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http://www.newstarget.com/012119.html

 

 

 

The truth about medical journals, and how drug companies exert heavy

influence over published scientific articles

Can the medical journals be trusted to provide accurate, unbiased

information about medicine even as they are almost entirely funded by

drug companies? In her book, Vaccination, Peggy O'Mara writes that the

current era of medical beliefs (or dogma) began to develop soon after

Louis Pasteur's demonstration that some pathogens could be converted

into vaccines. The medical community then decided to try the same

method for all afflictions. Medical journals were soon afterward

reporting the discovery of " miracle " vaccines for every disease under

the sun, and drug companies were simultaneously advertising those

vaccines on those very same pages.

 

Medical journals rely on Big Pharma's ads to pay the bills

Mainstream media has long depended on advertising revenue to cover its

bills. The money generated by newspaper subscriptions doesn't even

begin to scratch the surface of a daily paper's running costs.

Television stations also rely on advertising clients to foot the bill

for everyday operations. And of course it is no surprise that medical

companies are only too happy to shell out some bucks in advertising to

make their product a household name. The big difference in medical

journals is that readers are hardly likely to see a non-medical ad

within its pages.

 

On television, a plethora of commercials offer products ranging from

dog food to cosmetics to medicine. In newspapers, the ads often run

the gamut of available products and local services. Medical journals,

though, have a specific kind of advertising content within their

pages. All their ads are for hospitals or drugs; there's not a

non-medical ad in sight.

 

Since medicine is the subject of the entire journal, medical ads seem

par for the course. But what should an editor do if a product

advertised on a particular page isn't 100 percent safe? It might not

be cost-effective for a budget-strapped medical journal to remove the

ad and publish an article discussing the product's drawbacks. They run

the risk of angering the pharmaceutical company and losing revenue.

Donald M. Epstein, author of Healing Myths, adds that even if the

dangers of a drug or medical procedure were to be included in a

respected medical journal, often the " religious " belief that doctors,

and even patients, have in conventional medicine overrides their

decision-making process.

 

People believe that if a drug is FDA-approved and on the market, it

must be okay. If a drug proves fatal to 10 or even 10,000 patients,

doctors will still staunchly defend it, claiming the benefits outweigh

the risks. Epstein's feelings are that anyone with a little common

sense should be enraged by the fact that the entire industry is

operating with self-imposed blinders -- from the pharmaceutical

companies that hawk unsafe drugs to the medical journals that publish

doctored clinical studies and misleading ads.

 

What really makes the controversy interesting for many folks is this:

If the journals were ever to publish a study that finds a procedure

within a different healing art -- such as herbal or chiropractic

medicine -- to be harmful or fatal to patients, there would be a loud

and obvious call to outlaw or regulate that practice. Only Big Pharma

and the Western health care system are allowed to operate with obvious

dangers (like the Vioxx drug killing more Americans than the entire

Vietnam War) and get away with it. A further frustration for Epstein

is that drugs and procedures proven to be unsafe or ineffective do not

deter the medical community from developing new treatments based on

the old " biomedical story. "

 

Consumers falsely trust medical journals to be impartial

Richard Smith, the ex-editor of the British Medical Journal (BMJ),

publicly criticized his former publication, saying the BMJ was too

dependent on advertising revenue to be considered impartial. Smith

estimates that between two-thirds to three-quarters of the trials

published in major journals -- Annals of Internal Medicine, Journal of

the American Medical Association, Lancet and New England Journal of

Medicine -- are funded by the industry, while about one-third of the

trials published in the BMJ are thus funded. He further adds that

trials are so valuable to drug companies that they will often spend

upwards of $1 million in reprint costs (which are additional sources

of major revenues for medical journals). Consumers trust medical

journals to be the impartial and " true " source of information

concerning a prescription drug, but few are privy to what is truly

going on behind the scenes at both drug trials and medical journals.

 

Scientists who conduct drug trials may be hard-pressed to stay

impartial when the manufacturers so often pay them for lectures and

consultations, or when they are conducting research that has been

funded by the company. In addition, as stated by doctors Mark Hyman

and Mark Liponis in Ultraprevention, since drug companies are so

reliant on the word of doctors, they often visit doctors' offices to

hand out free samples, take the staff out to lunch, offer free gifts

-- including toys for kids, seminars at expensive restaurants and

junkets to the Caribbean islands -- and frequently sponsor continuing

education for doctors.

 

According to Smith, BMJ editors want to be impartial most of the time,

but it is often impossible for editors to spot a rigged drug trial,

notwithstanding the " peer review " process theoretically used by drug

companies in order to have their research independently checked. Smith

said that drug companies don't fiddle with the results of a trial, but

they obtain positive results by asking the " right " questions. Another

pothole mentioned by Smith was the choice a publisher might face to

either publish a drug trial that would bring in $100,000 in profit, or

lay off an employee in order to meet the end-of-year budget. The

answer, according to Smith, is to have more publicly-funded trials, or

have journals not publish them at all.

 

Big Pharma's published studies lack transparency

Smith provided specific examples of wrongdoing, including the testing

of a new drug against a treatment already known to be inferior, using

too high or too low of a dosage for a competing drug, testing on too

small of a scale, or choosing which results they want to make public.

The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry denied Smith's

allegations, stating that it would not rig a trial due to the high

risk of being " found out. " Richard Ley, a spokesman for the industry

group, said that it was not within the interests of the industry to

make claims they know to be untrue, since the cost of lawsuits far

outweigh any potential income those claims might generate. Ley also

said that Smith's suggestion for more publicly-funded trials was not

realistic.

 

Fiona Godlee, current editor of the BMJ, did not debunk Smith's

claims; in fact, she agreed with much of what Smith said. " The BMJ

takes the issues of transparency very seriously, " she said. " We

continue to call for public registration of all clinical trials and

full disclosure of results, regardless of outcome. " Godlee added that

there was a need for more transparency in the journal and that it was

something they were working on. The difficulty, Godlee said, lies in

having to tell a drug company to " clean up their act, " while

simultaneously relying on them for money. Godlee added, " What we need

now is a debate about the issue. "

 

In his book, On the Take, Dr. Jerome Kassirer says he is confident

that, for the latter part of the 20th century, drug company ads had no

influence on the editorial content of the New England Journal of

Medicine. But he also adds that he is not sure the same could be said

for other medical journals. He agrees with some of what Smith says,

citing a negative study of the pharmaceutical industry published in

Annals of Internal Medicine, which resulted in dramatically lower

pharmaceutical advertising for the journal. This decrease in

advertising interest continued for many months. This is an example of

why medical journal editors are, at best, afraid of contradicting

their major source of income.

 

Misrepresenting drug trials is the " norm " in medical journals

The scandal in medical research is far more shocking than the

corporate scandals that recently created headlines, according to John

Abramson in Overdosed America. Abramson says that the withholding of

negative results and the misrepresentation of research are accepted

norms in the field of drug trials, or " commercially sponsored medical

research. "

 

He even goes as far as to say that there is a web of corporate

influence in the form of " regulatory agencies, commercially sponsored

medical education, brilliant advertising, expensive public relations

campaigns, manipulation of free media coverage, " as well as the

aforementioned relationship between trusted medical voices and the

medical industry. In Abramson's view, this all contributes to the

silencing of the industry's corruption. He likens the situation to the

recent corporate scandal in which securities analysts received

payments in order to write reports that drove up stock prices.

 

According to Ann Blake Tracy, PhD, author of PROZAC: Panacea or

Pandora, a " CBS HealthWatch " article even accused pharmaceutical

companies of authoring drug studies themselves, then paying doctors to

sign their names onto them. Furthermore, of the approximately 3,000

medical journals published monthly, only 10 percent are cross-indexed

into a computer system, according to Charles T. McGee, in his book,

Heart Frauds. This cross-indexed material is closely reviewed by

" conservative editorial boards " in order to screen out controversial

content. The 10 percent of material that's been approved is the only

material available to a doctor when he asks a medical librarian to

conduct a computer search or a search of a CD-ROM service such as

Medline. On top of that is Kenny Ausubel's report, contained in his

book, When Healing Becomes a Crime, that many drug companies just cut

out the middle-man and publish their own medical journals.

 

Inexpensive herbal remedies never appear in medical journals

Theoretically, for much the same reason dog food ads are absent from

their pages, medical journals never contain advertising or studies

about natural or herbal remedies. Supposedly, they're not considered

" in tune " with the content of the journals. However, many nutritional

experts and some medical doctors postulate that it's actually due to

the low amount of revenue generated by such remedies, since herbs are

usually significantly less expensive than over-the-counter and

prescription drugs. This may be why such inexpensive treatments often

seem to be dismissed offhand by medical journal editors.

 

McGee also writes about Dr. Richard Casdorph, who studied some old

experiments in chelation therapy (a procedure that uses

ethylenediamine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) to remove metals from the

body) and had success with the treatment by using methods that were

not available when the initial experiments were performed. In one

case, Casdorph apparently saved two patients from the amputation of

their legs via chelation therapy. When he tried to publish his study,

many medical journals rejected it, stating that chelation therapy was

found to be ineffective years before, and was therefore inappropriate

content for their publications. Presumably, Casdorph would have

informed the editors that his study involved previously undiscovered

methods, in which case their reason for rejection would be a

non-sequitur. Casdorph eventually found a journal of alternative

medicine that agreed to publish his study.

 

Opponents of the perceived corruption in medical journals offer many

solutions. Smith, as mentioned previously, would either like more

privately-funded studies published or have none published at all.

Abramson feels that researchers have to have access to all the results

of their studies, perform their own analysis of data, write their own

conclusions and submit the report to peer-reviewed medical journals. A

change may be in the cards, and as Richard Gerber, MD, notes, the

number of patients seeking alternative medical answers to their

problems is becoming too large for mainstream medical media to ignore.

Gerber says that some medical journals are even publishing articles

that explore the nature of these " unorthodox " treatments and discuss

why patients are seeking alternative health care.

 

Research Notes:

Ex-medical journal editor reveals drug firms' dirty tricks

 

IAN JOHNSTON

 

SCIENCE CORRESPONDENT

 

PHARMACEUTICAL companies are using their massive financial clout to

corrupt medical journals by rigging clinical trials of new drugs, it

was claimed today.

 

Richard Smith, former editor of the British Medical Journal (BMJ), has

exposed a series of tricks used by drug firms to ensure good publicity

for new products in prestigious journals. He said it was often

impossible for editors of the journals to spot a rigged trial -

despite the process of " peer review " where research is checked

independently - and also highlighted a " conflict of interest " because

publishing trials by major drug companies would result in increased sales.

 

The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry denied the

allegations, saying it would make no sense to rig trials because they

would eventually be " found out " .

 

Writing in the online journal PLOS [Public Library of Science]

Medicine, Mr Smith, who is now chief executive of private firm

UnitedHealth Europe, said action should be taken to ensure journals

were not becoming " an extension of the marketing arm of pharmaceutical

companies " .

 

" A large trial published in a major journal has the journal's stamp of

approval, will be distributed round the world and may well receive

global media coverage, " he said. " For a drug company, a favourable

trial is worth thousands of pages of advertising.

 

" The companies seem to get the results [in trials] they want not by

fiddling the results, which would be far too crude and possibly

detectable by peer review, but rather by asking the `right' questions. "

 

Med journals 'too close to firms'

Medical journals are an extension of the marketing arms of drug firms,

says an ex-British Medical Journal editor.

 

Dr Richard Smith, who edited the BMJ for 13 years, criticized the

journals' reliance on drug company advertising.

 

Writing in Public Library of Science Medicine, he also said journals

were undermined by relying on clinical trials funded by the drugs

industry.

 

The BMJ said a debate was needed, but drug industry representatives

rejected the criticisms.

 

Dr Smith, who is now chief executive of healthcare firm UnitedHealth

Europe, said the most conspicuous example of the dependence was

reliance on advertising, but he added it was " the least corrupting

form of dependence " since it was there for all to see.

 

Dr Smith said the publication of industry-funded trials was a much

bigger problem.

 

He said: " For a drug company a favorable trial is worth thousands of

pages of advertising, which is why a company will sometimes spend

upwards of a million dollars on reprints of the trial for worldwide

distribution. "

 

And Dr Smith argued, unlike ads, these trials were seen as the highest

form of evidence.

 

" Fortunately from the point of view of the companies which fund these

trials - but unfortunately for the credibility of the journals who

publish them - they rarely produce results that are unfavorable to the

companies' products. "

 

He said editors are put under further pressure by the demands of

producing a profit.

 

" An editor may thus face a frighteningly stark conflict of interest -

publish a trial that will bring in $100,000 (£54,000) of profit, or

meet the end of year budget by firing an editor. "

 

Publicly-funded trials

 

He said there needed to be more publicly-funded trials - about two

thirds are currently paid for by the industry - or journals should

stop publishing such trials.

 

BMJ editor Dr Fiona Godlee said she agreed with much of what Mr Smith

said.

 

" There is certainly a need for more transparency, it is something we

are working on.

 

" The whole issue about advertising is something journals are

uncomfortable about.

 

" On the one hand we are saying clean up your act, while we are fairly

dependent on the advertising for our survival.

 

" What we need now is a debate about the issue. "

 

But Richard Ley, of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical

Industry, said Smith's criticisms were unfounded.

 

" There would be an outcry if a pharmaceutical company tried to put

pressure on.

 

" And we must also remember these trials are peer reviewed. "

 

He also added it was not realistic to think trials could be funded

form public money.

 

Excerpt from story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/4552509.stm

 

Even when evidence is published in respected medical journals

documenting the dangers of certain drugs and procedures, the

unquestioned and almost religious belief in the biomedical model still

rules the decision-making process among doctors and patients alike. If

the above findings applied to practitioners of any other healing art,

including chiropractors, acupuncturists, or herbalists, their

professions would have been eliminated, their proponents ridiculed or

thrown in jail, and their schools closed by order of the courts.

Instead, the medical establishment today enjoys incredible prestige.

Philanthropists donate billions of dollars for medical research,

construction of hospitals, and other curing establishments. Even when

it is proven that certain drugs or procedures never worked or no

longer work, new treatments, based on the old biomedical story, are

generated every day.

Healing Myths by Donald M Epstein, page 73

 

Before long, drug companies themselves acquired and published medical

journals, pouring their proprietaries through the funnel of official

medical publications to disperse through doctors. They also lavished

advertising dollars on independent medical journals, becoming their

fiscal anchor. By the turn of the century, only one out of 250 medical

journals relied solely on subscription revenues from its professional

constituency.28

When Healing Becomes A Crime by Kenny Ausubel, page 287

 

Three of these studies were published in leading medical journals. No

efforts were made to attract media attention to the embarrassing

results. If the media had picked up the story they could have

accurately reported, " The diagnostic test used to scare the pants off

heart disease patients and coerce them into billions of dollars of

unnecessary surgical procedures is a scam. " The information was

ignored by physicians and never picked up by the press.

Heart Frauds by Charles T McGee MD, page 14

 

Drug companies control what gets published in medical journals through

their advertising dollars. An interesting situation surfaced several

years ago when a medical journal published a double-blind study

showing an herb had beneficial effects in the condition being studied.

Heart Frauds by Charles T McGee MD, page 151

 

Most medical journals now contain about one-third printed material and

two-thirds slick advertisements for drugs. According to the Wall

Street Journal, drug companies spent over $330,000,000 on advertising

directed at doctors in 1990. You can rest assured major medical

journals that rely on drug industry money are not going to publish

articles that demonstrate benefits from competing treatments such as

diets, herbs, acupuncture, chelation, vitamins, minerals, amino acids,

or other complimentary approaches.

Heart Frauds by Charles T McGee MD, page 151

 

Then again, what about biting the hand that feeds you? Some scientists

may be swayed because they receive money from the chemical or

pharmaceutical industries forgiving lectures or consulting, or their

research may be funded through industry. For example, since 1997

nearly half the articles evaluating drugs in the New England Journal

of Medicine were written by scientists who worked as paid advisers to

drugmakers or received major research funding from them. Most medical

journals these days don't require the authors of studies to stay

independent of industry.

Hormone Deception by Dr Lindsey Berkson, page 28

 

There is also little information about any possible influences of the

profitability of medical journals (advertising, reprint orders) on

journals' editorial content. I am confident that for at least the last

quarter of the twentieth century, these commercial influences had no

influence on editorial decisions made by the editors of the New

England Journal of Medicine, but I have no inside information on other

journals. Dr. Richard Smith, editor of the British Medical Journal,

has raised the concern that lucrative advertising and reprint sales

can be a corrupting influence.15 One experience at the Annals of

Internal Medicine in 1992 sent a chill down the spines of editors and

publishers alike. When the (then) editors, Drs. Suzanne and Robert

Fletcher, published a study sharply critical of the pharmaceutical

industry,16 pharmaceutical advertising in the journal declined

substantially, and remained lower than usual for months thereafter.17

For editors of many journals whose profit margins are not robust, that

experience might lead them to be chary about criticizing the

advertisers who support their publications. These issues are worthy of

much more study, but whether editors can be forthcoming about the

factors that influence them, and whether the editors' personal

financial conflicts influence them in judging what to publish will be

difficult, if not impossible, to assess.

On The Take by Jerome P Kassirer M.D., page 91

 

What I found over the next two and a half years of " researching the

research " is a scandal in medical science that is at least the

equivalent of any of the recent corporate scandals that have shaken

Americans' confidence in the integrity of the corporate and financial

worlds. Rigging medical studies, misrepresenting research results

published in even the most influential medical journals, and

withholding the findings of whole studies that don't come out in a

sponsor's favor have all become the accepted norm in commercially

sponsored medical research. To keep the lid sealed on this corruption

of medical science—and to ensure its translation into medical

practice—there is a complex web of corporate influence that includes

disempowered regulatory agencies, commercially sponsored medical

education, brilliant advertising, expensive public relations

campaigns, and manipulation of free media coverage. And last, but not

least, are the financial ties between many of the most trusted medical

experts and the medical industry. These relationships bear a

remarkable resemblance to the conflicts of interest the Securities and

Exchange Commission recently brought to a halt after learning that

securities analysts were receiving bonuses for writing reports that

drove up stock prices with the intent of bringing in more investment

banking business.

Overdosed America by John Abramson MD, page 9

 

and public scrutiny. Nontransparency is now the norm for commercially

sponsored medical research in much the same way that it had become the

norm in accounting and business practices in companies such as Enron

and Worldcom, and with much the same results—though the magnitude of

the cost in dollars and health still remains a well-kept secret.

Medical researchers must have access to all the results of their

studies, perform their own analyses of the data, write up their own

conclusions, and submit the report for publication to peer-reviewed

medical journals. Research data must also be made available to peer

reviewers for medical journals and to the new oversight body for

independent evaluation.

Overdosed America by John Abramson MD, page 253

 

Corporate-sponsored scientific symposiums provide another means for

manipulating the content of medical journals. In 1992, the New England

Journal of Medicine itself published a survey of 625 such symposiums

which found that 42 percent of them were sponsored by a single

pharmaceutical sponsor. There was a correlation, moreover, between

single-company sponsorship and practices that commercialize or corrupt

the scientific review process, including symposiums with misleading

titles designed to promote a specific brand-name product.

" Industry-sponsored symposia are promotional in nature and . . .

journals often abandon the peer-review process when they publish

symposiums,' the survey concluded.20 Drummond Rennie, a deputy editor

of the Journal of the American Medical Association, describes how the

process works in plainer language:

Trust Us We Are Experts by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber, page 205

 

And so on, and so on, until your medicine cabinet looks like a

pharmacy—which, of course, pleases the pharmaceutical companies.

They'd like to think that doctors work for them. Because these large

pharmaceutical companies make money only when doctors prescribe their

drugs, they do everything they can to make sure that this happens,

from supporting medical journals with their ads to having their

representatives visit every single doctor's office in the country,

where they hand out free samples, buy lunch for the staff, distribute

gifts—not just paperweights and pens, but toys for the kids,

" seminars " at excellent restaurants, junkets on Caribbean islands. And

since doctors are required to continue their medical education, who do

you suppose generally sponsors that education? Pharmaceutical companies.

Ultraprevention by Mark Hyman MD and Mark Liponis MD, page 38

 

And so on, and so on, until your medicine cabinet looks like a

pharmacy—which, of course, pleases the pharmaceutical companies.

They'd like to think that doctors work for them. Because these large

pharmaceutical companies make money only when doctors prescribe their

drugs, they do everything they can to make sure that this happens,

from supporting medical journals with their ads to having their

representatives visit every single doctor's office in the country,

where they hand out free samples, buy lunch for the staff, distribute

gifts—not just paperweights and pens, but toys for the kids,

" seminars " at excellent restaurants, junkets on Caribbean islands. And

since doctors are required to continue their medical education, who do

you suppose generally sponsors that education? Pharmaceutical companies.

Ultraprevention by Mark Hyman MD and Mark Liponis MD, page 38

 

That marketing " strategy " isn't reserved just for patients. Medical

doctors are targeted by drug advertising as well, and medical journals

are filled with ads pushing one drug over another. The drug industry

spends millions of dollars every year on advertising and, according to

the report, " the money is well spent, since marketing undoubtedly

influences the way that doctors prescribe. "

Under The Influence Modern Medicine by Terry A Rondberg DC, page 150

 

Following Pasteur's demonstration that attenuation of pathogenic

microbes transformed some pathogens into vaccines, the international

scientific community rushed to identify and convert into vaccines the

leading causes of death in the industrial world: tuberculosis,

pneumonia, cholera, dysentery, diphtheria, meningitis, influenza,

typhoid, childbed fever, and sexually transmitted diseases. Corrupt

pharmaceutical companies quickly started producing vaccines

scientifically " proven " to prevent all these diseases and more.

medical journals rushed into print successful accounts of the

discovery of " miracle " vaccines for tuberculosis, syphilis, and other

such diseases. American medical journals also started carrying

advertisements for and receiving enticing funds from pharmaceutical

companies selling such vaccines. Most, if not all, of these vaccines

were worthless; many were even harmful. And though they were published

in the leading medical journals, supporting studies were bogus. But

then, as now, it was difficult for many to accept that pharmaceutical

companies could be guilty of chicanery.

Vaccination By Peggy O'Mara, page 15

 

A large proportion of the medical journals published today could not

stay in business without advertising dollars from the pharmaceutical

industry. While such strong-arm tactics as those alleged against JAMA

are probably the exception, there is undoubtedly a more subtle, but

more pervasive, type of pressure on editorial boards to keep their

sources of funding happy. Since virtually every medical journal

advertiser would be displeased by articles emphasizing natural

medicine over drugs and surgery, there is little incentive for

editorial boards to accept these articles.

Preventing And Reversing Osteoporosis By Alan R Gaby MD, page 250

 

I am not implying that those who review manuscripts are corrupt or

even conscious of their bias. Nevertheless, doctors and scientists who

are interested in nutritional medicine almost invariably complain

about how difficult it is to have their work published in

" peer-reviewed " medical journals.

Preventing And Reversing Osteoporosis By Alan R Gaby MD, page 250

 

All this research and money has been spent to prove the obvious! Yet,

despite all these logical findings, health authorities, medical

doctors and other health professionals are not taking advantage of the

benefits that nutrition (see related ebook on nutrition) can bring in

reducing the incidence and mortality of many diseases. The thing that

really amazes me is that doctors do not recognize any relationship

between diet and brain function (behavior, learning capacity, etc.),

proof enough that they are eating too much junk! Their only " brain

food " is reading medical journals which, as I will expose, has

resulted in atrocious judgmental errors.

Health In The 21st Century by Fransisco Contreras MD, page 123

 

A CBS health report was released: Ghostwriting Articles for medical

journals

http://cbshealthwatch.medscape.com/medscape/p/G_Library/article.asp?Recld=2381

Now, many drug companies are actually writing those articles and then

paying doctors to sign their names to them. It's called ghostwriting.

" The articles are written by drug company researchers, given to an

outside doctor to review and sign his or her name to, and then

submitted to a journal. In effect, it's like washing dirty money, "

explains Douglas Peters, a medical malpractice attorney.

PROZAC Panacea or Pandora by Ann Blake Tracy PhD, page 280

 

Most medical journals nowadays devote about a third of their space to

advertisements for drugs. According to The Wall Street Journal, drug

companies spend over $330,000,000 on advertising directed toward

doctors. medical journals quite literally rely on drug money for their

survival.

Saturated Fat May Save Your Life by Bruce Fife ND, page 199

 

" Drug companies spend millions of dollars educating physicians. Drug

companies are the major advertisers in all medical journals. They fund

clinical trials to determine the effectiveness of their drugs and they

pay these researchers to speak at hospitals and medical schools. And

if a drug company that makes a cholesterol-lowering drug provides most

of the funds to conduct research on the effectiveness of that drug,

then there is a potential for bias, even if unwittingly, despite

independent monitoring committees that sometimes oversee these

studies. Drug companies provide sandwiches and doughnuts at hospital

conferences and for the doctors' lounges. They provide free samples of

their products. Drug companies also sponsor scientific meetings on the

importance of lowering cholesterol, often emphasizing the importance

of cholesterol-lowering drugs. These meetings are sometimes held in

resorts, and doctors who attend may even be given free transportation

and expenses in addition to their food and entertainment. "

Saturated Fat May Save Your Life by Bruce Fife ND, page 91

 

An example of a strong drug proponent who advocates chronic

maintenance administration of antidepressant medication is Dr. Martin

Keller, professor and chairman of the department of psychiatry at

Brown University. Keller has published numerous research articles,

many of them coauthored with other psychopharmacologists who take a

similar position on the treatment of depression. Appearing in

prestigious medical and psychiatric journals, Keller's articles have

the appearance of impartial academic publications. Yet, as described

in Chapter 5, the October 8, 1999, Boston Globe revealed that " Keller

earned a total of $842,000 last year [1998], according to financial

records, and more than half of his income came .. from pharmaceutical

companies whose drugs he touted in medical journals and at

conferences. " For example, while publishing articles specifically

endorsing Zoloft for the chronic treatment of depression, Keller

received $218,000 in 1998 alone from Zoloft's manufacturer, Pfizer.

" At the same time, " continued the Boston Globe, " Keller was receiving

millions of dollars in funding from the National Institute of Mental

Health for research on depression and ways to treat it. " The Boston

Globe said Keller cited his NIMH-funded research on depression in an

article in which he made claims on behalf of drugs like Zoloft. See D.

Kong and A. Bass, " Case at Brown Leads to Review, NIMH Studies Tighter

Rules on Conflicts, " Boston Globe, October 8,1999, pp. B1,B5.

Prozac Backlash by Joseph Glenmullen MD, page 373

 

A recent survey of consumer health-care choices in the United States

found that nearly one in four Americans utilize some form of

alternative medicine. This means that consumers are spending more than

a billion dollars a year in the United States on alternative

therapies. Because this trend toward increased interest in alternative

medicine is having a powerful economic impact, more and more

physicians and health-care providers are seeking information about

alternative health care. There are now several medical schools in the

United States that are offering courses to students on alternative

medical treatments. Popular medical journals are publishing articles

that examine the reasons why patients are seeking alternative health

care and that explore the nature of " unorthodox " treatments.

Vibrational Medicine by Richard Gerber MD, page 510

 

New breakthroughs about bone health are happening every day. There's

always some cutting-edge technology described in the medical journals.

There are loads of lab tests and diagnostic criteria and better

treatments under development, and some of them will no doubt

revolutionize the way we care for low bone density. The demand for

these advances is high (every baby boom woman has a vested interest),

so there's plenty of money in it for those who do the best work. By

all means keep up with the news, which will inevitably outpace even an

up-to-date book like this one, and choose the best new options to

maximize your health.

The Bone Density Program George Kessler DO PC, page 19

 

In the late 1970s and 1980s, I added another interest—food politics.

Medical research alone cannot change what Americans eat. Vital

research paid for with taxpayers' money remains locked in the medical

journals unless it is communicated to the public and implemented by

government policy. To help shape that policy, I chaired the Nutrition

Coordinating Committee at the NIH for nine consecutive years and

co-chaired the Interagency Committee for Human Nutrition Research at

the Office of Science and Technology Policy at the White House for

five years. These committees influenced nutrition and food policy

throughout the federal government.

The Omega Diet by Artemis P Simopoulos MD and Jo Robinson, page 365

 

Aghast at Hoxsey's upset victory, Dr. Fishbein decided to lift the

controversy outside medical journals to center stage in the public

media. He jointly authored " Blood Money " in the American Weekly, the

Sunday magazine supplement of the Hearst newspaper chain. The

installment on cancer quackery was part of a lavish six-part " Medical

Hucksters " series. It strutted Fishbein's purple prose and yellow

journalism, lacerating his favorite target, Harry Hoxsey. The tirade

smoldered against a lurid four-color painting of a frock-coated

Dickensian figure. Wearing white

When Healing Becomes A Crime by Kenny Ausubel, page 102

 

....chemotherapy research has made the headlines of the majority of

medical journals with all the academic fanfare, applause, prizes and

the solemn acceptance of the experts with authority on the subject.

The researchers are happy, their universities and institutes have

obtained more money for their impressive advances, the industry is

bulging with profits and the patients are dying. The only conclusion

that can be drawn is that their (pseudo) therapeutic value borders on

the criminal. My professional pride cries out for the academic

recognition of the establishment, that the authorities of the

oncological branch would give me their blessing. My conscience as a

physician nevertheless demands that I offer to my patients sufficient

resources so that he or she can decide which route to follow in their

struggle to recover health.

Health In The 21st Century by Fransisco Contreras MD, page 340

 

Overview:

 

* The truth about medical journals, and how drug companies exert

heavy influence over published scientific articles

 

Source: http://www.newstarget.com/012119.html

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