Big Pharma

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Big Pharma

Post: # 25012Unread post Gary Oak »

[youtube][video][/video][/youtube]

I am a bit leery of Alex Jones as I suspect that he has controllers among other things however I don't believe that he said anything misleading in this video


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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 25014Unread post Blue Frost »

I find him to be more annoying than anything, but he brings on some good points, and subjects.
People should at least read some of his stuff, will get you asking questions.
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Prescription-Drug-Induced Violence Medicine's Best Kept Secr

Post: # 26013Unread post Gary Oak »

http://www.activistpost.com/2012/12/pre ... lence.html

Prescription-Drug-Induced Violence Medicine's Best Kept Secret?

I was just talking to a former coworeker the other day and found out that he is on meds. He is a good guy. We all have issues. I don't believe that we need meds for everything
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 26014Unread post Blue Frost »

Almost any med can effect your mood, and from experience I can tell it did for me.
I have been on a few that did noticeable changes. I was on an antibiotic once that I was so jumpy, and also I was flirting with every girl around :blush: I made a lot of friends that week :blush:
The antidepressants oh my what changes, and none made me feel feel less depressed. One made me angry, Zoloft I believe, Prozac made me not care, and like a zombie, and another just depressed, and :blush: never mind.
I had a few people on my team at Ford constantly on meds, two of them was like a time bomb, nice one moment, and going off the next.
I'm where I take nothing unless I have to take it, and only if it helps, and then rarely. I try to find foods that help, or some herbs.
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Top Ten Legal Drugs Linked to Violence

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Weren't we all better off before these pills ?

Body & Mind
Top Ten Legal Drugs Linked to Violence
By Maia SzalavitzJan. 07, 20111 Comment

Follow @TIMEHealthland

When people consider the connections between drugs and violence, what typically comes to mind are illegal drugs like crack cocaine. However, certain medications
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 26271Unread post Blue Frost »

I took a few of those for a while, and quit, I didn't like how they made me feel, or the other side effects.
Some vitamin D3 with K2, and some Magnesium Malate helped some, but the COQ10, and Omega 3s I think helped the most.
Also cut out a lot of the sugars, very mood altering, and not for the good.
A lot of people just need more sun, especially this time of year, it's been proven that it helps the winter blues.
a sun lamp can help.
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 31061Unread post Gary Oak »

http://www.thrivemovement.com/sandy-hoo ... sense.blog

Take a look at these videos. I have seen another video on these meds. Have these drugs ever done any good ? It seems to me that these psychotropic drugs are only destroying people people. Are any of the big pharmaceiticals ever losing any of these lawsuits ? I am so thankful that there were now any of these psychotropics when I was a problem boy as I believe that it is a safe bet that doctors would have suggested my being put on them. After experiencing low blood sugar ruin a number of years for me by "spacing me out" I do not see how anything that dulls ones mental faculties doing anything but damage
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 31062Unread post Blue Frost »

Sad videos, and I understand it more than a lot of people since I have been on a lot of those myself.
The medicine takes a lot out of you mentally suppressing feelings, and emotion.
I was where I was depressed, but couldn't really care that I was.
I was like I was trapped in my head with no way out.
Me I figured instead of feeling like that I would just quit them, and give up on help from doctors.
Also after reading more on my newly installed Internet I didn't want to take anything else.
The poor kids forced on them, and that have no choice because of ignorant parents, and money hungry doctors.
I would say most kids need something more to do, to get out more with family, and friends.
For me I have always been somewhat a sad person unless helping someone, or working, but I got really down loosing so many in my family.
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 60775Unread post Blue Frost »

Government here has taken liability away for them on the most part, most the payoffs are from tax payer pockets.
They will get fined yes, but there is no accountability on the most part so they pocket trillions.
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 60776Unread post Gary Oak »

That movie The Fugitive with Harrison Ford showed the kind of stuff they actually are doing
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 60779Unread post Blue Frost »

i wouldn't doubt they have had hits on people, or at least threats . People are discredited by them with money.
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 60899Unread post Gary Oak »

I just got a couple little packets of honey for free from Mcdonalds [ filipinos like it when I speak tagalog to them :thumbsup: ]. I think that this should be more than enough honey to kill off this bacteria. If this works then honey and the word got out then honey could cost the pharmaceuticals millions of $$$$
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 60907Unread post Blue Frost »

Farm fresh honey is the way to go, the McDonald stuff is likely pasteurized to death killing the good stuff in it.
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19 Statistics About The Drugging Of America

Post: # 74935Unread post Gary Oak »

Is there more to Big Pharma hidden hand in all this than merely money ? These statistics are very alarming. The same thing in going on in Canada though I suspect to a lower degree. The rest of the world as well I wonder ?

http://endoftheamericandream.com/archiv ... to-believe

The American people are the most drugged people in the history of the planet. Illegal drugs get most of the headlines, but the truth is that the number of Americans that are addicted to legal drugs is far greater than the number of Americans that are addicted to illegal drugs. As you will see below, close to 70 percent of all Americans are currently on at least one prescription drug. In addition, there are 60 million Americans that
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 74937Unread post Blue Frost »

Doctors are the number 1 killers in America, that post you have tells how they do most of it.
After taking all that stuff it does long term damage, and kills you sooner than you should.
Also it leads to more meds because complications.
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Big Pharma To Blame For Rise Of Deadly Superbugs

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I have reasons to believe that the big pharmaceuticals are not run by benevolent people.

Empty drug capsules manufactured by Capsugel are displayed Tuesday, March 21, 2006 in New York. The Greenwood, S.C. based company, a division of Pfizer, supplies leading pharmaceutical companies and dietary supplement manufacturers with its gelatin capsules.
Big Pharma to Blame for Rise of Deadly Superbugs
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 129921Unread post Gary Oak »

This is long but definitely worth reading and listening to the video. Obama and Trudeau will eagerly support this move by the FDA to get rid of the small health food producing businesses that will cut into the big pharmaceutical cartels cash cows.

http://www.naturalnews.com/053287_FDA_c ... aliff.html
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Re: Big Pharma

Post: # 129930Unread post Blue Frost »

They should be cracking down on Pharma, and all these meds that are killing people.
One of my meds for blood pressure i wouldn't take causes kidney failure, tumors, and cancer.
Also many more side effects not good.

They have been after the little guy a long time now, some with good reason, but others for no better reason than to help big business.
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Re: Big Pharma

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How Money From Pharmaceutical Companies Sways Doctors’ Prescriptions

New research found that even receiving something as small as a meal made physicians more likely to prescribe brand-name drugs.

http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archi ... ns/474399/

Doctors have long disputed that the payments they receive from pharmaceutical companies have any relationship to how they prescribe drugs.
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There’s been little evidence to settle the matter—until now.

A ProPublica analysis has found for the first time that doctors who receive payments from the medical industry do indeed tend to prescribe drugs differently than their colleagues who don’t. And the more money they receive, on average, the more brand-name medications they prescribe.

We matched records on payments from pharmaceutical and medical device makers in 2014 with corresponding data on doctors’ medication choices in Medicare’s prescription drug program. (You can read ProPublica’s methodology here.)

Doctors who got money from drug and device makers—even just a meal—prescribed a higher percentage of brand-name drugs overall than doctors who didn’t, our analysis showed. Indeed, doctors who received industry payments were two to three times as likely to prescribe brand-name drugs at exceptionally high rates as others in their specialty.

Doctors who received more than $5,000 from companies in 2014 typically had the highest brand-name prescribing percentages. Among internists who received no payments, for example, the average brand-name prescribing rate was about 20 percent, compared to about 30 percent for those who received more than $5,000.

ProPublica’s analysis doesn’t prove industry payments sway doctors to prescribe particular drugs, or even a particular company’s drugs. Rather, it shows that payments are associated with an approach to prescribing that, writ large, benefits drug companies’ bottom line.

“It again confirms the prevailing wisdom … that there is a relationship between payments and brand-name prescribing,” said Aaron Kesselheim, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School who provided guidance on early versions of ProPublica’s analysis. “This feeds into the ongoing conversation about the propriety of these sorts of relationships. Hopefully we’re getting past the point where people will say, ‘Oh, there’s no evidence that these relationships change physicians’ prescribing practices.’”

Numerous studies show that generics, which must meet rigid Food and Drug Administration standards, work as well as name brands for most patients. Brand-name drugs typically cost more than generics and are more heavily advertised. Although some medications do not have exact generic versions, there usually is a similar one in the same category. In addition, when it comes to patient satisfaction, there isn’t much difference between brands and generics, according to data collected by the website Iodine, which is building a repository of user reviews on drugs.
“You can debate if these payments are good or bad, or neither, but what isn’t debatable is that they permeate the profession.”

There’s wide variation from state to state when it comes to the proportion of prescribers who take industry money, our analysis found. The rate in Nevada, Alabama, Kentucky, and South Carolina was twice as high as in Vermont, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Maine.

But overall, payments are widespread. Nationwide, nearly nine in 10 cardiologists who wrote at least 1,000 prescriptions for Medicare patients received payments from a drug or device company in 2014, while seven in 10 internists and family practitioners did.

Walid Gellad, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh and co-director of its Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing, who also reviewed our analysis, said the pervasiveness of payments is noteworthy. “You can debate if these payments are good or bad, or neither, but what isn’t debatable is that they permeate the profession.”

The results make sense, said Richard Baron, the president and chief executive of the American Board of Internal Medicine. Doctors nowadays almost have to go out of their way to avoid taking payments from companies, according to Baron. And those who do probably have greater skepticism about the value of brand-name medications. Conversely, doctors have to work to cultivate deep ties with companies—those worth more than $5,000 a year — and such doctors probably have a greater receptiveness to brand-name drugs, he said.

“You have the people who are going out of their way to avoid this and you’ve got people who are, I’ll say, pretty committed and engaged to creating relationships with pharma,” Baron said. “If you are out there advocating for something, you are more likely to believe in it yourself and not to disbelieve it.”
Which Doctors Prescribe Brand-Name Drugs More? The Ones Getting Paid by Drug, Device Companies

ProPublica analyzed the prescribing patterns of doctors who wrote at least 1,000 prescriptions in Medicare’s drug program, known as Part D. Across five common specialties, as doctors received more money, they tended to prescribe a higher percentage of brand-name drugs.
Note: ProPublica calculated brand-name prescribing rates for doctors who received no payments, $0.01 to $100, $100 to $500, $500 to $1,000, $1,000 to $5,000 and more than $5000 in payments from drug or device companies in 2014. (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services / Sisi Wei / ProPublica)

Physicians consider many factors when choosing which medications to prescribe. Some treat patients for whom few generics are available. A case in point is doctors who care for patients with HIV/AIDS. Others specialize in patients with complicated conditions who have tried generic drugs without success.

Holly Campbell, a spokeswoman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the industry trade group, said in a statement that many factors affect doctors’ prescribing decisions. A 2011 survey commissioned by the industry found that more than nine in 10 physicians felt that a “great deal of their prescribing was influenced by their clinical knowledge and experience,” Campbell said in a written statement.

“Working together, biopharmaceutical companies and physicians can improve patient care, make better use of today’s medicines and foster the development of tomorrow’s cures,” she wrote. “Physicians provide real-world insights and valuable feedback and advice to inform companies about their medicines to improve patient care.”

Several doctors who received large payments from industry and had above-average prescribing rates of brand-name drugs said they are acting in patients’ best interest.

“I do prefer certain drugs over the others based on the quality of the medication and also the benefits that the patients are going to get,” said Amer Syed of Jersey City, New Jersey, who received more than $66,800 from companies in 2014 and whose brand-name prescribing rate was more than twice the mean of his peers in internal medicine. “My whole vision of practice is to keep the patients out of the hospital.”
“If the doctor is susceptible to being bought out by a pharmaceutical company, he can just as easily be bought out by other factors.”

Felix Tarm, of Wichita, Kansas, likewise prescribed more than twice the rate of brand-name drugs than internal medicine doctors nationally. Tarm, who is in his 70s, said he’s on the verge of retiring and doesn’t draw a salary from his medical practice, instead subsidizing it with the money he receives from drug companies. He said he doesn’t own a pharmacy, a laboratory, or an X-ray machine, all ways in which other doctors increase their incomes.

“I generally prescribe on the basis of what I think is the best drug,” said Tarm, who received $11,700 in payments in 2014. “If the doctor is susceptible to being bought out by a pharmaceutical company, he can just as easily be bought out by other factors.”

A third doctor, psychiatrist Alexander Pinkusovich of Brooklyn also prescribed a much higher proportion of brand-name drugs than his peers in 2014 while receiving more than $53,400 from drug companies. He threatened to call the district attorney if a reporter called again. “Why are you doing a fishing expedition?” he asked. “You know that I didn’t do anything illegal, so good luck.”

ProPublica has been tracking drug company payments to doctors since 2010 through a project known as Dollars for Docs. Our first lookup tool included only seven companies, most of which were required to report their payments publicly as a condition of legal settlements. The tool now covers every drug and device company, thanks to the Physician Payment Sunshine Act, a part of the 2010 Affordable Care Act. The law required all drug and device companies to publicly report their payments. The first reports became public in 2014, covering the last five months of 2013; 2014 payments were released last year.

The payments in our analysis include promotional speaking, consulting, business travel, meals, royalties and gifts, among others. We did not include research payments, although those are reported in the government’s database of industry spending, which it calls Open Payments.

Separately, ProPublica has tracked patterns in Medicare’s prescription drug program, known as Part D, which covers more than 39 million people. Medicare pays for at least one in four prescriptions dispensed in the country.
Most Doctors Take Money From Drug, Device Companies

Nationally, about three quarters of doctors across five common medical specialties received at least one payment from a company in 2014. In Nevada, that number was over 90 percent. In Vermont, it was less than 24 percent.
Note: The five specialties are family medicine, internal medicine, cardiovascular disease, psychiatry and ophthalmology. (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services / Sisi Wei / ProPublica)

This analysis matches the two datasets, looking at doctors in five large medical specialties: family medicine, internal medicine, cardiology, psychiatry, and ophthalmology. We only looked at doctors who wrote at least 1,000 prescriptions in Medicare Part D.

Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, who pushed for the Physician Payment Sunshine Act, said in a statement that “it’s gratifying to see” ProPublica’s analysis.

“Since brand name drugs generally cost more than generic drugs, what doctors prescribe has major effects on Medicare and other payers in the health care system,” he said. “I look forward to more data, more analysis, and to hearing from doctors about what influences their decision to prescribe brand name drugs versus generic drugs.”

David W. Parke II, the chief executive of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, suggested that many payments made to ophthalmologists don’t relate to drugs they prescribe in Medicare Part D, and instead may be related to drugs administered in doctors’ offices or devices and implants used in eye procedures. As a result, he said, it may be unfair to presume that industry payments are associated with prescribing in Part D.
The more physicians learn about a new drug’s “differentiating characteristics,” he said, the more likely they are to prescribe it.

Still, he said, ProPublica’s analysis points to areas that specialty societies may want to look at. “In some cases, there are very appropriate and clinically valid reasons” for doctors who are outliers in their prescribing. “For others, education may very easily result in prescribing change leading to substantive savings for patients, employers and society.”

Kim Allan Williams Sr., the president of the American College of Cardiology, said he believes relationships between companies and doctors are circular. The more physicians learn about a new drug’s “differentiating characteristics,” he said, the more likely they are to prescribe it. And the more they prescribe it, the more likely they are to be selected as speakers and consultants for the company.

“That dovetails with improving your practice, and yes, you are getting paid to do it,” he said.

Williams said new drugs are, at least in part, responsible for a significant decrease in cardiovascular mortality in the past three decades.

“If you’re not making strides in this highly competitive area, if you don’t have a product that’s better, it’s not going to fly,” he said. “So the fact that there’s this high relationship in cardiology [between doctors and companies] may in fact be driving the progress that we’re making.”
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