Guest guest Posted January 23, 2004 Report Share Posted January 23, 2004 http://campaignfortruth.com/Eclub/210104/CTM%20-%20main%20article.htm Taking Your Medicine From an article by Gary Hughes and Liz Minchin The Age, 13th December 2003 Australia Many of us with chronic health problems rely on advocacy groups and peak medical bodies for independent advice and support. But just how independent is that advice and are we being given the full picture? The Age has found that many advocacy groups are becoming hooked on sponsorship dollars from drug companies and these international corporations are, in turn, using them to promote their products in Australia's booming $5 billion drug market. Asthma Meet Puff the purple dragon. Last year Puff became the public face of a new Asthma Council Awareness campaign to encourage asthmatics to better manage their medication. But Puff had an earlier existence. He began life as the registered trademark used by the pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to market one if its asthma drugs, Seretide, to doctors. His colour matches the packaging for Seretide. It was GlaxoSmithKline's idea for the NAC to use its symbol and give Puff a new, much more public role encouraging asthmatics to update their medication regimens. GlaxoSmithKline, which is the world's biggest seller of asthma medications, also provided financial support for the television campaign to develop an interactive internet quiz for the NAC website to check whether someone's asthma was under control. Even if you answer, " No " to the initial question, " Do you have asthma " and say you have no symptoms, Puff advises you that your asthma appears to be under control, but you should visit your doctor anyway for a medical review. NAC chief executive Kristine Whorlow defends the use of a pharmaceutical logo to spearhead a supposedly independent campaign, saying market research before the campaign showed there was no public recognition of Puff. The board of the council, which is the peak asthma body in Australia, also discussed potential conflicts of interests. " When GSK was talking to us and we were talking to them about doing another consumer campaign and they came up with the idea of using Puff, we discussed that very thoroughly here at our board meetings and we decided to go ahead with it, " she said. " But we only went ahead with it when we looked at the consumer research showing that the consumers were not aware of the dragon at all. " …. It is not surprising that the NAC and GlaxoSmithKline should work so closely together on such a campaign. GlaxoSmith Kline was the founding sponsor of the council when it was launched more than a decade ago and remains its principal source of funds. According to the NAC's website, other sponsors in 2002 included the pharmaceutical companies AstraZeneca, Aventis, Boehringer Ingelheim,Schering-Plough, Merck, Novartis and Proctor and Gamble. According to MsWhorlow, up to 60 per cent of the council's annual budget of between $800,000 and $1 million comes from the pockets of pharmaceutical companies. Diabetes In July last year, retired swimmer, Susie O'Neill, went on television urging Australians to visit their doctor to check their blood glucose levels (BGL). Just before the commercial went to air, thousands of doctors were receiving another kind of visitor: sales representatives from the drug company AlphaPharm, bearing new " Be Well - Know Your BLG " kits from Diabetes Australia. The sophisticated, multimedia campaign was run by Diabetes Australia's NSW division, but was paid for by O'Neill's sponsor, Capilano Honey, diabetes monitoring equipment maker, Abbott Laboratories, and AlphaPharm, which produces a range of generic diabetes drugs and claims to be " Australia's largest provider of oral anti-diabetic medication " . AlphaPharm is a subsidiary of major international pharmaceutical company Merck, which also sells diabetes treatments. Although the sponsorships were not mentioned on the television commercial, which only displayed Diabetes Australia's logo, they were acknowledged on other campaign material. The campaign co-ordinator and corporate relations manager at Diabetes Australia - NSW, Bill Edmonds, says that AlphaPharm's " field force " , or sales team, played a crucial role in the campaign's success. " Basically, they tour round the country and say, 'Look, here is the latest awareness campaign by Diabetes Australia, the 'Be Well - Know Your BGL campaign', and they hand it either to the practice nurse or the doctor. Now at the same time you know that the pharmaceutical company is also selling other products. (But) we couldn't afford to get it out there as effectively and efficiently as the 'field force'. " Mr Edmonds says he does not believe that the arrangement could be misinterpreted as an endorsement by Diabetes Australia of AlphaPharm products " because doctors are pretty smart creatures " . Part of Diabetes Australia's 12-member federation, the NSW division, is responsible for national marketing and fund raising and has attracted a long, varied list of corporate sponsors. Under the heading, " corporate sponsorship and branding opportunities " , the NSW website boasts its campaigns provide " excellent return on investment " and says that the BGL campaign offers " unique branding and market expansion opportunities for all types of businesses " . Mr Edmond says good publicity is the only benefit pharmaceutical sponsors such as AlphaPharm and Abbott get from their involvement, and that no sponsor has ever pressured him to get more for their money. But he admits he has " voluntarily " gone overboard " to thank the BGL campaign supporters, quoting them in press releases and even preparing a PowerPoint presentation for AlphaPharm sales staff this year about the effectiveness of the 2002 awareness campaign. This year, Edmonds says, only AlphaPharm, Merck and Novo Nordisk have supported the organisation, giving about $100,000, not including non-financial aid such as visiting doctors. In the past few years, Diabetes Australia has also won support from other diabetes drug producers, such as Aventis, Bayer, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Park Davis (now part of Pfizer), Roche and Servier. Compared with many consumer groups, Diabetes Australia and its NSW branch have massive budgets, around $93 million and $8 million respectively for the past year, although most of that money is tied up in administering the National Diabetes Services Scheme for the Federal Government. However, Diabetes Australia's executive director, Brian Conway, says that rather than avoiding any chance of conflicting interests, they choose to accept the funding and in-kind support because " it still helps " . One such potential conflict of interest is when Diabetes Australia or its members lobby for diabetes drugs to be added to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). For two years, the organisation pressured the Government to add Glaxo-produced Avandia and Actos, made by Eli Lilly, to the PBS (they were finally listed in October this year). But Mr Conway denies that both companies' past support for diabetes research and campaigns helped win Diabetes Australia's Lobbying support. Depression Leanne Pethick is the woman behind DepressioNet, an apparently independent consumer website for people suffering from depression that claims to attract more than 1 million visits every three months. And international pharmaceutical giant, Wyeth, which markets antidepressants, is the company behind Leanne Pethick. " DepressioNet would not exists today without Wyeth, " Ms Pethick readily admits. " Wyeth is a company I am extremely proud to be associated with. " Wyeth has provided $150,000 over the past three years to keep the Melbourne-based DepressionNet running. But the links do not stop there. Ms Pethick is also on the editorial board of Wyeth's own depression website, 'Yes To Life', and is a member of DepressioNet's medical advisory board. The Yes To Life links through DepressioNet, which is described as " an independent resource " without disclosing that it is substantially funded by Wyeth. Ms Pethick helps with training seminars for Wyeth's sales team and last year took part in a promotional tour the pharmaceutical company organised for a visiting US depression expert, Professor Martin Kellick. Ms Pethick even thanked Wyeth on her website for the opportunity to help with the national tour, which saw her costs paid by the company to take part in panel discussions at meeting of doctors. But what Wyeth did not tell Ms Pethick was that Professor Kellick had been at the centre of a row in his hometown of Boston in 1999, when The Boston Globe reported he failed to disclose more than $500,000 in consulting fees from pharmaceutical companies at conferences and in journal articles. " No, I wasn't aware of that, " Ms Pethick told The Age. " On that particular tour no particular product was mentioned. " DepressioNet's stated aim is to " significantly increase the proportion of Australian depression sufferers who seek help and treatment. " Ms Pethick, who started the website in 2000 after her own battle with depression, agrees that encouraging more people to seek medical treatment will expand the market for antidepressants in Australia. But she sees no conflict of interest in accepting drug company sponsorship. She also insists her website, which also received a one-off grant of $20,000 from another pharmaceutical giant and the makers of Prozac, Eli Lilly, is able to remain independent. " The money we got from Wyeth was totally unconditional and helped us and continues to help us to provide a vital service, " she said. " Any money we get, we disclose. " When her own savings ran out in 2001, Ms Pethick deliberately approached companies in the antidepressant market because she thought they would be more interested in sponsorship. DepressioNet is not the only non-profit organisation advocating for patients with mental illness that receives pharmaceutical industry financial backing. The peak national body, Sane Australia, the operating name of the Schizophrenia Australia Foundation, relies on drug companies for about 25 per cent of its annual $1 million budget. Last year, Sane Australia used a grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, which markets two schizophrenia drugs, to commission an Access Economics report on the cost of schizophrenia to the community. The report found that many sufferers were missing out on treatment and said some newer medicines could be " extremely effective " in reducing symptoms. Earlier this year, Sane used a grant from GlaxoSmithKline, which markets a lithium-based drug for bipolar disorder, to commission a second Access Economics report, this time on the cost of bipolar disorder to the community. The report found that average treatment levels for sufferers was less than a quarter of what was considered best practice. Sane Australia's executive director, Barbara Hocking, said that the organisation accepted only unrestricted educational grants from pharmaceutical companies. " We receive grants for specific purposes. The purposes we receive them for are driven by us. We have our own guidelines, " she said. Sane deliberately targeted Novartis and GlaxoSmithKline to fund the two Access Economics studies because they produced drugs in those markets. " The reality is, you go where you feel the money is likely to come from and it is precisely because those companies have products in that area that we felt they would be interested in having this independent information, " Ms Hocking said. Arthritis Two years ago, the Australian Rheumatology Association decided to get tough with its national executive members who were involved with drug companies. To avoid the faintest whiff of conflicting interests, the executives were told to sever all ties to pharmaceutical companies or resign. It didn't last. " It was felt that in a small organisation that is a difficult thing to sustain, " says association secretary, Associate Professor Geoff McColl. " There was some consideration that it may have limited the pool of individuals who might serve on the executive. " Although the executive is mainly a professional body for rheumatologists, who specialise in diseases of the joints, muscles, and connective tissues, it also sees itself as a patient advocate. Instead of banning relationships with drug companies, the ARA now insists that its executive members put any conflict of interest on the record. But those disclosure documents are available only to other ARA members, rather than being open to public scrutiny. As well as sponsoring a number of the ARA's research and educational projects, each year, drug companies such as Pfizer, Schering-Plough. Wyeth, Abbott and Merck pay for its annual scientific meeting. Next year's conference is being held in Cairns. Dr McColl defends the drug-funded subsidy, saying some of his colleagues could struggle to attend if their costs shot up from around $600 to several thousand dollars. " We are grateful to our pharmaceutical colleagues, particularly as we believe, and I don't think there's any evidence to the contrary, that it doesn't alter our decision making, " Dr McColl says. " Now, whether it has a more global effect on individuals' views of particular companies, that's a much more difficult thing to quantify. " Just how easily patient Advocates can be swayed by relationships with drug companies was illustrated three years ago in a case involving Dr McColl and Arthritis Australia. In July 2000, The ABC's Media Watch exposed how a seemingly independent advertising campaign by the then Arthritis Foundation of Australia was used to sell the new arthritis treatment, Celebrex. The drug's co-marketers, Pfizers and Pharmacia, gave the Foundation an unconditional grant of $250,000. The money was spent on television and print ads telling people to " ask your doctor about exciting new arthritis treatments " . Callers to the arthritis hot line were reportedly told, " there's this new whizzbang drug called Celebrex " and offered a phone number to find out more information. Former Arthritis Foundation director, Ian Hook, apologised, saying, " it won't happen again " , but that didn't stop Celebrex quickly becoming one of the top selling drugs in Australia. At the time, Dr. McColl was on Pharmacia's medical advisory board and was one the reassuring public faces of the media and marketing blitz. He now regrets that involvement, saying he won't be part of another drug marketing campaign. " I think that taught us how powerful a direct-to-customer marketing campaign can be and I think really there should be some legislation or guidelines so that doesn't occur (again), " he says. " I've been made aware that if you work closely with these people your views can be subtly altered, and that that's fine as long as everyone knows that might have happened. And it's probably better, ideally, if you don't get involved. " Dr McColl's relationship with the Pharmacia advisory board ended 18 months ago. He now advises Schering-Plough, makers of another rheumatoid arthritis treatment. All the key decision makers at Arthritis Australia who approved the Celebrex campaign have since left, and new president, Ita Buttrose, says she couldn't comment on why it went ahead. But she vows " As long as I am president, Arthritis Australia will not allow itself to be a disguised front for any pharmaceutical company or accept donations 'with strings attached' " . Herpes Click on the sponsorship link on the Australian Herpes Management Forum's website and everything seems to be upfront: " The AHMF is sponsored by GlaxoSmith Kline Australia and Novartis pharmaceuticals via open educational grants. GlaxoSmith Kline is the founding sponsor of the Australian Herpes Management Forum and the major sponsor for 2003. " But there is something that visitors to the AHMF's website are not told: The group relies entirely on Australia's main herpes drug manufacturers for its existence, and has since it was set up in 1996. Recently appointed AHMF executive director, Trish Berger, estimates that in the past financial year, GlaxoSmithKline has given the AHMF about $120,000 or 80 per cent of its budget. The other 20 per cent comes from Novartis. There is a strong bond between the AHMF and GlaxoSmithKline, for many years the only major manufacturer of herpes treatment in Australia. Its constitution was written by Glaxo Wellcome's (now GlaxoSmithKline) Melbourne based law firm, Deacons, and up until August this year, the forum's administration was run by public relations firm, Edelman, hired on the recommendation of a well known client, GlaxoSmith Kline. Most of the experts who have sat on the AHMF board have also worked with or advised GlaxoSmith Kline and Novartis in recent years…. AHMF chairman, Professor Adrian Mindel concedes that the forum has been vulnerable to pressure from GlaxoSmith Kline and Novartis because without their funding, " the Australian Herpes Management Forum would cease to exist tomorrow " …. " We are all professionals who are mostly academics in this area, and protecting our own reputations and independence is also terribly important…We think it is a quid pro quo (arrangement) and that we gain some benefit from that by promoting the science and improving the general health of the community. They get the benefit in terms of their drug. And I'm not sure it's possible to completely separate the two. " In contrast, Professor Mindel says the global version of the AHMF, the International Herpes Management Forum, may be a different story. He says that although the IHMF " produces some high quality material……whether it is completely unbiased is questionable because of its close ties to dug companies. " More than half of the current IHMF board have links to GlaxoSmithKline, such as leading trials of its herpes drugs, or, in one case, featuring in a Glaxo sponsored television special. Novartis has since signed on as a sponsor too, and the companies influence the International Herpes Alliance (which also relied on GSK funding to get started in 1999) website. Its " educational " material for journalists has been written by the " organisations (that) have made educational contributions to the International Herpes Alliance for the promotion of herpes awareness " - in other words, GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis. COPD World Chronic Pulmonary Disease Day was launched globally in November last year. But the concept was born nine months earlier at London's Radisson Hotel during a meeting between pharmaceutical company executives and medical experts. The experts were members of the executive committee of an organisation called Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, or GOLD. The organisation was sponsored entirely by the pharmaceutical companies attending the meeting and the airfares and the hotel expenses for the medical experts had been provided. Minutes from the meeting showed that " the committee and sponsors discussed the development of a World COPD Day and suggested that the feasibility and objectives… be discussed. " Nine months later, World COPD Day was launched using promotional materials prepared by GOLD with the aim of raising public awareness of the threat posed by chronic lung diseases. In Australia this was spearheaded by the Australian Lung Foundation, the consumer and research arm of the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand. No mention was made that the pharmaceutical companies providing the money to run GOLD were also some of the biggest players in the global respiratory medicines market, including the world leader, GlaxoSmithKline. Nor was it obvious that the Australian Lung Foundation's launch was also partly funded by GlaxoSmithKline and another international heavyweight, Boehringer Ingelheim. And even harder to pick was, that the company that runs GOLD was an American Communications corporation that boasts, on its website, of helping the pharmaceutical industry " find solutions to significant marketing and education challenges " through such techniques as promoting brands and repositioning or launching products. Dr Larry Grouse, the chief executive of the company Medical Communications Resources Inc, is also the co-ordinator of GOLD and listed as a member of its executive committee. " No, I wasn't actually aware of that. Thanks for pointing it out, " says William Darbishire, the chief executive of the Australian Lung Foundation, which is setting up a national call centre to provide advice to COPD sufferers with a $US 20,000 ($A 27,000) grant from drug giant Pfizer. MCR and virtually the same set of sponsors are also behind an international organisation called Global Initiative For Asthma, or GINA. Dr Christine Jenkins is an independent Australian representative on Gold's executive committee as well as being the head of clinical trials at Sydney University's Woolcock Institute of Medical Research which received a $1million endowment from GlaxoSmithKline. She strongly rejects any suggestion that the pharmaceutical industry sponsors of GOLD and GINA could influence the setting of guidelines for the types of drugs doctors are advised to use to treat asthma or chronic lung disease. " I think Gold is a very, very independent process, " says Dr Jenkins, who helped to launch Australia's first COPD Day at a Lung Foundation media conference last year. When GOLD issued updated treatment guidelines in July, the medication, tiotropium, marketed by Boehringer and Pfizer as Spiriva, was added to the list recommended. The companies issued a media release quoting Dr. Larry Grouse, but failed to mention their financial support. Five months earlier, when Spiriva was launched on to the Australian market, Pfizer and Boehringer issued a local media release through public relations company Hill and Knowlton quoting Dr Jenkins on the dangers of COPD. Dr Jenkins said tiotropium was " an excellent drug " and it should be expected that pharmaceutical companies would use such decisions to market their products. " I think the companies will use GOLD, there is no question, " said Dr Jenkins, who has her air fares and accommodation paid for by GOLD's drug company's sponsors when she attends executive meetings. " That's their business, to sell dugs. " Further Resources For more information on the double-dealing of the drug and medical industries: Health Wars by Phillip Day Wake up to Health by Steven Ransom Great News on Cancer by Steven Ransom SiteBuilder - Free web site building tool. Try it! 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