An edition of Pharmaphobia (2015)

Pharmaphobia

how the conflict of interest myth undermines American medical innovation

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Last edited by MARC Bot
November 13, 2020 | History
An edition of Pharmaphobia (2015)

Pharmaphobia

how the conflict of interest myth undermines American medical innovation

For millennia, human survival depended on our innate abilities to fight pathogens and repair injuries. Only recently has medical science prolonged longevity and improved quality of life. Physicians and academic researchers contribute to such progress, but the principal contributor is private industry that produces the tools - drugs and medical devices - enabling doctors to prevent and cure disease. Heavy regulation and biology's complexity and unpredictability make medical innovation even harder in misguided pursuit of theoretical professional purity. Bureaucrats, reporters, politicians, and predatory lawyers have built careers attacking the medical products industry, belittling its critical contributions to medical innovation and accusing it of non-existent malfeasance: overselling product value, flaunting safety and corrupting physicians and academics who partner with it. The mania has imposed conflict-of-interest regulations limiting or banning valuable interactions between industry and physicians and researchers and diverting scarce resources from innovation to compliance. The victims are patients suffering from cancer, dementia, and other serious diseases for which new treatments are delayed, reduced, or eliminated as a result of these pointless regulations. ... Thomas Stossel shows how this attack on doctors who work with industry limits medical innovation and inhibits the process of bringing new products into medical care."--Book jacket.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
333

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Previews available in: English

Book Details


Table of Contents

The stakes
A practitioner's history of medical innovation
Enter the conflict-of-interest mania
The mania mongers
Abusing evidence
Bad policy process
Flawed and damaging policies
Misunderstanding innovation
Economic illiteracy
Misplaced criticism of incremental innovation
Rushing to judgment with product safety alarms
Demonizing marketing is false advertising
The 'gift' smoke screen
The lawyers' ball
The price we pay
What is to be done?.

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
362.10973
Library of Congress
RA418.3.U6 S86 2015, RA418.3.U6

The Physical Object

Pagination
xix, 333 pages
Number of pages
333

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL27186827M
Internet Archive
pharmaphobiahowc0000stos
ISBN 10
1442244623
ISBN 13
9781442244627
LCCN
2014042834
OCLC/WorldCat
894183728

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL20006738W

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