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30 Dec 2003 00:35:03 -0000

" Pharma Buys a Conscience " Article and Email I Sent to Thank Its Author

" IAHF.COM "

 

IAHF Webmaster: Breaking News, Whats New, All Countries

 

Re Article Below " Pharma Buys a Conscience "

 

IAHF List: Please read the email I just sent to Dr.Elliott and read his

excellent article (below) about how drug companies are trying to control and

manipulate bioethicists in an effort to suppress unwanted articles, such as his.

While this is nothing new to me and to most of you, it is none the less shocking

and very revealing. If you appreciate Dr.Elliott's article, please forward it

widely, with or without my letter to him. I will be on the air again tomorrow

and also Friday with Stan Monteith, see below...

 

Carl Elliott, MD, PhD, Graduate Studies

Center for Bioethics

Department of Philosophy

University of Minnesota

ellio023

 

Dear Dr.Elliott-

 

I deeply appreciate your article " Pharma Buys a Conscience " (below for those I'm

forwarding this to.) Please let me know if you come under Pharma Attack for

writing it, and if so, what the nature of that attack proves to be. If you do

come under attack, I'll be glad to help you in any way possible. As a lobbyist

for the dietary supplement industry and for dietary supplement consumers world

wide, I've had death threats and constant threats of legal action- all of which

I either ignore or find creative ways to deal with.

 

By chance have you seen the excellent documentary on PBS which raises badly

needed questions about the fraudulence and corruption inherent inside the FDA

and with the FDA's so called " drug approval process " ? PBS raises the question:

" The FDA: Hazardous to Your Health " ? PBS's series " Dangerous Prescription " can

be seen on their website at

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/prescription/hazard/ You should

urge all your students to watch this, its very well done, and it ties in

directly with your message!

 

I am the President of International Advocates for Health Freedom

http://www.iahf.com and am going to forward your fine article to my global

distribution list of thousands of dietary supplement consumers who are up at

arms against the Pharma Cartel's global efforts to destroy the dietary

supplement industry as unwanted competition.

 

I am working closely with the Alliance for Natural Health in the UK

http://www.alliance-natural-health.org whose executive director, Dr.Robert

Verkerk forwarded your article to me. ANH has filed a lawsuit to overturn the

European Union's mindless Food Supplement Directive, which via globalization

mechanisms threatens to be imposed planet wide unless stopped by force of law.

 

The biggest problem we face is pharmaceutically dominated vitamin trade

associations doing massive spin against our message.

 

Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.

 

As a person whose life was saved via a suppressed alternative treatment mode

after mainstream medicine almost killed me due to a near total ignorance of

clinical nutrition, my life was saved over 20 years ago via orthomolecular

medicine. The story of my recovery has been downloaded over a million times by

people around the world searching for answers when grappling with severe

depression and schizophrenia. It has been translated into numerous foreign

languages by people in cyberspace who share our distrust of the Pharma Cartel, I

never had to pay anyone for doing these translations. If interested, you can

read my story at http://www.iahf.com/on_the_back_wards.html

 

You may also be interested in my article from the July issue of Life Extension

Magazine about the Alliance for Natural Health's lawsuit to overturn the EU Food

Supplement Directive

http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2003/2003_preprint_eu_01.html

 

Thanks again for having the courage to tell the truth. There aren't enough

people with your level of integrity in the world today, in or outside of

academia.

 

I am doing a radio show tomorrow on the American Freedom Network, as the guest

of Dr.Stan Monteith, and will mention your article on the air. If you should

want to listen in, it will be at 8PM west coast time and you can hear it on the

web at http://www.americanewsnet.com/radio.htm I'll also be doing another show

with Dr.Monteith on Friday at 4PM west coast time, same website.

 

If you would like to call to discuss anything I'm saying here, I can be reached

in Washington State at 800-333-2553 home and work

 

Sincerely,

John Hammell, President

International Advocates for Health Freedom

556 Boundary Bay Rd.

Point Roberts, WA 98281 USA

http://www.iahf.com

800-333-2553 N.America

360-945-0352 World

 

cc: William Faloon, VP, The Life Extension Foundation http://www.lef.org

cc: Dr.Stan Monteith- Dr.Stan's Radio Show

cc: Greg Ciola, ceo, Crusador Enterprises

cc: IAHF email distribution list

 

SEE Dr.Elliott's article below.....

 

 

 

At 09:10 AM 12/29/03 +0000, you wrote:

 

 

From In Touch, a journal of the Provincial Health Ethics Network, Alberta,

Canada

 

 

 

http://www.phen.ab.ca/materials/intouch/vol4/intouch4-09.html

 

 

 

 

 

Volume 4, Issue 09 - December 2001

 

Pharma Buys a Conscience

 

 

The following are excerpts from an article published in The American Prospect

(Volume 12, Issue 12, 2001). Reproduced here with permission from the publisher.

 

Guest Writer Profile:

Carl Elliott

 

Carl Elliott, MD PhD, is an associate professor at the University of Minnesota

Center for Bioethics and the author of A Philosophical Disease: Bioethics,

Culture and Identity. He is Associate Professor and Co-Director of Graduate

Studies in the Center for Bioethics. He was educated at Davidson College in

North Carolina and Glasgow University in Scotland, where he received his PhD in

philosophy. He received his MD from the Medical University of South Carolina.

 

He joined the faculty at the University of Minnesota in July 1997 after four

years at McGill University in Montreal, where he held appointments in the

Biomedical Ethics Unit and the Montreal Children's Hospital and directed the

Master's degree specialization in Bioethics.

 

I was raised in a house filled with drug-industry trinkets. My father has been a

family doctor for more than 40 years, and drug representatives bearing gifts

have visited him throughout his career. My brothers and I grew up tossing Abbott

Frisbees and Upjohn Nerf balls. We took down messages on Inderal notepads, wrote

with Erythromycin pens, carried Progestin umbrellas. We constructed weird

Halloween costumes from models of the human hand and brain supplied by

Parke-Davis and Merck. My father was no great fan of " detail men, " as drug reps

were called then. (These days, if you're a male physician, your detail man is

likely to be an attractive young woman.) Nor did he take part in the drug

industry's more outrageous marketing efforts, such as frequent-flier miles in

exchange for drug prescriptions. But he saw no great harm in accepting drug

samples for his patients or toys for his children. Like virtually all doctors,

he did not think that the gifts influenced him in any way.

 

Why pharmaceutical companies want the goodwill of doctors is no great mystery.

The surprise is why they want the goodwill of someone like me. I am a philosophy

professor, and I work at a bioethics center. While I do happen to have a degree

in medicine, that degree is largely decorative: The only prescriptions I write

these days are moral ones. Despite this difference (or maybe because of it), the

pharmaceutical and biotechnological industries are funneling more and more cash

into the pockets of academics who teach and study ethics. Some of it goes

straight to individuals, in the form of consulting fees, contracts, honoraria,

and salaries. Some of it--such as gifts to bioethics centers--is less direct.

Many corporations are putting bioethicists on their scientific advisory boards

or setting up special bioethics panels to provide in-house advice. While I have

not yet been offered Frisbees or Nerf balls, I suspect that it is only a matter

of time.

 

The issue of corporate money has become something of an embarrassment within the

bioethics community. Bioethicists have written for years about conflicts of

interest in scientific research or patient care yet have paid little attention

to the ones that might compromise bioethics itself. Arthur Caplan, the director

of the University of Pennsylvania Center for Bioethics, counsels doctors against

accepting gifts from the drug industry. " The more you yield to economics, "

Caplan said last January, " the more you're falling to a business model that

undercuts arguments for professionalism. " Yet Caplan himself consults for the

drug and biotech industries, recently coauthored an article with scientists for

Advanced Cell Technology, and heads a bioethics center supported by Monsanto, de

Code Genetics, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Geron Corporation, Pfizer,

AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Human Genome

Sciences, and the Schering-Plough Corporation.

 

By no means does Caplan's center stand alone in its coziness with industry. The

University of Toronto houses the Sun Life Chair in Bioethics; the Stanford

University Center for Biomedical Ethics has a program in genetics funded by a

$1-million gift from SmithKline Beecham Corporation; the Merck Company

Foundation has financed a string of international ethics centers in cities from

Ankara, Turkey, to Pretoria, South Africa. Last year the Midwest Bioethics

Center announced a new $587,870 initiative funded by the Aventis Pharmaceuticals

Foundation. That endeavor is titled, apparently without irony, the Research

Integrity Project.

 

Bioethics appears set to borrow a funding model popular in the realm of business

ethics. This model embraces partnership and collaboration with corporate

sponsors as long as outright conflicts of interest can be managed. It is the

model that allows the nonprofit Ethics Resource Center in Washington, D.C., to

sponsor ethics and leadership programs funded by such weapons manufacturers as

General Dynamics, United Technologies Corporation, and Raytheon. It also permits

the former president of Princeton University, Harold Shapiro, to draw an annual

director's salary from Dow Chemical Company while serving as chair of the

National Bioethics Advisory Commission. Dow, of course, has been the defendant

in a highly publicized lawsuit over the Dow Corning silicone breast implants as

well as in numerous legal actions involving disposal of hazardous waste.

 

Part of the problem is aesthetic. It is unseemly for ethicists to share in the

profits of arms dealers, industrial polluters, or multinationals that exploit

the developing world. But credibility also is an issue. How can bioethicists

continue to be taken seriously if they are on the payroll of the very

corporations whose practices they are expected to assess?

 

Listening to Eli Lilly

Last year some colleagues and I helped put together " Prozac, Alienation, and the

Self, " a special issue of The Hastings Center Report, a bioethics journal. Some

of the papers that we published, including one by me, expressed worries about

the extent to which antidepressants are being prescribed, especially for

patients who are not clinically depressed. One paper in particular - " Good

Science or Good Business? " - was especially critical of the drug industry. Its

author, David Healy, is a psychopharmacologist and a historian of psychiatry at

the University of Wales.

 

Shortly after these Prozac essays were published, Eli Lilly and Company, which

manufactures Prozac, withdrew its annual gift to the Hastings Center, citing the

special issue as its reason. Lilly's yearly check for $25,000 was not especially

large by industry standards, but it was the Hastings Center's largest annual

corporate donation. Lilly's letter to the organization was especially critical

of Healy's article. Healy had previously published research indicating that some

patients, particularly those who are not clinically depressed, may be more

likely to commit suicide while taking antidepressants. He has also testified as

an expert witness against Lilly and other drug manufacturers in lawsuits brought

by family members of patients who killed themselves or others after taking

antidepressants. In " Good Science or Good Business? " Healy argued that

manufacturers of antidepressants have gone into the business of selling

psychiatric illnesses in order to sell psychiatric drugs.

Apparently, this was not the kind of bioethics scholarship that Lilly had in

mind when it donated money to the Hastings Center.

 

The reaction of bioethicists to all of this is emblematic of the difficulties

raised by corporate money. Some were encouraged by the response of the Hastings

Center staff -particularly by the Report's editors, who published the special

issue without regard to Lilly's reaction. We are never hostage to corporate

money, these scholars say. We can always turn it down, resign our posts, and do

the right thing despite enticements to the contrary. For others, however, the

fact that the Report's editors faced such incentives is precisely the problem.

Given enough cases where bioethicists must choose between scholarship and their

corporate funders, the funders will eventually win out. In the long run, money

conquers all.

 

But the Hastings Center episode was only the first chapter of the Healy affair.

In November 2000, Healy gave a talk on the history of psychopharmacology at the

University of Toronto's Center for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), where he

was scheduled to take up a new position as director of the Mood Disorders

Program. In that lecture, Healy mentioned his worries about Prozac and suicide.

Shortly thereafter, the center rescinded his appointment. He was given no reason

but merely informed by e-mail that CAMH did not feel that his " approach was

compatible with the goals for development of the academic and clinical resource "

of the clinic. CAMH officials insist that the Eli Lilly Corporation had nothing

to do with the decision; yet the center is the recipient of a $1.5-million gift

from Lilly. The Mood Disorders Program, which Healy was to direct, gets 52

percent of its funding from corporate sources.

 

Whether Lilly or any other corporate funder had anything to do with Healy's

dismissal is impossible to know. Even so, the trouble CAMH has had in convincing

the public that industry sources were not involved points to the difficulty of

discerning financial influence. Would CAMH have dismissed Healy if it had no

ties to Lilly whatsoever? Does fear of being unable to attract future corporate

money count as influence? Does fear of angering powerful industry-tied

psychiatrists?

 

" Doctors fear drug companies like bookies fear the mob, " says Harold Elliott, a

psychiatrist at Wake Forest University. Corporate money is so crucial to the way

that university medical centers are funded today that no threats or offers need

actually be made in order for a company to exert its influence. The mere

presence of corporate money is enough.

 

And researchers are probably right to be afraid. The University of Toronto

itself has seen two other public scandals erupt over pharmaceutical-company

funding in recent years. The most visible one involved Nancy Olivieri, a

researcher at the university's Hospital for Sick Children,

" How can bioethicists continue to be taken seriously if they are on the payroll

of the very corporations whose practices they are expected to assess? " who was

conducting clinical trials of deferiprone, a thalassemia drug, for the

generic-drug manufacturer Apotex. When Olivieri became concerned about possible

side effects of deferiprone, she broke her confidentiality agreement with Apotex

and went public with her concerns. In response, Apotex threatened her with legal

action. Rather than backing Olivieri against Apotex, the Hospital for Sick

Children attempted to dismiss her. News headlines had hardly faded when Apotex

promised the University of Toronto $20 million (about $13 million in U.S.

dollars) in funding for molecular biology, then threatened to withdraw it if the

school's then-president, Robert Prichard, did not lobby the federal government

to change its drug-patent regulations. Apotex wanted rules that would be more

favorable to generic-drug manufacturers. The president did

as he was asked and was later forced to apologize publicly when the story

broke.

 

Industry-sponsored bioethics programs face problems that parallel those

encountered by industry-sponsored medical researchers. What do you do when your

scholarly work conflicts with the goals of your industry sponsor? No one is

forcing industry money on bioethics programs, but many of them are located in

academic health centers, where faculty members are expected to generate money to

fund their research either by seeing patients or by obtaining grants. If

bioethics is seen as an activity that can attract industry sponsorship,

university administrators strapped for cash will inevitably look to industry as

a financial solution. All that remains is for bioethicists themselves to

dispense with the ethical roadblocks...

 

Still, we can all take heart: Help may be on the way. The American Medical

Association's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs is planning a $590,000

initiative to educate doctors about the ethical problems involved in accepting

gifts from the drug industry. That initiative is funded by gifts from Eli Lilly

and Company, GlaxoSmithKline, Inc., Pfizer, U.S. Pharmaceutical Group,

AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, Bayer Corporation, Procter and Gamble Company, and

Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceutical.

For Health Freedom,

John C. Hammell, President

International Advocates for Health Freedom

556 Boundary Bay Road

Point Roberts, WA 98281-8702 USA

http://www.iahf.com

jham

800-333-2553 N.America

360-945-0352 World

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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