¶ … Overdosed America by Jay Abramson
Abramson, Jay. (2004). Overdosed America. New York: HarperCollins.
Read this book before you go to the doctor!
Key assumptions deflated regarding modern medicine -- not everything you read in the media with a doctor's name after it is objective!
Tests unlikely to improve patient care are being routinely ordered, as the result of insistent but ill-informed patient demands. Influence of patient-targeted advertising by big pharmaceutical companies.
Expensive drugs that had not been shown to be any more effective or safer than the older drugs they were replacing are being routinely prescribed
Condemnation of 'infomercials' masquerading as health information. Infomercials rather than doctors inform patients today.
Chapter 2 Medical Journals
The politics of spin -- influence of money upon what gets published and publicized, although such journals should provide unbiased evidence, and be the mouthpiece of respected professionals.
Following the money -- many medical journals publish studies that receive funding even a covert fashion from the pharmaceutical industries they purporting to study
Use of these journals for marketing purposes, not to draw an objective conclusion about the data or to promote patient health
III. Chapter 3: Celebrex and Vioxx case studies
Advertising Celebrex
Ads make it seem free of all side effects. Patients demanded drug from doctors because ads made the drug seem so attractive, and insisted upon the drug, even when the doctor felt it was not warranted.
Even after Vioxx pulled, Pfizer defended similar drug.
Celebrex and Vioxx more expensive than over-the-counter medications
Advertising Vioxx
Trials showed higher rates of death in patients compared with those who simply took regular NSAI (non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs)
C. FDA warning letters about misleading advertising simply and easily ignored by Pfizer and Merck
IV. Chapter 4: The Myth of Excellence
Assumption that best health care is most cutting edge and high-tech is wrong.
Assumption that more is better, even though survival rates, for example, between American and Canadian heart patients the same, even if American patients received more intrusive and interventionist medicine regarding drugs and latest treatment.
V. Chapter 5: Case study of hormone replacement
Menopause difficult time in women's life
Women want to be told something will make it better
Hormone replacement drugs to prevent the development of menopause symptoms may actually increase the risk of certain cancers.
Healthy lifestyle (not smoking, exercise, good diet low in saturated fat) is associated with an 83% reduction in a woman's risk of developing heart disease, and improving long-term life
VI. Chapter 6: American Medicine's Perfect Storm
Coming together of various cultural elements result in corporate takeover of American medicine
Deregulation of industry
Increased power of industry lobbying groups such as pharmaceutical companies in Washington D.C.
Increased venues of advertising, from print, news, commercials on television, Internet, to late-night infomercials
Surge of new public relations
Marketing to doctors
More money to go around as new drugs are developed and have yet to become cheaper and generic, even if new drugs do same thing or are more dangerous, these new drugs are marketed as better and different
VII. Chapter 7: The Commercial Takeover of American Medicine
Lack of empowered regulatory agencies
FDA subject to political pressures from corporations and interest groups
Commercially sponsored medical education -- get the doctors while they're young!
1. Funding medical education -- receiving corporate sponsorship and funds comes at a price to doctor objectivity and patient health.
VIII. Chapter 8: The Snake and Staff -- Duping American Doctors
Wooing doctors with 'freebies' -- drug reps give free dinners, meals, and food to doctor's office, and office supplies with drug names
In reality, drug companies have no more responsibility to oversee the public's health than the fast-food industry has to oversee the public's diet -- both corporations in the business of making money, not saving person's lives. But drug companies have more legitimacy in eyes of the public
IX. Chapter 9 Cholesterol Guidelines
Cholesterol guidelines not absolute as may seem -- subject to political and business pressure to alter guidelines
Guidelines change with invention of medicines to treat high cholesterol
Cholesterol drugs expensive, often unnecessary, but have given great profits for drug companies!
X. Chapter 10: Direct to Consumer Advertising
Television
Television advertising has caused a rift in traditional doctor-patient relationship.
Patients arriving for doctor visits with a firm, fixed idea of outcome -- prescribe me the drug because I saw it on television! Encourage consumers to think buying drug like buying soap.
End of expectation that individual doctor knows best and best medical care emerges from open discussion of patient symptoms, concerns, and exam and consideration of the options, some of which may involve lifestyle changes not drugs
Radio
1. Even in car, hear about medical miracles that can change your life. Unending assault on consumer ears through various media.
Public Relations
There are financial ties between many of the supposedly most trusted medical experts and the medical industry
Medical 'news' or advertising masquerading as news
Studies on real news shows, funded by drug companies are presented as objective
Inadequate medical coverage and research on news -- medical news not hard news so less fact-checking
Lazy reporters -- accept biased reports as facts
XI. Chapter 11: Follow the Money -- Supply-side medical care
More care and more intervention means more money, but is not necessarily better medicine and better for the patient
Supply-side medicine means medicine has primary interest of improving financial health of hospital
XII. Chapter 12: Biomedicine limits
A. Scandal of using technology simply because 'you can' -- near-automatic use of medical technologies, such as cardiac catheterization, less because they are needed than because they are available
XIII. Chapter 13: What research shows about staying healthy.
Case study of the selling of Fosomax
1.Studies in respected peer-reviewed medical Journal of American Medicine promise the moon -- say Fosamax works
2. Randomized clinical trials of Fosamax published in medical journals show dramatic reductions in the relative risk of hip fracture for women with osteoporosis. JAMA in 1998 says women with an average age of 68 and a T score of - 2.5 or less (bone density score that means osteoporosis) who took Fosamax for four years were 56% less likely to suffer a hip fracture than women in the control group.
How many hip fractures were really prevented? With no drug therapy at all, women with osteoporosis had a 99.5% chance of making it through each year without a hip fracture
Creation' of illness in media, medical journals, and advertising
Also, osteoporosis drugs work on outer part of the bone, the cortical bone. This increases the score on bone density test but does not necessarily contribute proportionately to fracture resistance. Statistics look good, but drugs don't change much.
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