Thursday, March 17, 2011
26000 a year die of murder, 100000 of medical malpractice
We disagree that surgery and botulinum toxin are treatments of choice in severe cases of hyperhidrosis
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1118569/
Iontophoresis should be tried before other treatments
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1118569/
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
the Kuntz nerve played no part in the success or failure of ETS surgery
about the importance or otherwise of the Kuntz nerve. The Kuntz nerve is a small nerve
fibre sometimes seen on the second rib not far from the main sympathetic chain. Its
function is not known in humans. Some web-sites on ETS claim success rates of up to
100% for facial blushing because they search for and destroy the Kuntz nerve(s). These
same people also claim to be able to correct failed ETS operations by reoperating and
destroying the Kuntz nerve.
At the meeting of the International Society for Sympathetic Surgery in Germany, May
2003, attended by a majority of the world’s experts in ETS surgery (including us), all but
one of the surgeons present were of the opinion that the Kuntz nerve played no part in the
success or failure of ETS surgery for facial blushing. We share this majority opinion.
www.lapsurgeryaustralia.com.au
"Sympathectomy is a technique about which we have limited knowledge, applied to disorders about which we have little understanding."
Monday, February 14, 2011
Sympathectomy and fraud - HUGE BILL FRAUD CITED AT CLINICS
Twelve Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans, working with the F.B.I., said Friday that they had broken up an elaborate insurance scheme in which thousands of patients from 47 states were sent to California to undergo unnecessary surgical and diagnostic procedures, for which doctors filed more than $1 billion of fraudulent insurance claims. Insurance executives and law enforcement officials said that surgery clinics in Southern California typically paid recruiters $2,000 to $4,000 for each patient who received a medical procedure. The patients, they said, received rewards in the form of cash or discounts on cosmetic surgery.
to induce a patient's participation by appeal to their nonrational preferences, this is also a violation of their autonomy
MEDICAL EXPERIMENTATION, INFORMED CONSENT AND USING PEOPLE
DEAN COCKING 1 JUSTIN OAKLEY 1
1 Centre for Human Bioethics Monash University
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
vigorous entrepreneurial spirit that was undeterred by the ineffectiveness of their treatment methods
Med J Aust 151 : 280-284
"It is a lie that sympatholysis may specifically cure patients
...it is not an error, but a lie. While conceptual errors are not only forgivable, but natural to inexact medical science, lies, particularly when entrepreneurially inspired are condemnable and call for a peer intervention.
J. Neurology (1999) 246: 875-879
Monday, February 7, 2011
"we know that antibiotics are misused and overused"
Professor Cars was emphatic that although there are knowledge gaps in Australia, we must act now. “We can’t wait for the data; we know that antibiotics are misused and overused. We know that infection control could be improved without new information.”
He attributed the causes of antimicrobial resistance to three things:
• indiscriminate use of antibiotics
• indiscriminate effects of antibiotics, ie, broad activity
• global spread of resistance facilitated by the rapid dynamics of gene transfer between bacteria as a result of travel, trade and poor sanitation and hygiene.
http://www.mjainsight.com.au
Even a surgeon who was convinced that he was not obtaining good results seldom gave up lobotomy
Medical profession is the noblest of all ! . Doctors are akin to God in many ways ! They have the potential to remove the sufferings of mankind . These are the often made quotes about doctors for many centuries. Today’s medical professionals are , a strained lot to fulfil their role expected of them .They have to maintain the social identity and earn enough to sustain their image in society. The onslaught of commercial and pseudo-scientific concepts have ruined the profession considerably.
Those were the days when the family physician concept was flourishing , where in a doctor was taking care of entire family. This concept has taken a different avatar now .
Now a doctor feels , once the patient is seen by him becomes his/her patient rather a property! This perception has grown in a malignant manner , many doctors do not refer to a specialist even in deserving cases fearing patient poaching .
This possessiveness of doctors about their patients leads to many of the unethical behavior .
My case . . .my patient . . . my fees , . . .this sort of approach though appeared good in the past , is rapidly becoming a liability for the patients .Lack of organised health care by private and Government sector also amplifies the issue .It is pathetic to note , at least Govt hospitals have some accountability , majority of private health systems do not have mortality or morbidity auditing .
http://drsvenkatesan.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/why-many-doctors-consider-patients-as-their-property/
Advertised drugs were supported by evidence that was neither "of reasonable quality, nor independent"
Prof Brown is from the Department of Emergency Medicine at Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, and the School of Medicine at the University of Queensland.
They said the ban followed discussions with fellow emergency medicine specialists, who had aired concerns such as:
- Advertised drugs were supported by evidence that was neither "of reasonable quality, nor independent".
- There were cases of "dubious and unethical" research practices by the industry, including "ghost authorship" where scientific papers do not disclose all of their authors.
- Academics could also face industry pressure to withhold negative research, and together this could "inflate views of the efficacy" of heavily promoted drugs.
The professors also said drug ads were counter to a medical journal's mission to provide objective data that enabled doctors to make judgments based on the best available evidence.
"Meanwhile doctors - and indeed journal editors - generally deny they are influenced (by the ads), yet clearly they are," they said.
http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-national/medical-journal-bans-drug-company-ads-20110203-1aev8.html
How doctors think...
Review RD09 (2010)
WELFARE OF ANAESTHETISTS
SPECIAL INTEREST GROUP
Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists
Australian Society of Anaesthetists
New Zealand Society of Anaesthetists
WHY DON’T YOU HAVE YOUR OWN GP?
HOW MANY EXCUSES CAN YOU FIND?
HERE ARE 21 !
after Dr Peter Arnold
Australian Medicine November 1997
- Taking a health problem to another doctor lays me open to professional ridicule for not recognising, myself, that the problem is a) trivial or b) serious.
- I don’t believe that my symptoms really amount to much; they’re probably just something simple. If I wait awhile they will go away.
- If I take my symptoms to another doctor, my own diagnosis might be proved wrong!
- It would place me in a position where I would have to take the “submissive” role of patient and “counselee”, rather than my usually assertive role as doctor and counsellor.
- I wouldn’t know how to be a patient, being accustomed to being the doctor.
- Going to another doctor would make me dependent on someone else, when I am used to people being dependent on me.
- I would have to accept the other doctor’s opinion, whereas I would know more than he/she does on the subject. In particular I would know this patient better than he/she ever could.
- I can manage my own minor problems - if I’m seriously ill I refer myself to a specialist; why do I need a GP?
- I’m embarrassed at possibly having to discuss my anxieties about my health - I could be labelled a hypochondriac.
- I wouldn’t like my life insurance company to know about any illnesses I might have - they might load my policy. If I don’t consult another doctor, they’ll never know.
- I’m fearful of possibly being forced to disclose aspects of my personality or sexuality which I would rather remained secret
- Revealing my inner self to a colleague would place him or her at an unfair advantage in our competitive commercial world
- I know how I would manage a patient presenting with my problems. How can I accept a different way of going about it?
- Can I place my trust in another doctor, whose training and experience may not be as good as my own? I can accept that a specialist would know more about his/her field of practice than I would (unless he/she is in the same speciality) but how can I accept that a GP might know more than I do?
- How much do I discuss management, suggest investigations or referral to a specialist? After all, this is the age of patient-doctor partnership. Shouldn’t I have a say in my own management?
- Any GP would be intimidated by having to attend to me (especially if I am a specialist); he/she would not be able to treat me objectively.
- How well will the GP respect my confidentiality? Will he or she mention me to a spouse? Indeed the spouse might well be the receptionist! How would that affect our relationship, especially in our close-knit neighbourhood?
- It isn’t convenient to find the time to see a GP; I’ve got too much work to do looking after my own patients.
- How do I make an appointment without being embarrassed about having to front up to the receptionist? Do I sit in the waiting room with the other patients, some of whom may have been MY patients too ?
- How confidential will my records be? Will the receptionist read them?
- How do I pay the bill? Do I ask to be bulk-billed, or do I pay, and if so at what rate? Do I give a present in appreciation? If so, do I keep giving presents?
http://www.anzca.edu.au/fellows/sig/welfare/review-rd09-why-don2019t-you-have-your-own-gp.html
Medical schools act on pharma influence
Professor James Angus, president of the Medical Deans Australia and New Zealand (the peak body representing medical education in the two countries), said he would address the issue at the next executive meeting of deans later this month.
He was commenting on the results of a survey of 20 Australian medical schools, which assessed their policies regarding disclosure and management of conflict of interest with the pharmaceutical industry, published in the latest MJA.(1)
Coauthor of the study Professor Martin Tattersall, professor of medicine at the University of Sydney, said he suspected there would be some reform and further attention to policies as a result of publication of the study.
However, the current generation of doctors employed in universities, hospitals, public health departments and elsewhere also needed to be much more transparent to their employers and patients about their conflicts of interest, Professor Tattersall said.
“I think the current environment is probably doing medicine and the medical profession a fair amount of harm,” he said.
High doses of common painkillers increase stroke risk
British Medical Journal study links ibuprofen to highest risk of stroke over long term.
The fears relate to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as well as newer anti-inflammatory drugs known as Cox-2 inhibitors.
Doctors regularly prescribe such drugs to treat painful conditions, including osteoarthritis.
They are given at much higher doses than those found in over-the-counter remedies, which are used for occasional headaches, aches and pains.
The study, in the British Medical Journal, found that compared with a dummy drug lumiracoxib increased the risk of heart attacks, while ibuprofen was linked to the highest risk of stroke (more than treble the risk).
Diclofenac almost tripled the risk, while etoricoxib and diclofenac were associated with around a fourfold increased risk of suffering death from cardiovascular causes.
The authors, from the University of Bern in Switzerland, said: "Although uncertainty remains, little evidence exists to suggest that any of the investigated drugs are safe in cardiovascular terms."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2011/jan/12/high-doses-painkillers-stroke-risk
Fraud Case Rocks Anesthesiology Community
Scott S. Reuben, MD, of Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, Mass., a pioneer in the area of multimodal analgesia, is said to have fabricated his results in at least 21, and perhaps many more, articles dating back to 1996.
A recent PubMed search for Dr. Reuben’s name turned up 72 citations, the most recent an article in the December issue of the Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia on preventing the development of chronic pain after thoracic surgery.
What’s particularly surprising given the dimensions of the case, Ms. Johnston said, is that Dr. Reuben’s research managed to raise no alarms among peer reviewers. However, she added, “the peer review system can only do so much. Trust is a major component of the academic world. It’s backed up by the implication that your reputation will be destroyed if you violate that trust.”
http://www.anesthesiology...;a_id=12634&ses=ogs
Reuben prompted a furor in the medical community in March, when he was accused of making up research results in at least 21 published studies and inventing patients in certain instances.
http://www.masslive.com/n...uben_former_chief_o.html
the scope of the Reuben fraud “massive.”
A recent PubMed search for Dr. Reuben’s name turned up 72 citations, the most recent an article in the December issue of the Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia on preventing the development of chronic pain after thoracic surgery.
Josephine Johnston, an attorney specializing in research integrity at the Hastings Center, in Garrison, N.Y., called the scope of the Reuben fraud “massive.”
http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/ViewArticle.aspx?d_id=3&a_id=12634&ses=ogst
6% admitted failing to present data if it contradicted their previous research
Firstly, if you're planning a career in scientific fraud, then medicine is an excellent place to start.
Findings in complex biological systems - like "people" - are often contradictory and difficult to replicate, so you could easily advance your career and never get caught.
And fraud is not so unusual, depending on where you draw the line. In 2005 the journal Nature published an anonymous survey of 3,247 scientists: 0.3% admitted they had falsified research data at some point in their careers, in acts of outright fraud; but more interestingly, 6% admitted failing to present data if it contradicted their previous research.
Reuben (Scott S Reuben) was at the other end of the scale. He simply never conducted various clinical trials he wrote about for 10 years.
In some cases he didn't even pretend to get approval to conduct studies on patients, but just charged ahead and invented the results all the same.
The details haven't come out yet - investigators have asked various academic journals to formally withdraw at least 21 studies - but fabrication is often easier to spot than selective editing, and some people have argued for various fraud detection tools to be used more commonly by academic journals.
...
And in medicine, data isn't an arbitrary or abstract thing: Reuben's work examined the best way to manage pain after operations, and he provided evidence that non-opiate medications are equally effective.
Now that field is in turmoil. And pain really matters.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/mar/14/bad-science-medicine-fraud
Sunday, February 6, 2011
fraud and bias in medical research - BMJ 12 Feb 2009
Dr. Ben Goldacre writes:
The British Medical Journal this week publishes a complex study that is quietly one of the most subversive pieces of research ever printed. It analyses every study ever done on the influenza vaccine - although it's reasonable to assume that its results might hold for other subject areas - looking at whether funding source affected the quality of a study, the accuracy of its summary, and the eminence of the journal in which it was published....
We already know that industry-funded studies are more likely to give a positive result for the sponsors' drug, and in this case too, government-funded studies were less likely to have conclusions favouring the vaccines. We already know that poorer quality studies are more likely to produce positive results - for drugs, for homeopathy, for anything - and 70% of the studies they reviewed were of poor quality. And it has also been shown that industry-funded studies are more likely to overstate their results in their conclusions.
But Tom Jefferson and colleagues looked, for the first time, at where studies are published. Academics measure the eminence of a journal by its "impact factor": an indicator of how commonly, on average, research papers in that journal go on to be referred to by other research papers. The average journal impact factor for the 92 government-funded studies was 3.74; for the 52 studies wholly or partly funded by industry, the average impact factor was 8.78. Studies funded by the pharmaceutical industry are massively more likely to get into the bigger, more respected journals.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/feb/14/bad-science-medical-research
reporting bias is a widespread phenomenon in the medical literature
Regarding pharmacological interventions, cases of reporting bias were, for example, identified in the treatment of the following conditions: depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, Alzheimer's disease, pain, migraine, cardiovascular disease, gastric ulcers, irritable bowel syndrome, urinary incontinence, atopic dermatitis, diabetes mellitus type 2, hypercholesterolaemia, thyroid disorders, menopausal symptoms, various types of cancer (e.g. ovarian cancer and melanoma), various types of infections (e.g. HIV, influenza and Hepatitis B), and acute trauma. Many cases involved the withholding of study data by manufacturers and regulatory agencies or the active attempt by manufacturers to suppress publication. The ascertained effects of reporting bias included the overestimation of efficacy and the underestimation of safety risks of interventions.In conclusion, reporting bias is a widespread phenomenon in the medical literature. Mandatory prospective registration of trials and public access to study data via results databases need to be introduced on a worldwide scale. This will allow for an independent review of research data, help fulfil ethical obligations towards patients, and ensure a basis for fully-informed decision making in the health care system.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20388211
Superior results in the leucotomized groups - Medical bias and conflicts of interest
During the past two decades intracranial surgery for intractable mental disease has evolved in the direction of greater precision in and the making of smaller lesions. The most experience has been with bilateral stereotactically produced lesions of a few milliliters' volume in the white matter related to the limbic system. These have been placed just above the anterior half of the corpus callosum in the fibers deep to the gyrus cinguli or in the fibers below the anterior horns of the lateral ventricles or in both areas. Such operations have nearly eliminated the sequelae of the earlier much more extensive lobotomies. Critical and thorough evaluations in Great Britain of relatively small numbers of patients operated on compared with retrospectively matched controls not operated on have revealed superior results in the leucotomized groups. The mental disorders most clearly responding to this surgery appear to be those characterized by stereotypy of an excessive and futile emotional response — i.e., phobias, anxieties, obsessions, depressions and the affective component (when present) of schizophrenia. (N Engl J Med 289:1117–1125, 1973)
William H. Sweet, M.D., D.Sc.
N Engl J Med 1973; 289:1117-1125November 22, 1973
Friday, February 4, 2011
Lack of disclosure to ETS patients is unethical and would be criminal in a just society
Although it is not possible to predict exactly what will occur in each individual case, there is nearly 100 years of published scientific and medical research available on the effects of sympathectomy. That research paints a very different picture of the effects of this surgery than the one presented to patients considering this surgery. That's the issue. Generally, they lie and tell patients that CS is inconsequential in all but a tiny fraction of cases and simply fail to disclose a huge number of verified adverse effects of the surgery. They take advantage of the patient's ignorance on medical matter. It's unethical and would be criminal in a just society.
In short, you do have a way of knowing what will likely occur as a result of the surgery before you have it done. All the information necessary to make an informed decision exists. It's just not getting to patients.
http://etsandreversals.yuku.com/reply/22927/Would-you-do-it-again#reply-22927
Surgical sympathectomy listed as neurologic disorder
- Idiopathic orthostatic hypotension
- Multiple sclerosis
- Parkinsonism
- Posterior fossa tumor
- Shy-Drager syndrome
- Spinal cord injury with paraplegia
- Surgical sympathectomy (the elective life-style procedure to treat blushing and hand sweating)
- Syringomyelia
- Syringobulbia
- Tabes dorsales (syphillis)
- Wernicke's encephalopathy
Dizziness: Classification and Pathophysiology
The Journal of Manual and Manipulative Therapy, Vol. 12, No 4 (2004)
Monday, January 31, 2011
Medical students are performing intrusive exams on unconscious patients
- By Helen Davidson
- From: news.com.au
- January 28, 2011
No consent: patients probed by medical students
The shocking discovery, revealed in new research to be published in an international medical journal, raises serious questions about the ethical standards of our next generation of doctors.
It is expected to provoke a furious reaction from patient groups.
Unauthorised intimate procedures carried out by students included genital, rectal and breast exams. Almost half of patients were under the influence of medication or unconscious, while the remainder were conscious.
Among cases described in the research was that of a man who had been anaesthetised in preparation for surgery but was then unknowingly subjected to rectal examinations from a “queue” of students.
He hadn’t given consent beforehand.
http://madisonmag.com.au/news/no-consent-patients-probed-by-medical-students.htm
Saturday, January 22, 2011
DRUG company-sponsored trials published in medical journals should be regarded as marketing
DRUG company-sponsored trials published in medical journals should be regarded as marketing, unless proved otherwise, a researcher with the independent Cochrane Collaboration says.
In an article published in the British Medical Journal this week, researcher Tom Jefferson said that robust, independent assessments of drugs could not be carried out while companies were allowed to keep trial data secret on the basis that it is privately owned.
Mr Jefferson said it was vital that data be made freely available because trials and meta analyses of drugs in respected publications were ''heavily influenced by drug companies' marketing decisions on what is and isn't published''.
http://www.theage.com.au/national/sponsored-drug-trials-under-fire-20110121-1a02a.html
Sunday, January 16, 2011
medical sects and cults that propagate the Absurd
The guardians that usually keep the institution of medicine from reeling off into irrationality are social contracts built into medical science and ethical behavior. The academic community guards the contractual borders of science, while laws and regulations encode our ethical system. For the Absurd to have advanced, there must have been some breakdown of these social guardians.”
Propagation of the Absurd: demarcation of the Absurd revisited
Wallace Sampson, MD Editor and Clinical Professor of Medicine, Stanford University
Kimball Atwood IV, MD, Anaesthesiologist; and Assistant Clinical Professor, Tufts University School of Medicine Medical Journal of Australia Dec. 2005
France pledges reform after diabetes drug scandal
French Health Minister Xavier Bertrand has promised a complete revamp of the country's medical regulatory system.
He was speaking after an official report said a diabetes drug which caused up to 2,000 deaths should have been banned 10 years earlier.
The drug - known as Mediator - should have been banned as early as 1999, when it began to emerge that it could cause heart disease, the report said.
Several other European countries and the US then withdrew it.
'Political connections'But Mediator remained on sale in France for another 10 years.
Between 500 and 2,000 people in France are believed to have died because of its side effects.
It was developed to treat diabetics but millions of people took it simply to lose weight.
The report by a government agency, the Social Affairs Inspectorate, said it was incomprehensible that the authorities had failed to act sooner.
Mr Bertrand said it was now his duty to rebuild the regulatory system to protect the public.
His statement is being seen as an admission that one of the biggest medical scandals in France in recent years may not be an isolated case.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-12200506
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Why many doctors* consider patients as their property ?
http://drsvenkatesan.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/why-many-doctors-consider-patients-as-their-property/
Monday, December 20, 2010
Deadly Medicine: FDA Fails to Regulate Rapidly Growing Industry of Overseas Drug Testing
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Call for ban on shock therapy
Jill Stark
December 19, 2010ELECTRIC shock therapy may cause permanent brain damage and long-term memory loss and should no longer be used as a treatment for mental illness, researchers say.
Psychologists who analysed more than 100 studies of the controversial treatment say the risks of shock therapy outweigh the benefits and it should be consigned to the ''historical rubbish bin'' alongside lobotomies.
Electroconvulsive therapy, or ECT, induces seizures by delivering an electric current to the brain. It has divided the medical profession, with some arguing the practice is archaic and others maintaining it is highly effective and can be life-saving for severely depressed patients.
Earlier this year, The Sunday Age revealed there had been a 10 per cent increase from 2008 to 2009 in the number of Victorians receiving ECT. A third underwent the procedure against their will.
The review's lead author, John Read, of the University of Auckland, looked at placebo-controlled studies and concluded shock therapy had minimal effects for people with depression and schizophrenia.
''The dwindling numbers of psychiatrists who still use this procedure, which sends 150 volts through brain cells equipped to deal with tiny fractions of one volt, are no doubt well-intentioned, but the research just does not support them,'' Associate Professor Read said.
The review, published this week in the journal Epidemiologia e Psichiatra Sociale, found almost all ECT patients suffered some amnesia. ''For a proportion of those people some of that memory loss is recouped over time,'' Associate Professor Read said. ''However, we are now seeing that for a significant proportion of people that brain dysfunction is permanent. ECT can, for a minority of people, produce some very short-term benefits; it can lift people's mood quite quickly.
''The problem is that there's no evidence at all that that benefit lasts beyond the end of the period that you're giving the electric shock treatment for.''
However, eminent psychiatrist Ian Hickie, executive director of the Brain and Mind Research Institute, said the findings were ''ridiculous'' and that while previously it was presumed that ECT caused memory loss, advances in brain imaging had shown the patient's depression was often to blame.
''The relative safety of ECT has actually improved over time and there have been major changes in the way it is delivered to minimise the risks,'' Professor Hickie said.
''This review is completely out of step with the last decade of systematic neuroscience and related clinical studies.''
While shock therapy is not commonly given to young people, statistics from Victoria's Chief Psychiatrist show seven children under 17 were given a total of 46 ECT treatments last year. Associate Professor Read said this was particularly concerning because the brain was still developing.
The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists says ECT is one of the least risky medical procedures carried out under general anaesthetic and is beneficial in treating some serious mental illnesses.
http://www.theage.com.au/
Flu vaccine to be thrown out
AUSTRALIA'S remaining stock of swine flu vaccine will expire soon and will have to be thrown out, at a cost of $100 million.
At the height of last year's pandemic, the federal government spent almost $200 million buying 21 million doses of Panvax H1N1.
Just under half was distributed to doctors, with fewer actually used on patients. That leaves 3.8 million doses to be donated to the World Health Organisation and 7.8 million doses to be destroyed.
A Health Department spokeswoman said the first batch of vaccine began to expire in October and the entire stock would expire by December 31. Expired vaccine will be disposed of as medical waste.
Opposition Health spokesman Peter Dutton said the destroyed stocks represented huge waste.
''This is yet another rounding issue for this government,'' he said. ''The Gillard government just can't get the detail right. They have overreacted to a number of key issues and their response to this issue is going to cost taxpayers tens of millions.
''The government saw political advantage and they put their own spin ahead of patients' own interests.''
Health Minister Nicola Roxon said at the start of the month Australia's pandemic phase had moved from ''protect'' to ''alert'', signalling the end of the swine flu pandemic here.
http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/lifematters/flu-vaccine-to-be-thrown-out-20101218-191c2.html
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
WikiLeaks cables: Pfizer 'used dirty tricks to avoid clinical trial payout'
The world's biggest pharmaceutical company hired investigators to unearth evidence of corruption against the Nigerian attorney general in order to persuade him to drop legal action over a controversial drug trial involving children with meningitis, according to a leaked US embassy cable.
Pfizer was sued by the Nigerian state and federal authorities, who claimed that children were harmed by a new antibiotic, Trovan, during the trial, which took place in the middle of a meningitis epidemic of unprecedented scale in Kano in the north of Nigeria in 1996.
Last year, the company came to a tentative settlement with the Kano state government which was to cost it $75m.
But the cable suggests that the US drug giant did not want to pay out to settle the two cases – one civil and one criminal – brought by the Nigerian federal government.
The cable reports a meeting between Pfizer's country manager, Enrico Liggeri, and US officials at the Abuja embassy on 9 April 2009. It states: "According to Liggeri, Pfizer had hired investigators to uncover corruption links to federal attorney general Michael Aondoakaa to expose him and put pressure on him to drop the federal cases. He said Pfizer's investigators were passing this information to local media."
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
only 1% of the articles in medical journals are scientifically sound
According to the editor of the British Medical Journal, Richard Smith, only about 15% of medical interventions are supported by solid scientific evidence.
According to Professor David Eddy, of Duke University, only 1% of the articles in medical journals are scientifically sound and many treatments have never been assessed at all.
The British Medical Journal (BMJ) website Clinical Evidence reports that, of the 2404 treatments they have surveyed, only 15% are rated as beneficial, while 47% are of unknown effectiveness.
Where is the wisdom…? The Poverty of Medical Evidence
By RICHARD SMITH, Editor of BMJ
British Medical Journal 1991 (Oct 5); 303: 798–799
Safety and Ethics in Healthcare
"...professionals may adopt unreasonable practices. Practices may develop in professions, particularly as to disclosure, not because they serve the interests of the clients, but because they protect the interests or convenience of members of the profession. The court has an obligation to scrutinize professional practices to ensure that they accord with the standard of reasonableness imposed by the law."
Incresingly, the question is not whether the defendant's conduct conforms with the practices of the profession, but whether it conforms with standards of reasonableness. (p. 150)
"The right of patients self-determination is well entrenched both in law and in ethical codes. Respect for patient autonomy now occupies centre stage in medical ethics. In considering patient autonomy one needs to think about truth telling, confidentiality, privacy, disclosure of information and consent. Each is important and all have important implications for healthcare professionals." (p. 167)
Safety and Ethics in Healthcare: A Guide to Getting it Right, By Bill Runciman, Alan Merry
Published by Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2007
Monday, October 25, 2010
Fluvax side effects worse than the flu
MJA Insight
Thursday, August 5, 2010
Elective treatment for sweaty palms is classified as psychosurgery
pressure , thyroid , baroreflex , lung volume , pupil dilation, skin temperature, goose bumps and
other aspects of the autonomic nervous system . It can diminish the body's physical reaction to
exercise and/or strong emotion, and thus is considered psychiatric surgery. In rare cases sexual
function or digestion may be modified as well.
LVHyperhidrosis.com
Aury Nagy MD
Monday, July 26, 2010
Wikileaks.org releases documents that show the influence of "Big Pharma" on the policy making decisions of the WHO
http://wikileaks.org/
Thursday, June 10, 2010
after a unilateral sympathectomy customary sensation of shivering while listening to a stirring passage of music occurred in only one side
Physical Control of the Mind, Jose DELGADO
Mindcontrol not just science fiction
"The individual may think that the most important reality is his own existence, but this is only his personal point of view. This lacks historical perspective.
"Man does not have the right to develop his own mind. This kind of liberal orientation has great appeal. We must electrically control the brain. Some day armies and generals will be controlled by electrical stimulation of the brain."
Dr. Jose Delgado (MKULTRA experimenter who demonstrated a radio- controlled bull on CNN in 1985)
Director of Neuropsychiatry, Yale University Medical School
Congressional Record No. 26, Vol. 118, February 24, 1974
Biochemical theories - of mental disorders - are an entirely "unproven hypothesis"
argues that while psychotropic drugs sometimes do work, they do not even begin to address the
real cause of mental disorders, since in his view biochemical theories are an entirely "unproven
hypothesis" used to excuse what he sees as often unconscionable marketing practices of the
drug industry. Valenstein acknowledges a combination of medications and psychotherapy often
offers the best chance of success at treating common disorders, but stresses no one knows
exactly why.
Economic factors distorting the practice of medicine
they have at their disposal. There are tremendous economic factors distorting the practice of
medicine, just as there were in the lobotomy period. It is hard to find any clinicians or
researchers who don’t have vested interests in the development of procedures or drugs. I mean
that. Of course, they will deny that funding from drug companies has an influence, but it is so
subtle that they’re unaware of it themselves."
Elliott Valenstein (Stay Free! interview, Fall 2003).
Even a surgeon who was convinced that he was not obtaining good results seldom gave up lobotomy
The next similarity can be witnessed in the literature, as surgeons struggle to come up with milder, cuter names for their procedure, in order to differentiate themselves, competing with a horde of doctors willing to try their hand, and trying to undermine those who - they believe - are less qualified to perform it. Thus neurosurgeons are attacking thoracic surgeons, who attack vascular surgeons, and they all have a really good go at the cosmetic surgeons... Besides all these pressures, the doctors have to come up with results that match those that were already published in the literature.
"Even a surgeon who was convinced that he was not obtaining good results seldom gave up lobotomy. It was difficult to admit that the effort had been completely wasted, especially when other surgeons were reporting success. Rather than abandoning psychosurgery, neurosurgeons
much more commonly introduced some change in the operation in the hope of increasing the success rate."
Elliott Valenstein, in Great and Desperate Cures (1986).