Medical Detox Programs in a stress-free environment

March 13, 2008

Can We Save Big Pharma From Melt-Down, And Should We Even Bother?

Filed under: Big Pharma, medical drug detox, pharmaceuticals — Rod Malcolm @ 6:23 am

When you think you’re near death in an ambulance rocking through the midnight streets with sirens wailing and the paramedics are trying to save your sorry ass, you are likely to suspend at least for the moment any problems you might have with Big Pharma

Some years ago I unexpectedly found myself – well, who ever expects it – on a gurney in a big red ambulance rushing through late-night rain-slicked city streets, possibly dying of a heart attack. As we careened around corners, sirens wailing, a couple of calm and earnest paramedics were putting an oxygen mask over my nose and mouth, attaching wires to my chest, and sticking needles in my arm.

I remember thinking briefly about how I was a devout believer in the evils of Big Pharma and that no mysterious chemicals would ever be allowed into my veins. Let me tell you, my friends, that was a very brief and fleeting thought. The choice between meeting my Maker and taking a flyer with Big Pharma was a no-contest.

In the years since that traumatic midnight ambulance experience, Big Pharma has come to personify more than ever the ultimate in corporate greed and ethical expedience – that means ethics flexibly convenient for the situation. Reams of media exposure about overt scientific fraud, misinformation and illegal marketing abuses, safety scares and recalls, thousands of injuries and deaths, and massive law suits have solidified that view.

Governmental and regulatory collusion to subvert the market and prevent consumer litigation has only accelerated distrust of our lawmakers. Imagine your wife, husband or child turned into a blood-thirsty zombie by some badly-tested and ill-approved pharmaceutical, only to discover that you’re legally prevented from seeking justice in a court of law. That’s not a situation we want to face.

Even the peer-reviewed scientific literature can no longer be fully trusted. Major medical mags have continued to publish test results that were either flawed or outright tampered with to make so-so drugs look better than they are or to hide seriously dangerous side effects.

The media has jumped on the bandwagon too. Major magazine stories, newspaper articles, radio and television shows, even popular films such as The Constant Gardener and Michael Moore’s Sicko, have only pounded Big Pharma’s tarnished reputation even more.

Big Pharma, which began in antiquity as our shamans, our gurus, our feared and respected witch doctors and healers – those who possessed mysterious knowledge about the substances that can alter and heal our bodies and minds – is no longer the respected provider of all that is life-saving, life-affirming – and even life-taking when considered necessary.

Big Pharma has morphed from ultimate healer to ultimate destroyer, a role never imagined by the first Australopithecus who stooped to taste a handful of wild berries and, head spinning, perceived all the wonderful possibilities.

What is needed now is a full examination of the disease that has brought Big Pharma to its knees, a condition for which there is no quick fix from a potion or pill. We need an official investigation of all concerned – lawmakers, regulators, drug testers and Big Pharma itself – one that will lead us to recommendations for saving this industry from melt-down, and help prevent future public drug disasters too.

The investigation should look at two main areas:

1.    An overhaul of common procedural practices for drug testing performance, reporting and approvals, to remove any possibility of the substandard results we are unquestionably suffering from now;

2.    A ramp-up of enforcement of all the codes of ethical conduct governing business and government, important beyond measure for an industry that holds the power of life and death in its hands – and that’s not some catchy slogan, folks, that’s our lives and our deaths, yours and mine.

With such a plan of action, perhaps we can return to this once-vital industry the productivity and continued expansion it needs to sustain research and develop safer and even more effective and life-saving new drugs, while weaning out and discarding those that are only marginally helpful, unhelpful and outright dangerous.

And like those incredible paramedics years ago on my first ambulance ride, along with the ER nurses and doctors who later toiled solely and selflessly on my behalf – maybe Big Pharma can recover the support and respect that any dedicated life-saving activity truly deserves.

In our activity of providing medical drug detox services, we have seen a major shift from illicit street drugs to prescription drugs from Big Pharma. I invite you to share your comments, ideas and experiences with or about Big Pharma and your prescriptions.

March 6, 2008

What’s Wrong With Big Pharma, And Why Should I Care?

Filed under: Big Pharma, pharmaceuticals, prescription drug addiction — Rod Malcolm @ 8:06 pm

Unless you’re a cave-dweller in some remote and undiscovered mountain retreat, you’ve been touched and will be touched by pharmaceuticals in one way or another.

A storm has gathered around Big Pharma, and something needs to be done about it because we’re all involved. From the cradle to the grave, we all look to our drug companies for help and protection against unwanted conditions and disease.

But all that is changing. Trust in our drug companies is waning or gone. More and more people are looking elsewhere for the help they need. Interest in alternative medicine has never been higher.

With patents expiring on some of their biggest money-makers, the essential profits the drug companies need to research and deliver new drugs in the coming decade are seriously threatened. Added to this scenario are the dozens, perhaps hundreds, of record-setting legal settlements over thousands of drug injuries and deaths. The public and even health care professionals are more than concerned about withheld and falsified drug testing results – and many are mad as hell.

Even investors have joined the dispute and are suing at least one Big Pharma company, ticked off that their cozy blue-chip nest-eggs are turning moldy around the edges because corporate misbehavior and mismanagement has stock values plummeting.

Who is Big Pharma Anyway?

Those new to the storm around Big Pharma might be asking, “Who or what is Big Pharma anyway? And why should I care? I seldom even take an aspirin.”

You should know coming into this discussion that the Big Pharma storm is nothing if not globally significant because of the impact this trillion-dollar industry has on our lives economically – never mind the problems about financing research and development of new drugs at a billion dollars a pop. Yes, it costs roughly a $billion in R&D for every drug that reaches the market.

Big Pharma is the nick-name of a collection of two dozen or so immensely rich and successful multinational corporations that make nearly all the drugs we rely on to get us over the rough spots in life, to help and heal us, and to save our lives when the chips are down. You can check out Wikipedia to see a list of their names. You’ll see 50 companies on that page, and it’s a very good chance there’s not a house on your street that doesn’t have at least one container with one of those names on it.

The originally derogative – but that may be changing – “Big Pharma” nickname was coined when the giant drug-makers began to be perceived a decade or more ago as 19th century snake oil salesmen earning obscene profits at public expense, rather than as the healers and saviors they once were.

Perhaps some day, Big Pharma could be seen again as helpers and healers, if the right steps are taken to fix the right problems. In coming blogs I will be looking more closely at the problems facing Big Pharma, and reviewing news and developments concerning this vital industry.

Big Pharma has had an enormous impact on our activity of providing medical drug detox services to an exploding population of people suffering from prescription drug problems.  I invite readers to share your comments, ideas and experiences with or about Big Pharma and the problems it is now experiencing.

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