighting up, just as in a certain strata,
everybody was inhaling. Poppers and cigarettes were sexy, for gods sake. What is
being asserted, then, is that certain practices that now seem unconscionably risky were
once seen as innocent, as innocent as, in days gone by, puffing on a Lucky. AIDS:
A Second Opinion by Gary Null PhD with James Feast,
page 265 Fishbein was the most powerful man in American medicine in
his day. The AMA (and Fishbein) consolidated their hold over American medicine.
Subscriptions to the Journal had increased from 13,078 in 1900 to over 80,000 by 1924.
Income from pharmaceutical advertising was already in the hundreds of thousands of
dollars. Yet AMA leaders were conscious of the threat posed by irregular practitioners.
Ironically, the long-time General Manager of the Association, George H. Simmons, MD, had
himself been a homoeopathic practitioner in Lincoln, Nebraska, and one of a rather
partisan hue. Herbs Against Cancer by Ralph W Moss PhD, page 75 FDA Control (or lack or control) of Pharmaceutical Advertising Another connection between the FDA and the pharmaceutical
industry is through the Pharmaceutical Advertising Council (PAC). In 1985, the PAC teamed
up with the FDA to solicit funds from the pharmaceutical industry for the purpose of
combating medical quackery. The pharmaceutical Advertising Council and the FDA also
issued a joint statement addressed to the presidents of advertising and PR agencies
nationwide asking them to cooperate with a joint venture anti-fraud and quackery
campaign, according to Mark Blumenthal, Executive Director of the American Botanical
Council. Alternative Medicine by
Burton Goldberg, page 48 The primary culprit in promoting the mis-prescribing and
over-prescribing of drugs is the pharmaceutical industry, which now sells about $80
billion worth of drugs in the United States alone. By intimidating the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) into approving record numbers of me-too drugs (drugs that offer no
significant benefit over drugs already on the market) that often have dangerous adverse
effects and by spending well in excess of $12 billion a year to promote drugs, using
advertising and promotional tricks that push at or through the envelope of being false and
misleading, this industry has been extremely successful in distorting, in a profitable but
dangerous way, the rational processes for approving and prescribing drugs. Two studies of
the accuracy of ads for prescription drugs widely circulated to doctors both concluded
that a
substantial proportion of these ads contained information that was false or misleading and
violated FDA laws and regulations concerning advertising. Worst
Pills Best Pills by Sidney M Wolfe MD and Larry D
Sasich PharmD MPH, page 10 The division at FDA responsible for policing prescription
drug advertising has not been given adequate resources to keep up with the torrent of
newly approved drugs. As a result, the drug industry correctly believes it can get away
with more violative advertising than in the past. The role of the U.S. Congress in pushing
the FDA into approving more drugs, and passing, with the FDAs reluctant approval, legislation
to further weaken the FDAs ability to protect the public, cannot be
overlooked. Worst Pills Best Pills by Sidney M Wolfe MD and Larry D Sasich PharmD MPH, page 10 Though broadcast advertising of prescription drugs has
been legal for years, guidelines released by the FDA in 1997 clarified the rules for
advertising directly to consumers. According to these guidelines, drug companies can
fulfill their obligations for informing consumers about prescription drugs by referring in
advertisements to four sources of additional information: their doctor, a toll-free
number, a magazine or newspaper ad and a website. Ephedra Fact And
Fiction by Mike Fillon, page 77 Health care advocates were shocked by the decision of the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to allow drug makers to advertise prescription drugs on
television giving only minimal information about the risks involved. Under
The Influence Modern Medicine by Terry A Rondberg DC,
page 70 And for the first time in decades, pharmaceutical
companies are advertising heavily direct to the public. The 1962 Harris-Kefauver Amendment
to the Federal Food and Drug Act imposed strict regulations on pharmaceutical company
advertising. The requirements brought to a halt the aggressive marketing of notorious
drugs like amphetamine antidepressants and barbiturates. But in the mid-1990s, the FDA
liberalized the requirements pharmaceutical companies have to meet. The result has been a
surge of advertising drugs direct to consumers. Prozac Backlash by Joseph Glenmullen MD, page 231 Wilkes and a group of colleagues had earlier conducted a
study of prescription drug advertisements which showed many claims prove to be
inaccurate or misleading. The study was published in the June 1, 1992 issue of the Annals
of Internal Medicine. For the study, Wilkes group asked medical experts to
review 109 advertisements from the countrys ten leading medical journals. Using the
FDAs guidelines for pharmaceutical company advertising, the reviewers
indicated that 92% of
advertisements were not in compliance in at least one area of the FDAs
guidelines. Wilkes group speculated that the FDA is unable or unwilling to
enforce adequately its rules relating to drug advertising. Prozac
Backlash by Joseph Glenmullen MD, page 232 For years the pharmaceutical industry was allowed to
market its drugs only to doctors. It did this through medical journals, continuing medical
education, sponsored events, sales calls, and junk mail.
Then, in 1981, the drug industry proposed that the FDA allow advertising directly to
consumers, arguing that the public should not be denied access to the
knowledge that would be provided by such marketing. Four years later, the
pharmaceutical industry got its foot in the door when the FDA agreed to allow
direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising. But the rules were strict, and the
content of the ads was, therefore, limited: Drugs could be mentioned by name, but
advertisements that discussed the treatment of specific conditions were required to
include a lengthy list of side effects and contraindications (situations in which the drug
should not be used). As a result, the ads were vague and unfocused, primarily
brand-awareness campaigns designed to smooth the way at the doctors office.
Overdosed America by John Abramson MD,
page 151 In the fall of 1971, the FDA also made a serious attempt
to halt the growth of the increasingly popular field of alternative medicine. By defining
all unorthodox medical treatments as quackery, which they interpreted as
misinformation about health, the FDA
attempted to prevent physicians, manufacturers, and consumers from practicing alternative
therapies. The federal governments war against quackery was supported by the
pharmaceutical companies and the AMA. In 1985 the pharmaceutical Advertising Council and
the FDA solicited funds from the pharmaceutical industry to combat medical quackery; they
also issued a joint statement addressed to the presidents of advertising and PR agencies
nationwide, asking them to cooperate with the anti-quackery campaign. Innocent
Casualties by Elaine Feuer, page 11 Although it is entirely legal for a doctor to use a drug
off-label, it is illegal for a drug company to advertise a drug for any purpose other than
the one or ones approved by the FDA. By recruiting physicians to discuss off-label uses,
therefore, the drug companies, in essence, bypass official channels and create a potent
marketing force of physicians. One flagrant example of physicians aiding in marketing came
to light when a whistle blower charged that Warner-Lambert had engaged in unlawful
off-label marketing of the anti-epilepsy drug, Neurontin. In May 2004, Pfizer pled
guilty to Medicaid fraud and agreed to pay fines of approximately $430 million.
On The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D.,
page 28 Government intervention is also warranted on industry-initiated and industry-sponsored front organizations. These groups, often led by financially conflicted physicians, sponsor ventures such as pamphlets, brochures, pocket books, Web sites, and registries, and they have gotten out of hand, often subtly recommending off-label drugs and promoting expensive drugs. Although federal agencies have control over drug advertising, these ventures apparently have escaped detection and oversight. Nonetheless, they may have even more impact on the use and misuse of drugs than pharmaceutical advertising in medical journals and in the lay media. These publications masquerade as educational materials, but many are largely marketing efforts that deserve as much scrutiny as drug advertisements. On The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D., page 207 |