Seroxat/Paxil : Deception As A Marketing Tool
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/aug/24/deception-marketing-tool/
Drug industry writers behind some articles purportedly written by doctors
Monday, Aug. 24, 2009 | 2:05 a.m.
A student who hands in a term paper under his own name when in fact it had been written by someone else has committed a serious breach of ethics.
The same is true for doctors who allow their bylines to appear above articles published in medical journals when in fact the articles were largely produced by ghostwriters pushing a product.
According to stories published Wednesday by The New York Times and the Associated Press, many doctors have been persuaded by drug companies to cooperate on such articles.
A “sophisticated ghostwriting program” used by London-based drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline to promote an antidepressant pill called Paxil was an example given by AP. Although the company says it has discontinued the ghostwriting program, the news service obtained court documents showing that it had used this marketing tactic.
The danger here is that doctors are trusted. Readers who see a doctor’s name atop an article about a certain drug are apt to believe what is being stated. They would certainly be more skeptical if they knew the article was actually written by people working for the company that makes the drug.
Ghostwritten articles on Paxil, which highlighted doctors as their authors, appeared in five medical journals from 2000 to 2002. AP reported that today hundreds of people are pressing personal injury and wrongful death suits against GlaxoSmithKline, claiming the company downplayed the risks of Paxil.
The Times disclosed that there is “a growing body of evidence suggesting that doctors at some of the nation’s top medical schools have been attaching their names and lending their reputations to scientific papers that were drafted by ghostwriters working for drug companies — articles that were carefully calibrated to help the manufacturers sell more products.”
There are no laws prohibiting ghostwriting. But there is no question that the widespread practice is unethical and that universities and medical associations should crack down. We agree with a bioethics expert at Duke University who told the Times, “To blow this off is not acceptable.”
But doesn’t part of the problem lie in the journals, which are supposed to be peer-reviewed but must not have very stringent standards?
Bloggerwithocd blogs about what it’s like to live with obsessive compulsive disorder at http://www.itsmewithocd.blogspot.com.
I’m still recovering from the shock. It never crossed my mind that a medical doctor would put their own name to an article written by a Drug company.
Call me naive, call me stupid, call me joe public…
I’d like as much chapter & verse as possible. Hyperlinks to sources please.
I live in Ireland and, if this has been done in USA, my hypothesis is that it’s going on in Ireland too.
I suppose that it’s normal for medical doctors to take money and benefits-in-kind from Drug companies. I suppose this is not challenged during their training because their education doesn’t cover this issue? I wish I knew more about how ethical issues are covered during the initial and on-going training of doctors.
Grubby little money making it sounds like to me. On the one hand, this is the noblest profession imaginable, the savers of lives, those on whom we are so dependent. On the other hand, there seems to be a relationship that threatens to undermine and sully the reputation of all doctors.
I wonder if there are any doctors reading this blog and comments. This may be a forum for the converted. But I take this news very seriously.
Bloggerwithocd, journals are money making devices. Trust none of them without good reason. There are probably too many journals, all hoping to make their editor and board a name.
I suspect there are ethical, honest, open people working hard to improve drugs and prescribing practice. The likes of those who set out to fool us drag all downwards.
ps I’m going to cut and paste this blog post into my blog.
SOMEONE OUT THERE..ANYONE WHO READ THIS..PLEASE HELP ME FIND MORE DATA…ON THE DRUG BEFORE PROZAC ETC. THE NAME WAS IMIPRAMINE.
WHERE IT THE DATA ON THIS..THERE HAS BEEN NO REPORTS MADE BACK IN THE 1970′S-1980′S OF THE ADVERSE REACTION OF THIS DRUG.
MY SISTER WILL BE THE FIRST ..AND I HOPE MANY WILL FOLLOW. PLEASE HELP ME…
http://www.Drugawareness.org/recentcases/suspicious-suicide-of-sister
FINALLY SOLVED.
COPY AND PASTE LINK. READ!