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Bad Pharma: How Medicine is Broken, And How We Can Fix It Kindle Edition
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Ben Goldacre
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PublisherFourth Estate
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Publication dateSeptember 25, 2012
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
In the follow-up to his popular Bad Science (2010), British medical doctor Goldacre reveals how pharmaceutical companies mislead doctors and hurt patients. They “sponsor” trials, which tend to yield favorable results, while negative results often remain unreported. He also reports that drug companies spend twice as much on marketing and advertising as on researching and developing new drugs. Unfortunately for U.S. readers, he focuses largely on the UK, but ghost authorship of studies and “continuing medical education” boondoggle trips for doctors are problematic everywhere, and he does refer to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on multiple occasions. And everyone, everywhere should feel unsettled by his discovery that pharmaceutical companies funnel $10 million to $20 million a year to such major medical journals as the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association. Not surprisingly, he notes, studies funded by the pharmaceutical industry are that much more likely to get published in these influential journals. Goldacre’s essential exposé will prompt readers to ask more questions before automatically popping a doctor-prescribed pill. --Karen Springen
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Missing Data
Sponsors get the answer they want
Before we get going, we need to establish one thing beyond any doubt: industry-funded trials are more likely to produce a positive, flattering result than independently funded trials. This is our core premise, and you’re about to read a very short chapter, because this is one of the most well-documented phenomena in the growing field of ‘research about research’. It has also become much easier to study in recent years, because the rules on declaring industry funding have become a little clearer.
We can begin with some recent work: in 2010, three researchers from Harvard and Toronto found all the trials looking at five major classes of drug – antidepressants, ulcer drugs and so on – then measured two key features: were they positive, and were they funded by industry?1 They found over five hundred trials in total: 85 per cent of the industry-funded studies were positive, but only 50 per cent of the government-funded trials were. That’s a very significant difference.
In 2007, researchers looked at every published trial that set out to explore the benefit of a statin.2 These are cholesterol-lowering drugs which reduce your risk of having a heart attack, they are prescribed in very large quantities, and they will loom large in this book. This study found 192 trials in total, either comparing one statin against another, or comparing a statin against a different kind of treatment. Once the researchers controlled for other factors (we’ll delve into what this means later), they found that industry-funded trials were twenty times more likely to give results favouring the test drug. Again, that’s a very big difference.
We’ll do one more. In 2006, researchers looked into every trial of psychiatric drugs in four academic journals over a ten-year period, finding 542 trial outcomes in total. Industry sponsors got favourable outcomes for their own drug 78 per cent of the time, while independently funded trials only gave a positive result in 48 per cent of cases. If you were a competing drug put up against the sponsor’s drug in a trial, you were in for a pretty rough ride: you would only win a measly 28 per cent of the time.3
These are dismal, frightening results, but they come from individual studies. When there has been lots of research in a field, it’s always possible that someone – like me, for example – could cherry-pick the results, and give a partial view. I could, in essence, be doing exactly what I accuse the pharmaceutical industry of doing, and only telling you about the studies that support my case, while hiding the reassuring ones from you.
To guard against this risk, researchers invented the systematic review. We’ll explore this in more detail soon (p.here), since it’s at the core of modern medicine, but in essence a systematic review is simple: instead of just mooching through the research literature, consciously or unconsciously picking out papers here and there that support your pre-existing beliefs, you take a scientific, systematic approach to the very process of looking for scientific evidence, ensuring that your evidence is as complete and representative as possible of all the research that has ever been done.
Systematic reviews are very, very onerous. In 2003, by coincidence, two were published, both looking specifically at the question we’re interested in. They took all the studies ever published that looked at whether industry funding is associated with pro-industry results. Each took a slightly different approach to finding research papers, and both found that industry-funded trials were, overall, about four times more likely to report positive results.4 A further review in 2007 looked at the new studies that had been published in the four years after these two earlier reviews: it found twenty more pieces of work, and all but two showed that industry-sponsored trials were more likely to report flattering results.5
I am setting out this evidence at length because I want to be absolutely clear that there is no doubt on the issue. Industry-sponsored trials give favourable results, and that is not my opinion, or a hunch from the occasional passing study. This is a very well-documented problem, and it has been researched extensively, without anybody stepping out to take effective action, as we shall see.
There is one last study I’d like to tell you about. It turns out that this pattern of industry-funded trials being vastly more likely to give positive results persists even when you move away from published academic papers, and look instead at trial reports from academic conferences, where data often appears for the first time (in fact, as we shall see, sometimes trial results only appear at an academic conference, with very little information on how the study was conducted).
Fries and Krishnan studied all the research abstracts presented at the 2001 American College of Rheumatology meetings which reported any kind of trial, and acknowledged industry sponsorship, in order to find out what proportion had results that favoured the sponsor’s drug. There is a small punchline coming, and to understand it we need to cover a little of what an academic paper looks like. In general, the results section is extensive: the raw numbers are given for each outcome, and for each possible causal factor, but not just as raw figures. The ‘ranges’ are given, subgroups are perhaps explored, statistical tests are conducted, and each detail of the result is described in table form, and in shorter narrative form in the text, explaining the most important results. This lengthy process is usually spread over several pages.
In Fries and Krishnan [2004] this level of detail was unnecessary. The results section is a single, simple, and – I like to imagine – fairly passive-aggressive sentence:
The results from every RCT (45 out of 45) favored the drug of the sponsor.
This extreme finding has a very interesting side effect, for those interested in time-saving shortcuts. Since every industry-sponsored trial had a positive result, that’s all you’d need to know about a piece of work to predict its outcome: if it was funded by industry, you could know with absolute certainty that the trial found the drug was great.
How does this happen? How do industry-sponsored trials almost always manage to get a positive result? It is, as far as anyone can be certain, a combination of factors. Sometimes trials are flawed by design. You can compare your new drug with something you know to be rubbish – an existing drug at an inadequate dose, perhaps, or a placebo sugar pill that does almost nothing. You can choose your patients very carefully, so they are more likely to get better on your treatment. You can peek at the results halfway through, and stop your trial early if they look good (which is – for interesting reasons we shall discuss – statistical poison). And so on.
But before we get to these fascinating methodological twists and quirks, these nudges and bumps that stop a trial from being a fair test of whether a treatment works or not, there is something very much simpler at hand.
Sometimes drug companies conduct lots of trials, and when they see that the results are unflattering, they simply fail to publish them. This is not a new problem, and it’s not limited to medicine. In fact, this issue of negative results that go missing in action cuts into almost every corner of science. It distorts findings in fields as diverse as brain imaging and economics, it makes a mockery of all our efforts to exclude bias from our studies, and despite everything that regulators, drug companies and even some academics will tell you, it is a problem that has been left unfixed for decades.
In fact, it is so deep-rooted that even if we fixed it today – right now, for good, forever, without any flaws or loopholes in our legislation – that still wouldn’t help, because we would still be practising medicine, cheerfully making decisions about which treatment is best, on the basis of decades of medical evidence which is – as you’ve now seen – fundamentally distorted.
But there is a way ahead.
Why missing data matters
Reboxetine is a drug I myself have prescribed. Other drugs had done nothing for this particular patient, so we wanted to try something new. I’d read the trial data before I wrote the prescription, and found only well-designed, fair tests, with overwhelmingly positive results. Reboxetine was better than placebo, and as good as any other antidepressant in head-to-head comparisons. It’s approved for use by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (the MHRA) in the UK, but wisely, the US FDA chose not to approve it. (This is no proof of the FDA being any smarter; there are plenty of drugs available in the US that the UK never approved.) Reboxetine was clearly a safe and and effective treatment. The patient and I discussed the evidence briefly, and agreed it was the right treatment to try next. I signed a prescription saying I wanted my patient to have this drug.
But we had both been misled. In October 2010 a group of researchers were finally able to bring together all the trials that had ever been conducted on reboxetine.6 Through a long process of investigation – searching in academic journals, but also arduously requesting data from the manufacturers and gathering documents from regulators – they were able to assemble all the data, both from trials that were published, and from those that had never appeared in academic papers.
When all this trial data was put together it produced a shocking picture. Seven trials had been conducted comparing reboxetine against placebo. Only one, conducted in 254 patients, had a neat, positive result, and that one was published in an academic journal, for doctors and researchers to read. But six more trials were conducted, in almost ten times as many patients. All of them showed that rebo...
Missing Data
Sponsors get the answer they want
Before we get going, we need to establish one thing beyond any doubt: industry-funded trials are more likely to produce a positive, flattering result than independently funded trials. This is our core premise, and you’re about to read a very short chapter, because this is one of the most well-documented phenomena in the growing field of ‘research about research’. It has also become much easier to study in recent years, because the rules on declaring industry funding have become a little clearer.
We can begin with some recent work: in 2010, three researchers from Harvard and Toronto found all the trials looking at five major classes of drug – antidepressants, ulcer drugs and so on – then measured two key features: were they positive, and were they funded by industry?1 They found over five hundred trials in total: 85 per cent of the industry-funded studies were positive, but only 50 per cent of the government-funded trials were. That’s a very significant difference.
In 2007, researchers looked at every published trial that set out to explore the benefit of a statin.2 These are cholesterol-lowering drugs which reduce your risk of having a heart attack, they are prescribed in very large quantities, and they will loom large in this book. This study found 192 trials in total, either comparing one statin against another, or comparing a statin against a different kind of treatment. Once the researchers controlled for other factors (we’ll delve into what this means later), they found that industry-funded trials were twenty times more likely to give results favouring the test drug. Again, that’s a very big difference.
We’ll do one more. In 2006, researchers looked into every trial of psychiatric drugs in four academic journals over a ten-year period, finding 542 trial outcomes in total. Industry sponsors got favourable outcomes for their own drug 78 per cent of the time, while independently funded trials only gave a positive result in 48 per cent of cases. If you were a competing drug put up against the sponsor’s drug in a trial, you were in for a pretty rough ride: you would only win a measly 28 per cent of the time.3
These are dismal, frightening results, but they come from individual studies. When there has been lots of research in a field, it’s always possible that someone – like me, for example – could cherry-pick the results, and give a partial view. I could, in essence, be doing exactly what I accuse the pharmaceutical industry of doing, and only telling you about the studies that support my case, while hiding the reassuring ones from you.
To guard against this risk, researchers invented the systematic review. We’ll explore this in more detail soon (p.here), since it’s at the core of modern medicine, but in essence a systematic review is simple: instead of just mooching through the research literature, consciously or unconsciously picking out papers here and there that support your pre-existing beliefs, you take a scientific, systematic approach to the very process of looking for scientific evidence, ensuring that your evidence is as complete and representative as possible of all the research that has ever been done.
Systematic reviews are very, very onerous. In 2003, by coincidence, two were published, both looking specifically at the question we’re interested in. They took all the studies ever published that looked at whether industry funding is associated with pro-industry results. Each took a slightly different approach to finding research papers, and both found that industry-funded trials were, overall, about four times more likely to report positive results.4 A further review in 2007 looked at the new studies that had been published in the four years after these two earlier reviews: it found twenty more pieces of work, and all but two showed that industry-sponsored trials were more likely to report flattering results.5
I am setting out this evidence at length because I want to be absolutely clear that there is no doubt on the issue. Industry-sponsored trials give favourable results, and that is not my opinion, or a hunch from the occasional passing study. This is a very well-documented problem, and it has been researched extensively, without anybody stepping out to take effective action, as we shall see.
There is one last study I’d like to tell you about. It turns out that this pattern of industry-funded trials being vastly more likely to give positive results persists even when you move away from published academic papers, and look instead at trial reports from academic conferences, where data often appears for the first time (in fact, as we shall see, sometimes trial results only appear at an academic conference, with very little information on how the study was conducted).
Fries and Krishnan studied all the research abstracts presented at the 2001 American College of Rheumatology meetings which reported any kind of trial, and acknowledged industry sponsorship, in order to find out what proportion had results that favoured the sponsor’s drug. There is a small punchline coming, and to understand it we need to cover a little of what an academic paper looks like. In general, the results section is extensive: the raw numbers are given for each outcome, and for each possible causal factor, but not just as raw figures. The ‘ranges’ are given, subgroups are perhaps explored, statistical tests are conducted, and each detail of the result is described in table form, and in shorter narrative form in the text, explaining the most important results. This lengthy process is usually spread over several pages.
In Fries and Krishnan [2004] this level of detail was unnecessary. The results section is a single, simple, and – I like to imagine – fairly passive-aggressive sentence:
The results from every RCT (45 out of 45) favored the drug of the sponsor.
This extreme finding has a very interesting side effect, for those interested in time-saving shortcuts. Since every industry-sponsored trial had a positive result, that’s all you’d need to know about a piece of work to predict its outcome: if it was funded by industry, you could know with absolute certainty that the trial found the drug was great.
How does this happen? How do industry-sponsored trials almost always manage to get a positive result? It is, as far as anyone can be certain, a combination of factors. Sometimes trials are flawed by design. You can compare your new drug with something you know to be rubbish – an existing drug at an inadequate dose, perhaps, or a placebo sugar pill that does almost nothing. You can choose your patients very carefully, so they are more likely to get better on your treatment. You can peek at the results halfway through, and stop your trial early if they look good (which is – for interesting reasons we shall discuss – statistical poison). And so on.
But before we get to these fascinating methodological twists and quirks, these nudges and bumps that stop a trial from being a fair test of whether a treatment works or not, there is something very much simpler at hand.
Sometimes drug companies conduct lots of trials, and when they see that the results are unflattering, they simply fail to publish them. This is not a new problem, and it’s not limited to medicine. In fact, this issue of negative results that go missing in action cuts into almost every corner of science. It distorts findings in fields as diverse as brain imaging and economics, it makes a mockery of all our efforts to exclude bias from our studies, and despite everything that regulators, drug companies and even some academics will tell you, it is a problem that has been left unfixed for decades.
In fact, it is so deep-rooted that even if we fixed it today – right now, for good, forever, without any flaws or loopholes in our legislation – that still wouldn’t help, because we would still be practising medicine, cheerfully making decisions about which treatment is best, on the basis of decades of medical evidence which is – as you’ve now seen – fundamentally distorted.
But there is a way ahead.
Why missing data matters
Reboxetine is a drug I myself have prescribed. Other drugs had done nothing for this particular patient, so we wanted to try something new. I’d read the trial data before I wrote the prescription, and found only well-designed, fair tests, with overwhelmingly positive results. Reboxetine was better than placebo, and as good as any other antidepressant in head-to-head comparisons. It’s approved for use by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (the MHRA) in the UK, but wisely, the US FDA chose not to approve it. (This is no proof of the FDA being any smarter; there are plenty of drugs available in the US that the UK never approved.) Reboxetine was clearly a safe and and effective treatment. The patient and I discussed the evidence briefly, and agreed it was the right treatment to try next. I signed a prescription saying I wanted my patient to have this drug.
But we had both been misled. In October 2010 a group of researchers were finally able to bring together all the trials that had ever been conducted on reboxetine.6 Through a long process of investigation – searching in academic journals, but also arduously requesting data from the manufacturers and gathering documents from regulators – they were able to assemble all the data, both from trials that were published, and from those that had never appeared in academic papers.
When all this trial data was put together it produced a shocking picture. Seven trials had been conducted comparing reboxetine against placebo. Only one, conducted in 254 patients, had a neat, positive result, and that one was published in an academic journal, for doctors and researchers to read. But six more trials were conducted, in almost ten times as many patients. All of them showed that rebo...
Review
Praise for Bad Pharma “[Bad Pharma] is a book to make you enraged—properly, bone-shakingly furious—because it’s about how big business puts profits over patient welfare [and] allows people to die because they don’t want to disclose damning research evidence . . .This is a book that desperately needed to be written . . . A work of brilliance.” —Max Pemberton, The Telegraph “A thorough piece of investigative medical journalism. What keeps you turning its pages is the accessibility of Goldacre’s writing, . . . his genuine, indignant passion, his careful gathering of evidence and his use of stories, some of them personal, which bring the book to life.” —Luisa Dillner, The Guardian
About the Author
Ben Goldacre is a doctor and writer. His first book Bad Science was an international bestseller, and has been translated into twenty-five languages. He is thirty-eight and lives in London.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Bookforum
Bad Pharma is surely the most comprehensive account to date of how the pharmaceutical industry games the regulatory process. Still, Bad Pharma is short on practical prescriptions for reform, and it is not until the last ten pages that Goldacre acknowledges that drug companies are manufacturing products that save lives and alleviate pain for billions of people. —Chris Wilson
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Product details
- ASIN : B008PCVGKI
- Publisher : Fourth Estate (September 25, 2012)
- Publication date : September 25, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 1508 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 449 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
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#970,534 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #862 in Scientific Research
- #887 in Medical Ethics (Books)
- #1,087 in Pharmacies
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Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2018
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Verified Purchase
I've always enjoyed when Penn &Teller do a truck and fool me,explain HOW they fooled me ,and then ,having just explained how they do it,fool me once again as they repeat their trick! I find it less enjoyable wen pharmaceutical companies repeatedly pull the wool over my eyes,but I REALLY appreciate Dr. Goldacre showing me so many ways that Pharma uses to trick me . Again and again. What I don't fully understand,as a long-practicing physician in the twilight of my career,is how Pharma can repeatedly change primary outcomes for trials ,rewrite a protocol and pass off negative results as positive results. Well,I didn't understand this before,nor did I understand the prevalence of that cute maneuver, but at least now I understand how commonplace it is and how complicit or willfully stupid the journal editors are who let this go on. Ionnidis' famous article on how what u read in journals is likely NOT true was amazing. This book is just astounding in explaining the old Mark Twain quote "It ain't what u don't know that gits u (or is it your patient?)in trouble, it's what u know for sure that just ain't so." This enjoyable vade mecum explains almost exactly how we get to know so much for sure that" just ain't so." Thanx Dr Goldacre.
14 people found this helpful
Helpful
Reviewed in the United States on November 23, 2019
Verified Purchase
This is an incredibly deep and thorough look at the falsity and outright fraud being perpetrated through "scientific" studies and drug trials. Once you've read it, you will understand the necessity to be vigilant when any loved one needs medical treatment or medication. You'll understand why you need to do your own research ... AND that the data you urgently need may not even be available, not to you and not to the most well-meaning doctor. Millions of people have been harmed or lost their lives and until this entire system is overhauled, millions more will suffer. There are many urgent topics in today's world, and knowing how to navigate our medical system without being harmed or killed is right up there in importance. It's not an easy book to read but it's worth the work.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Allow me to explain a short quote regarding Big Pharm using pop stars Beyonce, Taylor Swift, and Kanye as the analogy:
Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2016Verified Purchase
Explaining Big Pharm Problems Using Pop Stars
“…the bar is very low: that drugs must only prove that they are better than nothing, even when there are highly effective treatments on the market already.“ — Goldacre, Ben "Bad Pharma: …”
Let me explain the above:
Say there’s a drug for ‘XYZ Disease’ on the market named “ ‘Yonce ” that is 80 - 85% effective in stopping growth right in its tracks. Most people use ‘Yonce, and are fairly happy with it, but nobody would mind if someone made it 100% effective.
Along comes a research company named SwiftMoney and dumps millions into research and development in hopes of marketing a competing drug to “‘Yonce” because wow ‘Yonce is a hit and SwiftMoney wants a piece of the pie.
So SwiftMoney churns out a drug named, ‘TaylorSwift,’ however, it turns out all their millions are for naught. The drug they’ve developed is only minimally effective — about 20 - 30% effective in stopping ‘XYZ Disease,’ even worse, in 10% of the subjects tested the drug actually proved harmful.
Luckily SwitftMoney is not legally required by the FDA to report, nor publish, negative results of drug trials if they don’t wish to. In that very manner SwiftMoney can carry out 10 clinical trials and publish the results from the 2 trials that had positive outcomes, and bury the 8 trials that showed no favorable outcome, or even worse showed negative outcomes. As long as SwiftMoney can prove that their drug is better than a placebo — a dummy pill — like the drug ‘Friday’ by pharmaceutical company ‘RebeccaBlack’ then the FDA will allow the marketing of ‘Taylor.’
So SwiftMoney floods the market with their subpar drug named ‘TaylorSwift’(1) and spends millions and millions in marketing to convince people that they should buy Taylor instead of ‘Yonce(2).
Trial data that shows unflattering evidence is simply withheld from doctors and patients, and this practice is commonplace. What we all really need is a nonprofit organization called KANYE to stand up and say: “Look, TaylorSwift, Imma let you market your drug, ‘cause this is a free market economy, but everybody deserves to know that ‘Yonce has the best ‘xyz drug’ of all time, up until this time.” In that way doctors and patients are making actual informed decisions.
What I’ve written about is only a small part of how nasty the whole problem truly is, I suggest picking up a copy of “Bad Pharma: How Drug Companies Mislead Doctors and Harm Patients” by Ben Goldacre for yourselves.
Thank you for your time.
We all need Yeezus!
—ewitty
(1.) [“This means that real patients are given dummy placebo pills for no good reason, but also that drugs appear on the market which are worse than the treatments we already have.” — Bad Pharma: …”]
(2.) ["pharmaceutical companies spend tens of billions of pounds every year trying to change the treatment decisions of doctors: in fact, they spend twice as much on marketing and advertising as they do on the research and development of new drugs. — Bad Pharma: …”]
“…the bar is very low: that drugs must only prove that they are better than nothing, even when there are highly effective treatments on the market already.“ — Goldacre, Ben "Bad Pharma: …”
Let me explain the above:
Say there’s a drug for ‘XYZ Disease’ on the market named “ ‘Yonce ” that is 80 - 85% effective in stopping growth right in its tracks. Most people use ‘Yonce, and are fairly happy with it, but nobody would mind if someone made it 100% effective.
Along comes a research company named SwiftMoney and dumps millions into research and development in hopes of marketing a competing drug to “‘Yonce” because wow ‘Yonce is a hit and SwiftMoney wants a piece of the pie.
So SwiftMoney churns out a drug named, ‘TaylorSwift,’ however, it turns out all their millions are for naught. The drug they’ve developed is only minimally effective — about 20 - 30% effective in stopping ‘XYZ Disease,’ even worse, in 10% of the subjects tested the drug actually proved harmful.
Luckily SwitftMoney is not legally required by the FDA to report, nor publish, negative results of drug trials if they don’t wish to. In that very manner SwiftMoney can carry out 10 clinical trials and publish the results from the 2 trials that had positive outcomes, and bury the 8 trials that showed no favorable outcome, or even worse showed negative outcomes. As long as SwiftMoney can prove that their drug is better than a placebo — a dummy pill — like the drug ‘Friday’ by pharmaceutical company ‘RebeccaBlack’ then the FDA will allow the marketing of ‘Taylor.’
So SwiftMoney floods the market with their subpar drug named ‘TaylorSwift’(1) and spends millions and millions in marketing to convince people that they should buy Taylor instead of ‘Yonce(2).
Trial data that shows unflattering evidence is simply withheld from doctors and patients, and this practice is commonplace. What we all really need is a nonprofit organization called KANYE to stand up and say: “Look, TaylorSwift, Imma let you market your drug, ‘cause this is a free market economy, but everybody deserves to know that ‘Yonce has the best ‘xyz drug’ of all time, up until this time.” In that way doctors and patients are making actual informed decisions.
What I’ve written about is only a small part of how nasty the whole problem truly is, I suggest picking up a copy of “Bad Pharma: How Drug Companies Mislead Doctors and Harm Patients” by Ben Goldacre for yourselves.
Thank you for your time.
We all need Yeezus!
—ewitty
(1.) [“This means that real patients are given dummy placebo pills for no good reason, but also that drugs appear on the market which are worse than the treatments we already have.” — Bad Pharma: …”]
(2.) ["pharmaceutical companies spend tens of billions of pounds every year trying to change the treatment decisions of doctors: in fact, they spend twice as much on marketing and advertising as they do on the research and development of new drugs. — Bad Pharma: …”]
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Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2016
Verified Purchase
Probably the most important book I've read this year. While I've been sceptical of Big Pharma for a long time, I was shocked and horrified to know just how bad things are. There are massive issues around funding, loopholes for approvals, and not publishing unfavourable results skewing the safety and efficiency perceptions of drugs. Bad Pharma isn't anti science - rather the opposite - Ben Goldacre is a doctor and science journalist, and advocates for sticking to the scientific method, full disclosure and advocating for the interest of the patients - not the drug companies. I can't recommend this enough.
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Top reviews from other countries
Doccox
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sins of omission or commission ? Read it and weep again !
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 27, 2016Verified Purchase
BAD PHARMA (Ben Goldacre)
For any person ( layman , doctor , patient) who is interested in how medicines are discovered/created , evaluated , regulated - but highlighting failures of the current systems – this is a must read (IMHO).
Any drug or medicine has (some) positive effects but also with possible side effects which range from trivial to lethal in some members of the population .
In Bad Science Ben Goldacre exposed the poor scientific evidence behind “ Detox” products/ diets , homeopathy and the like. The promotion of Vitamin C as the cure for Aids ( supported by the then SA Government) is a truly sad tale with lethal consequences.
Here he focuses on traditional and new medicines – the evidence that they work accrued by so-called clinical trials - and the recording of potential ( negative) side effects .
Sadly much of the data is missing ( A classic case of “Accentuate the positive , eliminate the negative – as the song goes) to the detriment of really understanding if new medicines work ( or work better than old ones) and in the failed trials many opportunities and problematic side effects have been ignored .This brings the stories up to ca 2012/3.
I am a retired chemist with some previous experience in new chemical creation and drug development but anyone who can follow simple arguments will be educated ,amused, horrified by Ben’s revelations . There is now a common belief that ANY\THING can be fixed by a pill rather than a healthy lifestyle – SCARY.
Once a “designer” of drugs ( such as it was 40 years ago) I am now on the receiving end of medications for diabetes and atrial fibrillation – what Ben has to say about the development and approval of some of these medications is truly scary. Not so much as to how the data is manipulated but the repressed trials that can result in unwanted side effects being missed. There are case histories here of the deliberate blocking of the release of data ( stand up Roche for the testing results on Tamiflu) to independent academics for true statistical analysis
Required reading for any sane person who wishes to assess company or media claims for products or treatments .
For any person ( layman , doctor , patient) who is interested in how medicines are discovered/created , evaluated , regulated - but highlighting failures of the current systems – this is a must read (IMHO).
Any drug or medicine has (some) positive effects but also with possible side effects which range from trivial to lethal in some members of the population .
In Bad Science Ben Goldacre exposed the poor scientific evidence behind “ Detox” products/ diets , homeopathy and the like. The promotion of Vitamin C as the cure for Aids ( supported by the then SA Government) is a truly sad tale with lethal consequences.
Here he focuses on traditional and new medicines – the evidence that they work accrued by so-called clinical trials - and the recording of potential ( negative) side effects .
Sadly much of the data is missing ( A classic case of “Accentuate the positive , eliminate the negative – as the song goes) to the detriment of really understanding if new medicines work ( or work better than old ones) and in the failed trials many opportunities and problematic side effects have been ignored .This brings the stories up to ca 2012/3.
I am a retired chemist with some previous experience in new chemical creation and drug development but anyone who can follow simple arguments will be educated ,amused, horrified by Ben’s revelations . There is now a common belief that ANY\THING can be fixed by a pill rather than a healthy lifestyle – SCARY.
Once a “designer” of drugs ( such as it was 40 years ago) I am now on the receiving end of medications for diabetes and atrial fibrillation – what Ben has to say about the development and approval of some of these medications is truly scary. Not so much as to how the data is manipulated but the repressed trials that can result in unwanted side effects being missed. There are case histories here of the deliberate blocking of the release of data ( stand up Roche for the testing results on Tamiflu) to independent academics for true statistical analysis
Required reading for any sane person who wishes to assess company or media claims for products or treatments .
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Mr. P. Chapman
5.0 out of 5 stars
Prepare to be shocked and angry
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 6, 2021Verified Purchase
This is another well researched and written work by Dr Goldacre. In Bad Science he showed us some of the tricks the pharmaceutical companies get up to in order to sell their drugs. In this book he reveals far more.
I haven't read it all yet but am disgusted by the 'criminal' ways the drugs companies routinely hide research data that shows their drugs either don't work properly or could have potentially life threatening side effects.
It certainly makes me wonder how those companies are now massaging the data surrounding their Covid 19 vaccines. Everybody needs to know the full truth and that means seeing all the data not just the data they choose to show us.
Prescription drugs kill people. In fact they are the third largest cause of death in the US and Europe. This will continue to happen until the drugs companies are more honest, transparent and open about their drugs and research practices. If they were to spend as much money on research and development as they do on pushing their drugs in any way they can to doctors and health services we may be a lot further on with effective treatments for our diseases.
This book needs to be read by everyone. Anyone who is sick plus their doctors, politicians, regulators and anyone who works in the health industry. They all need to know what they are dealing with so that they can assess the risks more accurately.
Buy and read this book today.
I haven't read it all yet but am disgusted by the 'criminal' ways the drugs companies routinely hide research data that shows their drugs either don't work properly or could have potentially life threatening side effects.
It certainly makes me wonder how those companies are now massaging the data surrounding their Covid 19 vaccines. Everybody needs to know the full truth and that means seeing all the data not just the data they choose to show us.
Prescription drugs kill people. In fact they are the third largest cause of death in the US and Europe. This will continue to happen until the drugs companies are more honest, transparent and open about their drugs and research practices. If they were to spend as much money on research and development as they do on pushing their drugs in any way they can to doctors and health services we may be a lot further on with effective treatments for our diseases.
This book needs to be read by everyone. Anyone who is sick plus their doctors, politicians, regulators and anyone who works in the health industry. They all need to know what they are dealing with so that they can assess the risks more accurately.
Buy and read this book today.
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Eratosthenes
5.0 out of 5 stars
A damning indictment of institutionalized cynicism and dishonesty
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 22, 2015Verified Purchase
This is a mind-boggling expose of just what is going on in the world of pharmaceuticals, medicine,
academia, politics and even in so-called regulatory agencies. It is as shocking and disgraceful as
the levels of dishonesty and fraud in banking and finance following the crash of 2008. Everybody should
read this book, patients, doctors, politicians, academics and regulators. There are clearly many people in
very powerful positions who should be held to account and are repeatedly getting away with their failures
and cover-ups, just as they were doing in the banking sector. As somebody holding an academic doctorate
myself one can only despair at the corrupt practices that are going on in the academic world because, along with
regulatory bodies these are two institutions in our society where we ought to be able to depend on total honesty,
transparency and trustworthiness.
academia, politics and even in so-called regulatory agencies. It is as shocking and disgraceful as
the levels of dishonesty and fraud in banking and finance following the crash of 2008. Everybody should
read this book, patients, doctors, politicians, academics and regulators. There are clearly many people in
very powerful positions who should be held to account and are repeatedly getting away with their failures
and cover-ups, just as they were doing in the banking sector. As somebody holding an academic doctorate
myself one can only despair at the corrupt practices that are going on in the academic world because, along with
regulatory bodies these are two institutions in our society where we ought to be able to depend on total honesty,
transparency and trustworthiness.
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Sparky
5.0 out of 5 stars
Scary reading
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 9, 2021Verified Purchase
Really interesting deep dive into the murky waters of creating new drugs, then how industry conducts trials of them, only to selectively publish depending on the outcomes. Shows how money talks on a massive scale (for what is after all a multi billion dollar a year industry as a collective) wonder to what extent a follow up years on would reveal, have they cleaned up their acts, or does much of the work/promotion etc on new treatments go on behind closed doors still?
Jules Jones
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dense but lucid examination of the problems with the pharmaceuticals industry
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 10, 2015Verified Purchase
Ben Goldacre is a very angry man, with good reason. In this book he lays out how the pharmaceutical industry has distorted drug research in pursuit of profit, sometimes intentionally, sometimes entirely without malice but with equally devastating effects for patient welfare. This matters because patients are prescribed less effective drugs, or drugs which are outright harmful, at huge financial expense to those paying for the drugs. This isn’t a conspiracy theory book; Goldacre is quite clear that many valuable drugs have come out of the industry, and that most of the people who work in it want to make better drugs. He sets out in detail how and why bias is introduced into both research and prescribing practices, putting it in layman’s terms but linking to the research papers and court documents that back up what he’s saying. He also addresses the failings of the current regulatory system, and proposes ways to improve things — pointing out that unless real controls with serious financial penalties are put in place, even those companies which genuinely want to reform will be under commercial pressure to continue with bad practice in a race to the bottom.
It’s a dense and at times exhausting read. But Goldacre has done a decent job of making the issue accessible to a wide audience with a direct interest, from patients to practising doctors and academics. You can skim a lot of the book to get the general gist, or you can read it in details without following the links, or you can dig into research material he drew on and has laid out in meticulous footnotes and citations. He concludes the original edition with practical suggestions about what individual people can do to improve things, often simply by asking questions.
I read the second edition, which has a “what happened next” chapter about the reaction to the first edition. As he had predicted, there was a backlash in an attempt to discredit him — but there was also a lot of covert feedback from industry personnel acknowledging the problems and considering how to improve things. While there’s always a “the lurkers support me in email” issue with uncredited sources, he does also offer some examples of companies which have publicly moved to improve transparency.
Bad Pharma is an angry but rational examination of a real problem that affects millions of people, including almost anyone reading this review. It’s a worthwhile read, even if it makes for uncomfortable reading for patients, doctors and companies alike.
It’s a dense and at times exhausting read. But Goldacre has done a decent job of making the issue accessible to a wide audience with a direct interest, from patients to practising doctors and academics. You can skim a lot of the book to get the general gist, or you can read it in details without following the links, or you can dig into research material he drew on and has laid out in meticulous footnotes and citations. He concludes the original edition with practical suggestions about what individual people can do to improve things, often simply by asking questions.
I read the second edition, which has a “what happened next” chapter about the reaction to the first edition. As he had predicted, there was a backlash in an attempt to discredit him — but there was also a lot of covert feedback from industry personnel acknowledging the problems and considering how to improve things. While there’s always a “the lurkers support me in email” issue with uncredited sources, he does also offer some examples of companies which have publicly moved to improve transparency.
Bad Pharma is an angry but rational examination of a real problem that affects millions of people, including almost anyone reading this review. It’s a worthwhile read, even if it makes for uncomfortable reading for patients, doctors and companies alike.
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