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Big Pharma Psychs Out the Shrinks
Just about everyone by now knows how the drug industry works to poison the minds of American doctors-not that many of them have resisted drinking the Kool-Aid, which comes in the form of ego-tripping awards, junkets, dinners, research funding, and cash in exchange for endorsing or prescribing the latest and most lucrative drugs. But even against this backdrop of sleaze, the latest news on the ties between Big Pharma and Big Psych could take your breath away.
It turns out that not just some, but most of the shrinks who wrote the American Psychiatric Association's most recent clinical guidelines for treating depression, bipolar disorders, and schizophrenia-which together account for $25 billion in prescription drug sales annually-had financial ties to drug companies, according a study to be published in Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, as reported in the Boston Globe.
Summarizing the findings, which were compiled by researchers largely from public records, the Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report states:
According to the study, 18 of the 20 authors of the guidelines had at least one financial tie to drug companies. Twelve authors had ties in at least three categories, such as consulting, research grants, speaking fees or stock ownership, the study found. In addition, the study found that all of the authors of schizophrenia and bipolar guidelines had relationships with the drug industry, while 60% of the authors of the depression guidelines had such connections. According to the study, more than 75% of the authors received funding for research from drug companies. In addition, one-third of the authors served on the speakers' bureaus of drug companies, the study shows.
As anyone who's suffered from any kind of mental health problem knows, treatment for these kinds of problems is a highly inexact science. A shrink can't give you a blood test or an MRI to figure out precisely what's wrong with you. So it's often a case of diagnosis by prescription: If you feel better after you take an anti-depressant, it's assumed that you were depressed; if you don't feel better, well, then maybe they'll try you on an anti-anxiety pill, or a low dose of a bipolar drug, and see how that works.
As one of the researchers for the study put it, "the lack of biological tests for mental disorders renders psychiatry especially vulnerable to industry influence." For this reason, she argues, it's particularly important that the guidelines issued by psychiatry's leading professional organization be compiled "on the basis of an objective review of the scientific evidence"-and not on whether the doctors writing them got a big grant from Merck or own stock in AstraZeneca.
Perhaps there's another reason why these conflicts of interest are so extreme in the field of mental health. You would expect that after news like this, confidence in the psychiatric profession would drop through the floor, and patients would begin to take their shrinks' diagnoses with a boulder of salt. But many psychiatric patients are desperately ill, highly vulnerable, and not in any position to be skeptical medical consumers.
A growing body of evidence suggests that the drug companies purposefully push doctors to push drugs on exactly these types of patients-the ones who are least equipped to push back. Look at the recent case of pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly, which agreed to pay a record $1.4 billion dollars to settle charges that it illegally marketed the anti-psychotic drug Zyprexa as a treatment for Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia in elderly patients. This despite the fact that the drug was not only unapproved for this "off-label" use, but had also been shown to cause obesity and diabetes-as this former Eli Lilly rep explains.
Now, $1.4 billion might sound like a tough punishment, until you find out that Lilly's total sales of Zyprexa have topped $37 billion. And at least some of those sales were thanks to doctors who, with guidance from Lilly drug reps, wrote thousands of prescriptions for patients with virtually no ability to defend themselves. Can you imagine an easier group for the drug companies-and their shills in the medical profession-to victimize than old people with dementia?
After spending some time reporting on the drug industry, I can easily picture Big Pharma's executives sitting around in their board rooms, planning which wretched, unprotected group of patients they're going to target next.
Then again, maybe I'm just paranoid. I'm sure there's a pill for that.
- Posted in

23 Comments so far
Show AllJust another $37 billion's worth of reasons to keep pot illegal.
yes, and to fund many interested or employed in keeping it that way...
Have you noticed all of the recent merger announcements from pharmceutical companies?
Big pharma wants to create ever bigger pharma giants that are too big to fail, thereby assuring that they maximize their corporate welfare potential.
The War on Drugs should be fought against THESE PEOPLE.
'Don't get fooled again' - Pete Townsend
Sioux Rose
Given the fiscal facts of modern life in the USA, depression is apt to be good business!
More than 10 years ago Ms. Magazine did a story on the over-treatment of depression via anti-depressant drugs. As an astrologer I am VERY well aware of natural cycles that EVERY person goes through. Saturn operates like heavy gravity and stays in a person's sun (as well as moon) sign for just over 2 years. This is often felt as a depressing period. When I lived in Puerto Rico, the head of the department of mental health services became interested in astrology and saw its viability. Some of my best clients were open-minded psychiatrists who saw firsthand how specific cycles impacted their patients. What they lacked was a model for understanding the cyclicity. That model has been around literally for ages.
I have a psychologist friend who works for some adjunct program affiliated with the University of Florida in Gainesville, and she deals with people who have behavioral problems. She told me she dreads the full moon as problems escalate. I also met a urologist in Puerto Rico who told me he never would perform a surgery during a full moon as it's much harder to stop the flow of blood. He said Hippocrates spoke of this but today's physician is bound by HIS golf schedule/game more than any respect for the higher cycles that impact all biological life on our planet.
I just finished a book that I began back in the early l990's expressly to provide a technology that would assist persons susceptible to dark moods in an understanding of their periodicity. Armed with this info, they can "just say no to drugs." Note the glaring hypocrisy (hardly invisible to youngsters) that so many real and invented ills advertise their drug "cures" on television nightly! Goddess forbid people learned to find organic answers... better diet, and an understanding that we are connected to the powerful cycles and thus not intended to feel the same way every day. Of course meaningful jobs, time for introspection/meditation/Yoga/Tai Chi/Martial arts would also be HEALTHY; but ours is a society that has departed from being healthy decades ago. This in parallel to the growth of lobbies in DC and a new rule by corporations, in particular those under homage to Mammon and Mars.
"This in parallel to the growth of lobbies in DC and a new rule by corporations, in particular those under homage to Mammon and Mars."
Sometimes, I often wonder if Mars has gotten the best of me and kicked Venus to the side everytime I get bitter at the kind of selling out and privatization Big Pharma has done against us all. Maybe Venus will make those oil supplies shorten to the point that we'll all have respect for one another and put the corporate bullies to fear or maybe even tears and make them pay dearly.
A whole article critical of the pharma/psyc connection and**still** no mention of psychotherapy, cognitive behavior therapy in particular having a well documented track record, esp. with depression. Are non pharmaceutical treatments so far off the radar we've forgotten them completely?
the crushing artificiality of modern life is so pervasive that trying to imagine living otherwise can be incredibly difficult...I wonder how many troubles diagnosed as other are largely due to this unnatural disconnect from one's own planet, body, and thinking, and the ability to live accordingly...
one enjoys pot, and is doing just fine, thanks...another insists pot is bad, and takes it away from the first by force, threatening jail...the other then forces the first, now (understandably) agitated, to ingest crap made by big pharma to reduce the agitation (side-effects included)...
perhaps if the other just left the first alone...
Interesting topic. Two books that I recommend are "Shocked" (About Kitty Dukakis) and also "Stop Walking on Eggshells" (help for those who love someone with Borderline Personality Disorder). Both books are much better than most on the topic.
I believe that Big Pharma is reaching the limits as the oil supplies get harder to come by. While I have heard of hemp and algae for oil along with the required decentralized infrastructure that's needed, maybe it's we the electorate who has been so infatuated with materialism that it's probably high time we let Big Pharma fail and let us get back in touch with one another and heel one another. Sometimes, I get the strange feeling that Mars keeps winning over Venus every time I get so sick and tired of the way Big Pharma poisons us that I get very bitter and upset that our natural alternatives have been privatized.
I know you meant 'heal', but 'heel' one another is very funny, in a sick, too-close-to-the-truth, way...
I agree with your underlying sentiment...that we, as consumers, may be unable to beat the addiction without hitting bottom...
Oops, my typo error. Sorry. :) No, I would never want to "heel" someone if I think I know what that means.
So these are the people who get to decide whether the people who are getting sick from air freshener and perfumes are really getting sick or just imagining it. The same people who probably bother people out partying the night before on New Years Day telling them that they are just imagining their hangover and that throwing up is psychosomatic.
If Big Pharma has this much control over Doctors and Shrinks, who else are they in bed with?
Does Big Pharma have holdings in Pesticide companies and Companies which produce Air Fresheners and perfumes?
A shame American doctors couldn't be content with simply charging a dollar for a capsule of Tylenol of helpless victims in the hospital and routinely prescribing overpriced laxatives and diurectics to people in senior citizen facilities, and then billing Medicare for the outrageous cost of these usually unnecessary drugs. (Both common practices have been going on for decades in US nursing homes and hospitals.)
They couldn't even be satisfied with prescribing heavy-duty blood pressure medication to those who have only slightly elevated blood pressure, and then a half-dozen other drugs to counter the side effects of the initial unneeded blood pressure drug, all the while making the recipient feel miserable.
In their insatiable quest for wealth, American doctors are now prescribing drugs to make healthy patients ill, and then prescribing other drugs to alleviate the problems caused by their own prescriptions and it's all perfectly legal. (Most doctors will not criticize a colleague for doing this; most of them do it themselves.)
How do I know this is happening? Ask an honest nurse, they'll tell you.
Or ask a patient who has, by some miracle, survived.
I find Ganja incredibly effective in treating some types of mental illness. Works in seconds. Affordable. I remember being angry more than once, smoking a joint and feeling much better. I also generally forget to do things, a welcome, if unintended, side effect. Sometimes I forget to be depressed. I eat more, sleep better, laugh more. I am also a lot more creative.
We need to look into ganja as one of the tools that will free us from big pharma's grip. My words are authoritative, as I am smoking a joint right now. A joint a night keeps me sane.
I don't give a rat's ass about the government's bans. You and I couldn't be as crooked as our politicians if our lives depended on it. The government will not encourage ganja use, because the shyte makes you think critically. The government is no friend of mine. It takes my money and gives it to rich people. It locks up my children to make money for rich people. It allows big pharma to kill us, so rich people can get richer. It sends our children to war, to further enrich rich people.
Everytime I smoke a joint, I am free.
nycdread
www.meetyourworld.com
I hardly ever comment, but here, I think I have something to contribute. As a huband and a father, I have seen serious mental illness first hand. I am saddened by the shameful distribution of wealth in our country and by our lack of understanding of the mentally ill. However, I am grateful for the the improvement in drugs that they have made over the last 30 years. There are mentally ill people who have been able to go on with happy and productive lives because of these drugs.
Slezak April 7th, 2009 2:02 am, I don't doubt that certain drugs will help the seriously mentally ill but, all too often, these psychotropic drugs are being prescribed for those with only mild forms of depression or anxiety which might be better treated through therapy.
Several years ago, a friend of mine was a little depressed with his life and feeling anxious about the future and his psychiatrist gave him Prozac. He turned numb, a robot without emotions, just floating through a joyless life without really experiencing it. He felt like an automaton. After a few months of this, he finally decided one day he was not happy -- not capable of feeling happy, for that matter -- and stopped taking the Prozac. What the doctor didn't tell him about are the after-effects of quitting Prozac -- while he didn't become psychotic, as some have, he had nervous tremors and a feeling of 'dislocation' from reality for nearly two months after stopping the drug.
Slezak...You make an important point. Each case is different. I have seen quite a few lives ruined because of therapy - especially Freudian Therapy. Sometimes meds help - sometimes they make things worse. Unfortunately we have a one-size-fits-all health care system and a very sick culture. It is like "The Perfect Storm" of mental illness.
In addition, because of HIPA, even if you believe that a murder/suicide is being thought about, there is not much that any individual can do about it.
Big Pharma will sell a 'cure' for anything but dependency. Just like any pusher.
Have some time on you hands? Sit down and watch the evening news on any of the major networks with pencil and paper and count how many prescription drug ads are featured. It's usually well over 50% of the total ads, sometimes as high as 75%. Just like beer and big trucks are peddled to sports fan watchers, the pharma pushers keep sticking their corrupted foot in our door every time we watch the latest bleed and lead stories. They have their demographics down and know older more stable individuals generally watch the evening news on a regular bases so lets scare the hypocondriical shit out of them and get rich doing so.
My oh my, who far we have strayed from the garden of eden! Maybe it time to follow the advice of "Crosby, Stills, & Nash" and "get back to the garden."
I went to the ER and said my foot is sore
The LPN smiled and said I have delusional disorder and gave me paxil
I went to the clinic and said that the neighbour dropped a rock on me
The nurse chuckled and said I have paranoia and gave me zyprexa
I went to the hospital and said that my wife is not happy
The doctor grinned and gave me cialis
I told the pharmacist my tummy is feeling funny
He never smiles he just gave me the finger
Now I have my nice little pill box that jingles and jangles
http://zexiest.com
jennastevens79@... April 7th, 2009 1:30 pm, how true. And in America, if you're poor, they'll usually just give you a placebo, the nation's most-ingested drug, and tell you to go home and suffer in silence -- unless you have really good health insurance. Then you'll get a quadruple heart bypass, MRI, a dozen costly prescriptions, and a complete blood work up, whether you need them or not, and invitations to receive a face lift, and hair plugs or 'breast enhancement,' even if you like the way you look.
Ironically, sometimes it's good to be uninsured in the Home of the Brave -- you aren't worth the 'treatment.'
It's easy to point fingers at doctors with financial ties to drug companies, but one has to look at the reasons the researchers in question have these ties. With the conservative revolution, federal funding for medical research became inadequate. Research costs money, and drug companies were happy to step up to the plate and fund research so they could patent the drugs and make enormous profits.
If we went back to federal research grants, the patents on the new products could be held by the NIH and any approved manufacturer could produce the drug, allowing competition to lower prices. The research team could receive a small percentage of profits as an incentive.