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On the Take: How Medicine's Complicity with Big Business Can Endanger Your Health
 
 

On the Take: How Medicine's Complicity with Big Business Can Endanger Your Health [Kindle Edition]

Jerome P. Kassirer M.D.

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Produktbeschreibungen

From Publishers Weekly

"Some physicians become known as whores." This is strong language in Kassirer's mostly temperate but tough look at how big business is corrupting medicine—but according to Kassirer, one doctor's wife used the word "whore" to describe her husband's accepting high fees to promote medical products. Such personal anecdotes distinguish Kassirer's look at the conversion of America's health-care system into a commercial enterprise. Kassirer, former editor-in-chief of the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine, notes the range of conflicts of interest between profit-centered business and people-centered medicine, such as the drug industry's huge expenditures (in the billions) for courting doctors to use their products, for recruiting physicians to tout their drugs or, more slyly, to present seemingly objective medical discussions that, on closer examination, do favor the company's product over others. Kassirer also covers the abuses of both fee-for-service (which can lead doctors to perform unnecessary but lucrative tests and procedures) and HMOs (which reward doctors for keeping costs down). The author calls for more scrutiny of the health-care industry by Congress and a "sustained public outcry against inappropriate practices"; the banning of industry gifts to medical personnel; and—difficult to imagine—disclosure to patients by doctors of financial incentives they are receiving.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Pressestimmen


"A surprisingly bare-knuckled book by one of the last editors-in-chief at the New England Journal of Medicine."--Mother Jones


"A temperate but tough look at how big business is corrupting medicine."--Publishers Weekly


"Kassirer's quiet fury is palpable as he watches his beloved medical profession being corrupted by businesses willing to do whatever it takes to get their drugs prescribed."--American Scientist


"From this book's title to its final words...Jerome P. Kassirer slams his fellow physicians.... 'It shouldn't have to be patients' responsibilities to protect themselves against the medical profession, ' Kassirer writes. Bravo to that."--Tom Graham, Washington Post Book World


"Documents with well-referenced examples, how conflicts of interest, primarily financial in nature, have infiltrated all areas of the profession."--New England Journal of Medicine


"Kassirer...has taken on the daunting task of documenting the varied and ingenious ways in which


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Amazon.com:  17 Rezensionen
41 von 41 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
We're not as objective as we think we are 18. April 2005
Von Martin G. Kistin - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Thirty years ago Dr. Kassirer was my chief when I was a medical house officer in Boston. (That will serve as my disclosure of possible conflict of interest although we have had little contact since that time.)

He has been a wildly successful nephorlogist/researcher, clinician and teacher. As editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, he constantly expressed concerns over possible conflict of interest and its influence on published medical literature.

This book is a highly researched and extensively documented look at conflicts of interest and potential conflicts of interest in the medical literature and other closely related areas of medicine. Sometimes there are situations where potential conflict of interest has little or no influence on our decision making. As amply documented in On the Take, there are other times when conflict of interest may impact our decision making to the detriment of our patients. This book examines when and how the harmless potential conflict of interest moves into the realm of a serious, even ethical, dilemma.

Amazingly, these conflicts may extend beyond the published medical literature to consensus papers and clinical guidelines increasingly embraced by the government and major medical societies and these conflicts of interest may even intrude into organizations designed to protect the consumer like the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and the CDC (Center for Disease Control).

We as physicians minimize the extent to which potential conflicts of interest influence us in our medical practice - a view not widely shared by patients or government regulatory committees.

Dr. Kassirer presents a number of suggestions to improve the situation. Some of these are already being implemented by major medical journals. Others will depend on the integrity of individual practitioners.

This book should be a must-read for medical students - both those planning to do medical research and those who will use the medical research to guide their medical practices.

Martin G. Kistin, M.D.
74 von 79 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
essential reading 26. Januar 2005
Von Paul Gahlinger, MD, PhD - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
I rarely write reviews, but in this case feel obligated to point out what a tremendous service Dr. Kassirer has provided. As a physician, I have always been concerned about the influence of gifts and outright payments to doctors and researchers in promoting pharmaceuticals and other healthcare. However, I had no idea how extensive and pervasive it is. Dr. Kassirer has done an outstanding job in giving us a picture of the truth. This is a very well written book. I strongly recommend that all medical students and physicians read it, and suggest that everyone interested in healthcare do so.

As a minor point: Dr. Kassirer does not address the same influence which is present in alternative and complementary medicine--whose practitioners often benefit from the negative press of scientific (allopathic) medicine. In fact, it is just as bad or even worse in those types of care.

Finally, I must point out that I have never met Dr. Kassirer and have no financial inducement to write this :-)

Paul Gahlinger, MD, PhD
61 von 66 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Big Pharma Out of Control 19. Januar 2005
Von Joel M. Kauffman - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Fact-dense, well referenced, yet balanced in tone and easy to read, this book is the best exposé I have ever read on the financial conflicts of the medical profession caused by the efforts of Big Pharma, which for this review will include device and test manufacturers as well as drug makers. From pens and pads to cruises and fake consulting arrangements, Big Pharma has caused financial conflicts in many physicians and others "on the take". Many of the consulting deals are to give talks, ostensibly based on good medical science, that promote a product. Much of this is shown to occur at Continuing Medical Education courses sponsored by Big Pharma in which gifts are freely dispensed, reprints of journal articles favorable to products are handed out, and financial ties of the "consultants" giving talks are minimized or concealed.

Academic researchers are tainted as well. By being encouraged by their universities to obtain grants with overhead from Big Pharma, they must do research that helps in product development. Agreements may delay, prevent or pollute the publication of results. When a product possibility from a government (usually NIH) grant is seen, federal legislation passed 20 years ago allows the researcher to patent discoveries, form a company, and do clinical trials on his own potential product. While this may have led to valuable results, the potential for bias at every step due to financial conflict is clearly laid out.

Journals fare little better, even the prominent JAMA, NEJM and Annals of Internal Medicine. Papers that may have been ghost-written by Big Pharma on clinical trials with selectively favorable results are published [see Joel M. Kauffman, Bias in Recent Papers on Diets and Drugs in Peer-Reviewed Medical Journals, J. Am. Physicians & Surgeons, 9(1), 11-14 (2004)]. Editors and peer-reviewers may have ties to Big Pharma. Editorials and comments in medical journals may be written by authors with financial conflicts of interest. Revealing such conflicts is mostly on the honor system at present.

Clinical guidelines for physicians are promulgated by committees whose members often have close ties to Big Pharma. The products included in formularies of HMOs, Medicare and other insurers, the only products that will be paid for, are influenced by Big Pharma, whose general lobbying efforts are already legendary.

Dr. Kassirer gives many specific examples of financial conflicts. Far from quitting with the devastating description of how bad things are, he goes on to make specific suggestions for reform, while being very realistic about their success without federal action for certain conflicts. He lists many desirable changes, such as no gifts from Big Pharma at all, boycotting meetings sponsored by Big Pharma, disclosure mandated for all financial ties, and selection of journal editors, officers of medical societies and leaders of medical schools who have no financial conflicts. He did not seem to indicate the degree of influence of Big Pharma on the FDA.

Trying not to alienate most of the medical profession, Dr. Kassirer wrote that most MDs are basically ethical and went into the profession for non-financial as well as financial reasons. Reductions in income with increased work loads due to inadequate compensation from HMOs and Medicare is one of the reasons so many MDs have looked outside normal practice for income.

******

He dropped a few hints that most major classes of drugs are more beneficial than they actually are [see Joel M. Kauffman, "Drugging Cardiovascular Disease", J. Am. Physicians & Surgeons, 9(4), 98-99 (2004)], and that alternative practices are not worth much [see Joel M. Kauffman, "Alternative Medicine: Watching the Watchdogs at Quackwatch", Website Review, J. Scientific Exploration 16(2), 312-337 (2002)].

This is a very minor blemish on one of the great exposés of all time, the "Unsafe at Any Speed" of the medical madness in the USA today.

******

Daniel Haley's "Politics in Healing" describes the squashing of alternatives.

Charles T. McGee's "Heart Frauds" exposes the mythology behind so much medical advice.

H. Gilbert Welch's "Should I Be Tested for Cancer?" gives the evidence for the harm in excessive testing.

John Anderson's "Overdosed America" reveals the extent of perverted clinical drug trials.

Merrill Goozner's "The $800 Million Pill" give the lie to Big Pharma's claim that high prices are needed for the discovery of breakthrough drugs, as does...

Marcia Angell's "The Truth About the Drug Companies", which also suggests how the perversion of drug trials can be halted.

Beliebte Markierungen

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&quote;
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 (the reminder is spent for "direct-to-consumer advertising").28 &quote;
Markiert von 4 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
With approximately 600,000 physicians in active practice29 this amounts to more than $30,000 spent on each physician. &quote;
Markiert von 4 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
He found that at 88 of 159 advisory committee meetings, half or more of the committee members had financial interests in the topic being evaluated. &quote;
Markiert von 4 Kindle-Nutzern

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