In a previous post I wrote about the pros and cons of pharmaceutical companies partnering with big philanthropy to help cure/treat diseases.
Now, Fard Johnmar at Envision Solutions has posted on how the public is becoming skeptical of alliances between pharmaceutical companies and nonprofits that are aimed to educate and improve health. As his post indicates, Fard’s company commissioned a big study (available for purchase) of this very issue and has found that
“43% of US adults believe that pharmaceutical companies fund groups like the American Heart Association and the National Kidney Foundation in order to get more people to buy their products or medicines. “
I haven’t purchased the report, but this one fact alone is evidence of the consumer cynicism that is a result of the numerous scandals associated with the pharmaceutical industry and a few greedy practitioners. Call me an eternal optimist, but it continues to amaze me what a few bad apples can do.
Here’s where the rant begins…
Fard’s research is intelligent and insightful. In my view, the research is very helpful in that it simply takes the temperature of what is going on — here and now— in the thoughts of the consumer/patient. Honestly, I think studies like this give us quantitative insights to what we all know… the healthcare industry is changing and consumers/patients are playing a larger role in how, when , where, and what care is delivered. Honestly, I have no beef with the report or with Fard– but it just got me started thinking about the one sided nature of this discussion.
What I do have a beef with is the extremists that continually bash the pharma industry without any thought about bashing those industries (hint–mainstream media and unethical education companies who took research reports and published them unedited as gospel) and prescribers who failed to think for themselves.
Afterall, it takes two to tango. –Right? And since the dawn of time every scientific study has had limitations that need to be examined before applying the findings to real life. I think it is dangerous to focus on the the actions of the largest kid in the room and forget to share the blame with other individuals for not being analytical, skeptical or simply failing to fulfill their responsiblity/duty to think for themselves. (I hear the echos of my mother’s voice… “You wouldn’t jump off a cliff it Sally told you to, would you?”) Afterall– temptation and influence are not torture techniques that make us do things that are against our better judgment.
I suppose what set me off was the ridiculous and sensationalized segment, last night by Brian Williams from NBC Nightly News on physician perks– which interestingly has a huge ad for an antidepressant on the page. (Hmmmmmm….) I suppose that is a rant for another day.
Nonetheless, I’m telling you– for a vast number of clinicians, a dinner, a pen, samples, or a sticky pad does not make a prescriber write a prescription. It just not that simple…
- Nor does the drug rep’s technique of rearranging sample cabinets so that his/her product is eye level and center make a prescriber write a prescription.
- For that matter, nor does the hate mail from insurance companies and PBMS (medco)– that innundates prescribers asking for them to consider other more forumulary friendly medicines.
- and just one more…Prior authorization processes are also a big failure too.
For most clinicians, they prescribe a treatment that they think will work given a complex set of individual patient parameters. Medicine cabinets can be arranged just as easily as paperwork can be refiled… that is why they have a staff.
What alarms me most is underlying unspoken belief that pharmaceutical companies have eliminated or brainwashed all analytical and skeptical thinkers in medicine.
- Yes, of course there are idiots who will believe anything.
- Yes, in the past, pharma has had a lot of influence.
- Yes, we are seeing a timely and healthy correction of this.
But — lets not get carried away and vilify the entire industry to exclude any good they do.
To me, this new statistic from Fard’s study simply means our age of innocence is officially a thing of the past. We all are simply going to have to use our brains a little more– which honestly, we should have been doing anyway.
Thanks for letting me indulge in a rant. I promise– I’ll try to be a little less emotional in my next discussions of this.