Monday, February 22, 2010

BIG PHARMA FRAUD (Part 2)


Our pal Aeswiren follows his dispatch last Saturday with today’s news that not only is the pharmaceutical industry deceiving us and robbing us blind but may also be killing us to maintain its profits.

“Hundreds of people taking Avandia, a controversial diabetes medicine, needlessly suffer heart attacks and heart failure each month, according to confidential government reports that recommend the drug be removed from the market.
The reports, obtained by The New York Times, say that if every diabetic now taking Avandia were instead given a similar pill named Actos, about 500 heart attacks and 300 cases of heart failure would be averted every month because Avandia can hurt the heart. Avandia, intended to treat Type 2 diabetes, is known as rosiglitazone and was linked to 304 deaths during the third quarter of 2009.
“Rosiglitazone should be removed from the market,” one report, by Dr. David Graham and Dr. Kate Gelperin of the Food and Drug Administration, concludes. Both authors recommended that Avandia be withdrawn.
The internal F.D.A. reports are part of a fierce debate within the agency over what to do about Avandia, manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline. Some agency officials want the drug withdrawn because they believe there is a safer alternative; others insist that studies of the drug provide contradictory information and that Avandia should continue to be an option for doctors and patients. GlaxoSmithKline said that it had studied Avandia extensively and that “scientific evidence simply does not establish that Avandia increases” the risk of heart attacks.”
(Click here for more.)

2 comments:

  1. I've come closer to death on legal drugs than I ever did on street drugs. Many times legal drugs have proven much more debilitating than the problem they were prescribed for. My doctor rolls his eyes when I tell him I don't trust him. He just sent me an email reminding me that I am scheduled for some tests. I emailed him back to tell him he was fired and got an automatic reply that he was out of the office.

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  2. ... and I'm lucky. I have health insurance.

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