It happens with regularity during citizen open-mike sessions at FDA drug advisory committee hearings. A queue of āpatientsā materializes out of nowhere to testify, often in tears, about the crucial need for a new drug or new use approval. Some are flown in by Pharma. It canāt be a generic drug, the āpatientsā cry, because they are just not the same. It has to be the $1000-a-month drug or even theĀ $1000-a-pill drug,Ā so that taxpayers and the privately insured prop up Pharmaās cred on Wall Street.
More than 80 percent of patient groups are Pharma-funded, the New YorkĀ TimesĀ reported this week, including the National Hemophilia Foundation, the American Diabetes Association and the National Psoriasis Foundation. But the most insidious are theĀ mental health front groups like the National Alliance for Mental Health (NAMI) and Mental Health America.
Not only do psychiatric drugs represent four digit outlaysĀ per month per patient, and sometimes much more, patients are kept on them for decades or for life, with few medical attempts to determine if patients still need them orĀ ever neededĀ them. Side effects of the drug cocktails are viewed, thanks to Pharma spin, as confirmation of the āmental illness,ā not the side effects they almost always are. The use of such drugs in theĀ elderly,Ā despite their links toĀ deathĀ in those with dementia, hasĀ becomeĀ epidemic and is an underreported cause of falls.
āMental illnessā is a category deliberately āgrownā by Pharma with aggressive and unethical million-dollar campaigns. These campaigns, often unbranded to look like a public service, convince people with real life challenges they are ādepressedā or ābipolarā and that their children have ADHD. Despite the Pharma marketing, the New England Journal of MedicineĀ recentlyĀ reported that the rate of severe mental illness among children and adolescents has actuallyĀ droppedĀ dramatically in the past generation.
The tactics of these front groups have been widely reported.
āWhen insurers balk at reimbursing patients for new prescription medications, these groups typically swing into action, rallying sufferers to appear before public and consumer panels, contact lawmakers, and provide media outlets a human face to attach to a cause,” reported theĀ Los Angeles Times.
Targeting poor people on government health plans is Pharmaās marketing plan.
āFor years, the alliance [NAMI] has fought statesā legislative efforts to limit doctorsā freedom to prescribe drugs, no matter how expensive, to treat mental illness in patients who rely on government health care programs like Medicaid, says theĀ New York Times.Ā āSome of these medicines routinely top the list of the most expensive drugs that states buy for their poorest patients.ā
Thanks to the Sunshine Act, which is part of the Affordable Care Act, it is possible to see what Big Pharma is paying patient front groupsāand the numbers are astounding. Last year Eli Lilly, one of the primary makers of psychiatric drugs, bestowed anĀ astonishingĀ 22 grants on NAMI including $25,000 for its āHealthy Americas Briefings.ā
How objective are those ābriefingsā? PfizerĀ gaveĀ NAMI $32,500Ā during one quarter last year.
Lilly also greased the palms ofĀ Mental Health AmericaĀ to the tune of $35,000 last year. Government is increasinglyĀ fundingĀ Mental Health America, adding to the Pharma exploitation and heisting of our tax dollars. Last year,Ā CounterpunchĀ reported that Walgreens had announced a partnership with Mental Health America. The plan empowered Walgreens to āscreenā customers to see if they might need expensive psychiatric drugs but not know itāuntil Pharma magnanimously told them.
ScreeningĀ is widely viewed, even by the medical establishment, as shameless Pharma marketing that leads to over-diagnosis, over-treatment and over-medication even as people who actually need medical treatment are ignored.
The Pharma business model actually wants people sick. Currently, in radio campaigns, Pharma is trying to convince people they have “exocrine pancreatic insufficiency”Ā and āNon-24Ā Sleep Wake Disorder,ā two conditions so rare as to be laughable as radio campaigns.
How much do the drugs Pharma, NAMI, Mental Health America and Walgreens push cost? If a ābipolarā child is prescribed a middle dose of the mood stabilizers Topamax and Lamictal, the yearly cost would be $23,220. If Seroquel is added, at a cost of $24,000, along with the ADHD drug Concerta at $7,812, and Neurontin at $4,860, one bipolar child would make Pharma $59,892 a year. Remember, you canāt substitute a generic.
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