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Pharma: Greed, Lies, and the Poisoning of America
J**.
Pharma
A very good read. Poster is an excellent author. I’ve read many of his books.
R**N
Compelling read, How the medical-industrial complex turned medicine on its ear.
This book is an important piece in understanding the selling of disease. Over time I have come to the conclusion that the germ-theory of disease has outlived its usefulness, and eventually the medical industrial complex is due to implode in on itself. Welcome alternatives are emerging such as lifestyle medicine, but it pays to understand deeply how and why things went wrong. Here is a message I left for the author on his website.quoteReading your Pharma book is amazing. I am reliving my youth. I am the son of a psychiatrist who, in the 50's and 60's took the alternative path, talk therapy only, amidst the rising tide of psychopharmaca, and the general rise to power of the medical-industrial complex.In one way he completely avoided the Libriums and Valiums, and drug reps could not even get an appointment with him. In recent years I've become a reader of some of Dr. Peter Breggin's work who as an expert witness stood on the other side, and helped fight pharmageddon, and documented the damages done by psychopharmaca, which my father had seen coming before it happened.In your recounting, I am reliving those years, and many many conversations with my father and some of his medical colleagues about the total corruption of medicine by big pharma as it was then coming to prominence.So, this is to say thank you for putting it all together in your Pharma book!!!One grateful reader.unquote
G**H
The U.S. pharma industry: home-grown narcotraficantes
You probably did not know that you could buy a dose of cocaine and a syringe from Sears Roebuck for the very reasonable price of $1.50 in the latter part of the 19th century. Or that heroin was invented in 1898 by Bayer, the company that was originally built on a foundation of aspirin, and that despite heroin being 10x more powerful than morphine, was marketed as a cure for everything from schizophrenia to morphine addiction! Also, as "safe for children". Or that until World War 2, the pharma industry in the US was largely supported by the sale of narcotics. Then, antibiotics entered the scene, in the form of penicillin, invented in an Oxford University lab but manufactured and sold in gigantic quantities by the dozen or so pharma companies authorized to do so by the US government as an emergency measure. Those companies still make up the bulk of the leading American pharma companies to this day.These are other fascinating facts litter this 600+ page book. It is, for the most part, quite fascinating, though the book could certainly have stood with further editing to chop out 100 or so pages.In particular, the author is quite obsessed with the Sacklers of Purdue Pharma fame, who are revealed as the most successful narcotics traffickers in the country. They put the Columbian narcotraficantes to shame, and don't have to live with the constant fear of being killed by rival drug lords or the army either. The fact that the Sacklers had so little to fear from government regulation -- and to the contrary were major beneficiaries of the protection against competition afforded by government regulation -- explains much of their success. Credit must also go in large measure to Arthur Sackler, who largely built the company through his marketing genius in the early decades of the company before it began to devote itself almost wholly to peddling the opioid Oxycontin, and killing tens if not hundreds of thousands of Americans in the process over the past 20+ years.The respectability that the Sackler family bought, with hundreds of millions in philanthropic donations, despite the plague they visited on the country with "hillbilly heroin", has worn very thin indeed. Yet no member of the family or of the management team has gone to jail, despite the death toll and despite the dangers of Oxycontin having been known since at least 2001. Through all of this, government regulators at the FDA remained almost entirely inert, abetted in part by the opportunity for these public servants to move into lucrative private sector jobs at Purdue and other pharma firms. The same bureaucrat at FDA who approved Oxycontin in 1997 was hired by Purdue a year later. Another significant factor in Oxycontin's rise was the relentless advocacy of lax regulation by well-compensated lobbyists such as Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City and well-connected in Republican circles in particular. Giuliani, friend of Donald Trump, has been instrumental in helping to kill off the small town and rural voters who form the backbone of Trump's white working class support.Today, Oxycontin remains the #1 best-selling drug in its category, despite the firm having filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2019.A particularly good chapter is the one entitled "Happy Pills", which documents the rise of mood altering drugs such as Thorazine and its many successors such as Valium and Prozac. So successfully marketed were these drugs that Americans became, far and away, the largest consumers of these drugs, downing many times more per capita on an annual basis than other countries' citizens. These drugs served as part of the rationale for the mass closing of psychiatric institutions in the 1960's, helping to lay the foundations of today's homelessness crisis, as the alternative forms of treatment provided failed to deal with the problems of society's more troubled members.One thing you will not read about in this tome is very much about the positive effects of the pharma industry. Throughout the period covered by this history of the US pharma industry, American life expectancy has risen by several decades (until reversing course in past few years due to the opioid crisis). The pharma industry deserves some credit for this, particularly for drugs such as antibiotics, statins and anti-cancer treatments. Life in this country and worldwide is much better for having had polio vaccines since the 1950's, a disease which used to cripple or kill millions.That said, U.S. pharma remains an under-regulated and over-priced industry, one of the chief causes of the out-of-control cost of healthcare that yields such poor public health results for Americans as compared with every other developed country. We spend twice as much per person as the average developed country, yet live lives that are five years shorter on average.This is an industry that desperately needs to be fixed, and only government action is likely to do it.
A**N
A must read for Americans
This book really helped me understand why the pharmaceutical industry is so screwed up and how the government is complicit in why it is the way it is today. The first step to facing a problem is admitting you have one and this book says that we have a problem loud and clear! I especially appreciated that nearly a third of this book was all the references and citations. Incredibly well researched.
J**N
AWESOME
AWESOME
J**N
Best book out on the Sackler family and Purdue Pharma!
In a word, amazing.This book is so well-researched and engrossing. I couldn't out it down.VOTE people. VOTE HARD to keep the wealthy and powerful in check.
D**E
Good book in content as well in form. Nice packing.
Good 👍
V**S
INCREDIBLY WELL DONE
An enormous amount of work has gone into the writing of this book, that is clearly evident. If we could have this kind of research and evidence on subjects that are vital for us to understand, I honestly believe we could change the world. I am in awe of the information provided, and believe this to be one of the best books I have ever read ... we need to know the truth, it gives me hope that this can occur again and again.
A**
Good Job
The author brings us the reality of pharma industry. The greed and lies imposed to the people. A serious question is why there is almost none investment on antibiotics because this kind of medication is indicaded for short treatments. When will occur the next pandemics, caused by bacteria???
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