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" HSI - Jenny Thompson " <HSIResearch

HSI e-Alert - Gall Unlimited

Tue, 21 Jun 2005 07:30:00 -0400

 

 

 

HSI e-Alert - Gall Unlimited

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

 

****************************************************

June 21, 2005

 

 

 

Dear Reader,

 

How are things going? Everything okay at home?

 

When a friend of mine (we'll call her Linda) was asked those two

simple questions during a routine physical, she felt at ease enough in

the privacy of her doctor's examining room to unburden herself a

little. Things weren't okay at home. She wasn't communicating well

with her husband. The pressures of child rearing were weighing

heavily. Her job was stressful but unfulfilling. And a cousin who she

was very fond of had recently passed away.

 

Then came the follow up question: Have you been feeling depressed?

 

We all have those times when life piles on an excess of demands. A

sense of being constantly overwhelmed can make anyone feel blue. So

when Linda's doctor also asked if she'd ever considered taking an

antidepressant she admitted that she was open to the idea. Suddenly it

felt like someone was in her corner.

 

Later that day Linda filled a prescription for a low dose of a best

selling antidepressant drug. Without knowing it, at that moment she

became an unwitting participant in a drug company sales plan.

 

-----------

Numbers racket

-----------

 

I just read a disturbing article in the online magazine, Slate, that

reveals a network of partnerships that combine to encourage doctors to

ask leading questions like, " Have you ever considered taking an

antidepressant? "

 

What's most amazing is that many doctors are unaware of how

information about their prescribing habits may be used to manipulate

their treatment decisions.

 

Here's how it works: About 10 years ago some pharmacy chains began

processing insurance claims by computer. As the saying goes,

information is power, and of course power can be easily converted into

cash. Some chains began to sell prescription sales data to marketing

information clearinghouses, which in turn sell the data to drug companies.

 

Don't worry, at this point your name isn't attached to the data. But

what IS attached is your doctor's physician ID number that's issued by

the Drug Enforcement Administration. Now if drug company executives

have already purchased very specific data on the sales of one of their

drugs and they want to find out which doctors are prescribing that

drug and in what amounts, all they need is a list that reveals

physician ID numbers.

 

No problem!

 

According to the Slate report, the American Medical Association makes

about $20 million per year selling information from a database known

as the " physician master file, " which contains both personal and

professional information about every doctor in the U.S., including ID

numbers.

 

Nice, huh? And what's worse, many doctors are completely unaware of

this practice.

 

Then comes the number crunching. Just put together the clearinghouse

information on drug sales with the AMA information about doctors, and

a drug company sales force can monitor the prescribing habits of

virtually any doctor " right down to the pill, " according to Slate.

Imagine the huge advantage this gives a drug company salesperson who

treats a doctor to a " friendly " golf game or an expensive dinner.

 

-----------

No they didn't

-----------

 

The techniques that drug companies use to sell their products never

cease to amaze me. But then what do you expect from an industry that

devotes about $15 billion dollars to sales every year? You would

expect just about anything. Including unmitigated gall.

 

Here's a perfect example.

 

About the same time I found the Slate article I came across a report

in the New York Times about a heartburn medication called Propulsid

manufactured by Johnson & Johnson. Porpulsid was approved by the FDA

in 1993. Within two years there were obvious problems. Patients were

developing irregular heartbeats. The FDA warned J & J that the drug

might trigger deaths. The Times reports that by 1998 more than 100

people had suffered severe heart problems, with children at

particularly high risk.

 

The FDA and J & J negotiated a new warning label and Propulsid continued

to be promoted for children. By the end of the 90's the drug was

posting sales of more than $1 billion per year. But by 2000 the wheels

were coming off; deaths (including children) and adverse reaction

reports were mounting. When a government hearing was scheduled, J & J

dodged the bullet by pulling Propulsid from the market.

 

Now...here's the good part.

 

Times reporters were denied several requests to interview J & J

executives for their report. Instead, the company provided written

responses defending Propulsid. And here's the kicker: The drug was

removed from the market, according to J & J, because doctors were

prescribing it inappropriately.

 

Unbelievable! Drug salespeople hound doctors to prescribe certain

drugs - going so far as to purchase databases with details about

doctors' prescribing habits - and then when a dangerous drug has made

billions of dollars, they pull it from the market and blame the doctors.

 

THAT, my friends, is what put the unmitigated in gall.

 

****************************************************

 

 

....and another thing

 

Have you ever heard that raisins are bad for your teeth? Turns out the

opposite may be true.

 

Any food that's sweet and sticky might seem like a potential cavity

culprit, even if it's a whole food like raisins. But researchers with

the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) have produced evidence

that raisins contain phytochemicals that kill bacteria that cause

tooth decay and gum disease.

 

Chemical analysis by the UIC team identified five phytochemicals in

Thompson seedless raisins. (No relation, by the way.) Three of the

phytochemicals inhibited the growth of two types of oral bacteria,

including Streptococcus mutans, which is known to cause cavaties.

 

Another phytochemical prevented S. mutans from adhering to the surface

of teeth. Bacteria must be able to stick to teeth in order to form plaque.

 

Christine Wu - lead author of the study - told NutraIngredients.com

that just because a food is sticky sweet doesn't mean it will cause

cavities. She said, " It is mainly the added sugar, the sucrose, that

contributes to the problem. "

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

 

 

 

Sources:

 

" Spin Doctored - How Drug Companies Keep Tabs on Physicians " Shannin

Brownlee and Jeanne Lenzer, Slate, 5/31/05, slate.msn.com

" Lucrative Drug, Danger Signals and the F.D.A. " Gardiner Harris and

Eric Koli, The New York Times, 6/10/05, nytimes.com

" Raisins Fight Oral Bacteria " Dominique Patton, NutraIngredients.com

6/8/05, nutraingredients.com

 

**********************

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