The article below is a short writeup on Ben Goldacre’s new book, Bad Pharma. There’s a longer edited extract here: guardian.co.uk/business/2012 … n-goldacre
Here’s an additional passage from The Guardian article (link posted above):
…it is entirely normal for researchers and academics conducting industry-funded trials to sign contracts subjecting them to gagging clauses that forbid them to publish, discuss or analyse data from their trials without the permission of the funder.
This is such a secretive and shameful situation that even trying to document it in public can be a fraught business. In 2006, a paper was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (Jama), one of the biggest medical journals in the world, describing how common it was for researchers doing industry-funded trials to have these kinds of constraints placed on their right to publish the results. The study was conducted by the Nordic Cochrane Centre and it looked at all the trials given approval to go ahead in Copenhagen and Frederiksberg. (If you’re wondering why these two cities were chosen, it was simply a matter of practicality: the researchers applied elsewhere without success, and were specifically refused access to data in the UK.) These trials were overwhelmingly sponsored by the pharmaceutical industry (98%) and the rules governing the management of the results tell a story that walks the now familiar line between frightening and absurd.
For 16 of the 44 trials, the sponsoring company got to see the data as it accumulated, and in a further 16 it had the right to stop the trial at any time, for any reason. This means that a company can see if a trial is going against it, and can interfere as it progresses, distorting the results. Even if the study was allowed to finish, the data could still be suppressed: there were constraints on publication rights in 40 of the 44 trials, and in half of them the contracts specifically stated that the sponsor either owned the data outright (what about the patients, you might say?), or needed to approve the final publication, or both. None of these restrictions was mentioned in any of the published papers.
Goldacre sets out the book’s claims in the introduction: “Drugs are tested by the people who manufacture them, in poorly designed trials, on hopelessly small numbers of weird, unrepresentative patients, and analysed using techniques which are flawed by design, in such a way that they exaggerate the benefits of treatments.” He goes on to explain that when trials produce results the industry doesn’t like, they suppress this data, distort evidence and make it near-impossible for people to properly evaluate their claims. The rot runs from the “education” that is provided for doctors but quietly sponsored by drug companies through to articles published in academic journals that are ghost-written by industry insiders, without acknowledgement. It’s more than just an attack on the pharmaceutical industry, but on the whole process by which scientific experimentation in medicine is reported and evaluated.
Just read this… should be required reading for everyone here. Makes a strong case against all areas of the medical establishment.
FUCK THIS INDUSTRY AND EVERY SLIMEBALL MONEY GRABBING DIRTBOX WHO WAS INVOLVED IN PUTTING THIS POISON TO MARKET.MAY THEY ROTT IN HELL BECAUSE THEY HAVE PROVED THEMSELVES TO BE A THORN IN THE SIDE OF HUMANITY AND NOTHING ELSE.
I’ve also read this - very good book. If this hadn’t happened to me then I wouldn’t have read this book and would still have the shutters over my eyes. I’d definitely recommend it.