Would love to see you also do one on
how BIG PHARMA is also «educating» doctors these days.
Richard Kemeny discusses
how big pharma might pay to access your genome (24 February, p 8).
And that's sad, because West Virginia is the poster child for
how big pharma used its power and influence to shove drugs down people's throats.
Not exact matches
All she ever talked about was
how hospital births and OBs are terrible, homebirth is best, vaccination hurts babies, all scientific studies are bought out by
Big Pharma etc..
Not sure if that's not in vogue with the all natural crowd, but I don't see anyone complaining when their chiropractor sells them priobiotics for 40 $ a jar, so I am failing to see
how giving enfamil 15 bucks for 2 months worth of polyvisol is some
big pharma scam.
However, if Owen Smith is under attack as a lobbyist for
Big Pharma, no matter
how spurious the charge, this appointment hands his opponents ammunition.
The article was a no - holds - barred denunciation of the U.S. public - health establishment, purporting to tell the story of
how «government health agencies colluded with
Big Pharma to hide the risks of thimerosal from the public... a chilling case study of institutional arrogance, power, and greed.»
When Janssen Pharmaceuticals, the R&D arm of
pharma giant J&J, decided they were going to focus on novel therapeutics of
big impact, rather than follow the competition's focus on branded generics or biosimilars, they completely redesigned
how they could tackle that goal by opening five so - called innovation centers.
6 months ago I left a
big corporate
pharma job knowing I wanted to make this happen but no clue
how and IFNA helped me make it a reality.
Unequal risks for breast cancer associated with different hormone replacement therapies: results from the E3N cohort study by Agnès Fournier, 1 Franco Berrino, 2 and Françoise Clavel - Chapelon1 * (9) http://bostonreview.net/BR35.3/angell.php Boston Review MAY / JUNE 2010
Big Pharma, Bad Medicine -
How corporate dollars corrupt research and education by Marcia Angell
How much money was spent on statin drug to lower the so called cholesterol scare which made
big pharma billions of dollars.
James started his career as an investment banker, but he had studied health economics, which is a really interesting field because we're looking at not just economics but we're looking at
how do people spend their money to live longer, and feel better, and to stay well, and decided after a year in banking that he wanted to work with integrative medicine or functional medicine, and he founded something called Evolution of Medicine, which is an eCommerce platform that lets doctors manage their practices better with customized tools and things like that so they can become more functional doctors, just to make it easier for the transition to come from basically a trained representative of
Big Pharma.
Bioidentical hormones are on
Big Pharma's blacklist, and we know
how many millions of advertising dollars they bring to television.
A fellow Psychiatrist enlightened me... Funny
how the gastroenterologists and endocrinologists I know are in the dark... but then they are also more dependent on
big pharma...
Setting the fact that the bias from
big pharma (which we know include / control / owns dairy industry etc.) is real and even documented and not just potential,
how can you compare the «potential» bias of somebody who has very high economic interest in having a specific result coming out of the study with that of somebody who is simply following a related social, scientific, religious, pratical etc. pattern?
She also points out
how «normal» levels of cholesterol and LDL are constantly lowered by the medical system in order to benefit
big pharma and get as many people as possible on statins.
How about getting your male counterparts in on your more holistic approach and getting
Big Pharma less in the picture when it comes to psych drugs?
How, he asks, has
big pharma created a nation of pharmaceutical tribes, each with its own unique beliefs, taboos, and brand loyalties?
Read on in Generation Rx for: — exclusive interviews with the strategists, scientists, and current and former heads of GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, Merck, Roche, and more — a first - ever, inside look at the rollicking business story behind
pharma's rise to power — the dramatic effects our drug culture is having on our major organs, from the liver to the heart to the brain — why old bodies and young bodies are the
biggest, and riskiest, arenas for our great American prescription pill party —
how the largely uncharted terrain of polypharmacy (various drugs taken together) has unleashed unanticipated, often deadly, consequences on unwitting patients Generation Rx will make every American who has ever taken a prescription drug look anew at what's in our medicine cabinets, and why.
Ultimately
Big Pharma's big problem is that while it's initially a complicated game to grasp that hints at a deep and varied strategy experience, once you've figured out how the system's work you quickly come to the realisation that underneath the surface complications that stem from understanding how the systems slot together there really isn't anything else to
Big Pharma's
big problem is that while it's initially a complicated game to grasp that hints at a deep and varied strategy experience, once you've figured out how the system's work you quickly come to the realisation that underneath the surface complications that stem from understanding how the systems slot together there really isn't anything else to
big problem is that while it's initially a complicated game to grasp that hints at a deep and varied strategy experience, once you've figured out
how the system's work you quickly come to the realisation that underneath the surface complications that stem from understanding
how the systems slot together there really isn't anything else to it.
How can SMEs attract talent from
big pharma organisations?
** Competition for
pharma jobs is tough... give yourself a
big advantage when you learn the secrets in my free webinar,
How to Get Into Medical Sales.
But I saw it recently, and it's a little like watching a train wreck: this woman wrote a book called
Big Pharma's Sexy Little Secret about
how (and it's possible I've missed everything there is to see here...) pharmaceutical companies purposely hire «cheerleader» types so that they can use sex — or the idea of it, anyway — to manipulate doctors into buying more of their product.