Guest guest Posted December 1, 2004 Report Share Posted December 1, 2004 > http://www.salon.com/opinion/huffington/2004/11/25/vioxx/ > > Bad medicine > There ought to be a special place in hell for > companies like drug giant Merck, whose painkiller > Vioxx may have killed 55,000 people. > > - - - - - - - - - - - - > > By Arianna Huffington > > Nov. 25, 2004 | As Democrats continue to search > heaven and earth for a moral values issue they > can call their own, I have just the prescription: > Why not start with the immoral behavior of giant > drug companies such as Merck that continue to > sacrifice the health of the public on the altar > of higher and higher profits? > > According to last week's Senate testimony by Dr. > David Graham, associate director for science and > medicine in the FDA's Office of Drug Safety, as > many as 55,000 patients may have died as a result > of taking Vioxx. Shocking. But not to Merck, > which had spent hundreds of millions of dollars > convincing Americans to take its blockbuster pain > pill even though the company's own studies showed > that it greatly increased the risk of heart > attacks and strokes. > > If Democrats want to appeal to voters who believe > in promoting what the president calls " a culture > of life, " they should make it a priority to put > an end to the kind of corporate behavior that > promotes a culture of death. > > Merck's actions throughout the entire Vioxx > affair have been utterly despicable. When the > company pulled the drug off the market in > September, CEO Raymond Gilmartin claimed that the > scientific findings that led to the withdrawal > were " unexpected. " Which is like releasing a > ravenous wolf into a pen full of sheep then > acting surprised that lamb chops are on the menu. > Because recently uncovered internal Merck > documents show that as far back as 1998 -- a year > before the drug was even approved by the FDA -- > the drug giant had evidence indicating that Vioxx > was a potential killer. > > But instead of going back to the drawing board, > the company made the heart-stopping decision to > push ahead -- using every weapon in its > well-funded arsenal to put off regulators, rope > in consumers, and keep the bad news from > surfacing. They did a masterful job, turning > Vioxx into a commercial elixir: Last year alone, > sales of the drug totaled $2.5 billion. It was a > huge success. Unless you were one of the people > who had to be sacrificed for it. > > Merck's CEO also claimed that the company's > handling of Vioxx showed it was " really putting > patient safety first. " Which it definitely did -- > if by " first " he meant right after profits and > Merck's stock price. > > Indeed, those internal documents reveal that > nothing in the Merck corporate hierarchy was more > important than covering the company's backside. > One offers an " obstacle handling guide " for " all > field personnel with responsibility for Vioxx. " > Another is titled " Dodge Ball Vioxx " and suggests > ways Merck salespeople can deal with troubling > questions raised by doctors concerned with the > safety of Vioxx. The final four pages of the > manual each contain a single instruction: > " DODGE! " (I wonder if Ben Stiller has heard about > this? I smell sequel!) > > Merck also exhibited a rare gift for putting > negative findings into a positive light. When one > scientific study found that Vioxx, while indeed > multiplying the risk of cardiovascular > complications, caused fewer digestive side > effects than other pain relief drugs, the company > strong-armed the FDA into displaying the good > news about fewer upset stomachs more prominently > on the drug's label than that pesky stuff about > more heart attacks. I'm surprised they didn't try > to turn this tidbit into a TV ad: " Sure Vioxx can > increase your chances of cardiac arrest, but at > least you won't have an upset tummy when it kills > you! " > > Speaking of ads, the most loathsome aspect of the > whole Vioxx affair is the way Merck used a $500 > million marketing campaign to persuade over 20 > million Americans to pop its noxious little pill. > And company executives continued to run these ads > long after they knew that there was big trouble > brewing. I'm sure that our evangelical friends in > the red states will agree that there ought to be > a special place in hell for corporations that > show such a wanton disregard for human life. > > And if any of this sounds familiar, it should. > It's certainly giving me a profound sense of drug > company déjà vu, with the tragic stories of > Baycol, Rezulin and Duract still fresh in my > mind. How many times do we have to travel down > this deadly path -- the side of the road littered > with bodies and the empty containers of drugs > that were approved despite serious questions, and > left on the market despite growing evidence of > innocent lives being lost? > > And after each case come the inevitable calls for > accountability and promises to reform the system > -- promises that are then forgotten until the > next killer drug hits the headlines. > > During last week's hearings on the Vioxx scandal, > Dr. Graham, while citing an additional five drugs > that he feels pose a danger to the public, said > that the nation's compromised drug oversight > system had left Americans " virtually defenseless " > against killer drugs and warned that we are > facing " the single greatest drug safety > catastrophe in the history of this country or the > history of the world. " > > And you thought our biggest problem with > pharmaceuticals was President Bush refusing to > allow us to get cheap drugs from Canada. Which he > laughably justifies because of concerns about the > safety of Canadian drugs. > > So why don't things ever change, even as the > death toll mounts? As always, the answer can be > found by following the money. The big > pharmaceutical companies continue to be the > 800-pound gorillas of American politics -- their > power stemming from a muscular combination of > lobbying ($150 million a year), campaign > contributions (close to $50 million doled out to > federal candidates over the past four years) and > powerful friends in very high places (Donald > Rumsfeld was formerly CEO of drug industry > powerhouse G.D. Searle, and Mitch Daniels, the > former White House budget director and new > governor-elect of Indiana, was a senior vice > president at Eli Lilly). > > In a 2000 e-mail, Merck's chief of research > called Vioxx's propensity to cause heart attacks > and strokes " a shame. " Something his company > clearly lacks. Of course, the real shame is that > we continue to have a regulatory system in which > corporate greed, political timidity and a culture > of cronyism have rendered the public good a > quaint afterthought. > > Sen. Charles Grassley, the conservative > Republican who chairs the Senate Finance > Committee that held the Vioxx hearings, lambasted > the FDA for being " under the thumb " of the very > pharmaceutical companies it is supposed to > regulate, saying the agency " has a relationship > with the drug companies that is too cozy. " Are > Democrats going to sit by while conservatives > like Grassley take the moral lead on this issue? > > If the Democratic Party is serious about > reclaiming the moral values high ground, it needs > to stop trying to figure out how to triangulate > on gay marriage and take a long hard look in the > medicine chest mirror. Then open it up, let fly > with the proper moral outrage, and start cleaning > out the mess that lies inside. It's time for > Democrats to become the real pro-life party. > > salon.com > > -- > When the government fears the people, you have liberty; > when the people fear the government, you have tyranny. > Thomas Jefferson > > Visit my site at: http://www.unsaccodicanapa.com > > > -- > > > The individual is supreme and finds the way through intuition... > > Sepp Hasslberger > > > My page on physics, new energy, economy: http://www.hasslberger.com/ > > Critical perspective on Health: http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/ > > Antiprohibition and cannabis: http://www.unsaccodicanapa.com/ > > Communication Agents: http://www.communicationagents.com/ > > Freedom of choice - La Leva di Archimede: http://www.laleva.cc/ > La Leva's news: http://www.laleva.org/ > > Robin Good - http://www.masternewmedia.org/ > > Trash Your Television! - http://www.tvturnoff.org/ > > Not satisfied with news from the tube and other controlled media? > Search the net! There are thousands of information sources > out there. Start with > > http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/ > http://www.joevialls.co.uk/ > http://www.padrak.com/alt/911DD.html > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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