Archive for January, 2010

Drugmaker that got kickbacks for giving antipsychotics to nursing home patients deserves “a special place in hell”

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Baltimore Chronicle & Sentinel
By James Ridgeway
January 17, 2010

There really should be a special place in hell for pharmaceutical manufacturers who make money by exploiting the weakest and most vulnerable of patients: old people with dementia. I wrote about one such case back in April of last year:

Pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly recently agreed to pay a record $1.4 billion dollars to settle charges that it illegally marketed the anti-psychotic drug Zyprexa as a treatment for Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia in elderly patients. This despite the fact that the drug was not only unapproved for this “off-label” use, but had also been shown to cause obesity and diabetes.

Now, $1.4 billion might sound like a tough punishment, until you find out that Lilly’s total sales of Zyprexa have topped $37 billion. And at least some of those sales were thanks to doctors who, with guidance from Lilly drug reps, wrote thousands of prescriptions for patients with virtually no ability to defend themselves.

The steep fine against Lilly apparently didn’t discourage another drugmaker, Johnson & Johnson, from using even sleazier tactics to promote its own lucrative antipsychotic for use on nursing home residents. As the New York Times reported on Friday:

Johnson & Johnson paid kickbacks to the nation’s largest nursing home pharmacy to increase the number of elderly patients taking the antipsychotic Risperdal and several other medications, according to a complaint filed Friday by the office of the United States attorney in Boston.

Read entire article:  http://baltimorechronicle.com/2010/011810Ridgeway.shtml

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Senator says Miami psychiatrist who wrote 284,908 drug prescriptions “should be a poster boy” for tougher laws

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Miami Herald
By John Dorschner
January 16, 2010

A Miami psychiatrist who wrote 284,908 prescriptions over the past six years has cost Florida taxpayers $43 million, and a state senator said Friday that “he should be a poster boy” for a legislative inquiry into whether “tougher enforcement provisions are needed.”

The practices of Fernando Mendez-Villamil, who has an office on Coral Way, came to light last month when Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, complained about him to federal authorities for writing prescriptions at a rate of 150 a day, seven days a week. Grassley, like many in Congress, is concerned about reducing America’s high healthcare costs to reform the system.

The Florida Agency for Health Care Administration has released data showing that those prescription-writing practices were expensive, too — since the patients had Medicaid, the state-federal insurance for the poor.

State Sen. Don Gaetz, R-Destin, chairman of the Senate healthcare committee, told The Miami Herald on Friday that the Legislature has “a tough law already on the books” that requires state regulators to investigate outliers like Mendez-Villamil, who writes twice as many anti-psychotic drugs as any other doctor in the state. But his case may mean the law needs to be tougher.

Read entire article:  http://www.miamiherald.com/business/v-fullstory/story/1428212.html

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Feds say Johnson & Johnson paid millions in kickbacks to increase drug sales including the antipsychotic Risperdal

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Wall Street Journal
By Jonathan D. Rockoff
January 15, 2010

Federal prosecutors alleged that Johnson & Johnson paid one of the nation’s largest pharmacies serving nursing homes “tens of millions of dollars in kickbacks” to increase sales of drugs including blockbuster antipsychotic Risperdal.

Prosecutors charged in a complaint filed in federal court in Boston Friday that J&J illegally paid Omnicare Inc. to get the pharmacy company to buy J&J medicines and recommend their use to nursing homes. Omnicare’s yearly purchases of J&J products nearly tripled to $280 million, prosecutors alleged.

The alleged payments took place from 1999 to 2004 and took various forms, including payments for the pharmacy’s data and for education programs for customers, prosecutors said. Omnicare charged Medicaid for a “substantial portion,” they said.

Read entire article:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703657604575004902853166786.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_sections_business

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Miami psychiatrist prescribed about 4,000 prescriptions per month for 5 years costing taxpayers $43 million

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Health News Florida
By Carol Gentry
January 15, 2010

Since 2004, a Miami psychiatrist has prescribed almost 14 million pills to Medicaid patients at a cost to taxpayers of $43 million, a state agency says.

Fernando Mendez-Villamil would have had to issue 4,000 prescriptions a month, or 1,000 a week, to keep up that pace, according to the report released this week by the Agency for Health Care Administration. Altogether in the six years from 2004-09, he issued nearly 285,000 prescriptions, the AHCA report showed.

However, AHCA noted that that total counts a refill as a prescription. The agency said its report does not conclude that Mendez-Villamil’s prescribing is improper; its investigation continues.

Mendez-Villamil’s status as the most prolific prescriber in the state was already known, based on a report released in December of a 21-month period in  2007-09. But that period was mild compared to the years before, the new data show, and a timeline suggests that the prescribing slowed down markedly after the state began implementing computer tracking and other controls.

His highest-prescribing year in the period studied was 2004, when he issued about 62,400 prescriptions that cost Medicaid $12.2 million, according to the chart. The number of patients: that year: 2,695. A quick calculation shows that he issued 23 prescriptions (or refills) per patient, for a total of more than 1,200 pills apiece.

Sen. Don Gaetz, chairman of the health regulation committee, said Mendez-Villamil “appears to be taking advantage of the taxpayers of Florida and draining money away from legitimate patients. He should be the poster boy for tougher enforcement actions.”

Read entire article:  http://www.healthnewsflorida.org/index.cfm/go/public.articleView/article/15742

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Natural News – “The U.S. is a nation seemingly hooked on mind-altering drugs”

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

S.L. Baker
NaturalNews.com
January 13, 2010

As NaturalNews has previously reported, the U.S. is a nation seemingly hooked on mind-altering drugs.  A study released last fall in the Archives of General Psychiatry documented a dramatic increase in the use of antidepressant drugs like Prozac since l996. In fact, these medications are now the most widely prescribed drugs in the U.S.

Think Americans are maxed out on the number of psychiatric meds that huge numbers of them are taking? Think again. A new report says U.S. adults are increasingly being prescribed combinations of antidepressants, anti-anxiety and antipsychotic medications — and they could be experiencing serious side effects as a result.

The study, published in the January edition of Archives of General Psychiatry, investigated patterns and trends in what is known as psychotropic polypharmacy, meaning the prescribing of two or more psychiatric drugs. Ramin Mojtabai, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Mark Olfson, M.D., M.P.H., of Columbia University Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, examined data gathered from a national sample of office-based psychiatry practices. In all, the researchers looked at the medications prescribed between 1996 and 2006 during more than 13,000 office visits to psychiatrists by adults.

Read entire article: http://www.naturalnews.com/027932_polypharmacy_psychiatric_drugs.html

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Daily Mail – “Internal bleeding. Strokes. Birth defects. The long term effects of antidepressants are terrifying”

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Jane Feinmann
The Daily Mail
January 12, 2010

Just a few years ago, Yasmin Miller would have been horrified by the suggestion she might take antidepressants for the rest of her life. But today, the 37-year-old can barely imagine a future without this daily chemical boost.

Yasmin’s ‘perfect’ life as a corporate tax adviser was shattered when, in 2003, she developed severe depression. Although incapacitated by the illness, she needed convincing that a pill could make a difference.

‘I was gobsmacked when my GP suggested antidepressants, because I thought they were addictive,’ she recalls. ‘But now I’ve changed my mind: depression is just like epilepsy or diabetes or any other illness where you need to take a daily pill for life in order to stay healthy.’

Just 20 years after the launch of the ‘sunshine drug’ Prozac, Yasmin is one of hundreds of thousands of young women who can’t imagine life without antidepressants.

But some experts are warning of disturbing parallels with the ‘mother’s little helper’ scandal of the Seventies and Eighties, when thousands of women became addicted to widely prescribed tranquillisers, including Valium.

Read entire article: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1242502/Hooked-happy-pills-Internal-bleeding-Strokes-Birth-defects-The-long-term-effects-antidepressants-terrifying.html

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Risperdal (an antipsychotic) Lawsuits Filed Over Breast Growth Among Boys

Monday, January 11th, 2010

AboutLawsuits.com
January 11, 2010

At least 10 families have filed lawsuits against the makers of Risperdal and Invega, alleging that the antipsychotic medications, often used to treat attention deficit disorder and autism, caused teen boys to grow breasts measuring as large as a 38D cup size in some cases.

The lawsuits were filed recently in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas by the families of boys who took the medications and experienced the noticeable breast growth side effects. The Invega and Risperdal lawsuits accuse the manufacturers of negligence and fraud, and say they failed to adequately warn users about the potential male breast growth effects of the drugs when given to teen boys. Most of the lawsuits involve the use of Risperdal alone.

Risperdal (risperidone) and Invega (paliperidone) are manufactured by Janssen, a division of Ortho-McNeil-Janssen, a subsidiary of Johnson and Johnson. Risperdal is approved by FDA for the treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and autism. Invega is approved for the treatment of schizophrenia.

The complaints allege that the boys experienced dramatic breast growth that was in addition to significant weight gain side effects of Risperdal and Invega. The boys’ doctors initially missed or dismissed signs of breast growth, assuming it was connected to the increases in weight. In some cases, the boys grew breasts as large as 38D, and the complaints indicate that some of the youths will require surgery for breast removal.

Read entire article: http://www.aboutlawsuits.com/risperdal-lawsuits-over-breast-growth-boys-7598/

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Psychology Today “Five Reasons not to take SSRIs: Now that SSRIs don’t work for depression, don’t take them!”

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Lennard Davis
Psychology Today
January 7, 2010

For the past five years, and in my recent book OBSESSION: A HISTORY, I have been questioning the effectiveness of Prozac-like drugs known as SSRIs. I’ve pointed out that when the drugs first came out in the early 1990′s there was a wildly enthusiastic uptake in the prescribing of such drugs. Doctors were jubilantly claiming that the drugs were 80-90 per cent effective in treating depression and related conditions like OCD. In the last few years those success rates have been going down, with the NY Times pointing out that the initial numbers had been inflated by drug companies suppressing the studies that were less encouraging. But few if any doctors or patients were willing to hear anything disparaging said about these “wonder” drugs.

Now the tune has changed.

Reason One: A study in the Journal of the American Medical Association says that SSRI’s like Paxil and Prozac are no more effective in treating depression than a placebo pill. That means they are 33 per cent effective, which is the percent of patients who will respond well to a sugar pill. The article goes on to say that although SSRI’s are effective to some degree in treating severe depression they don’t have any effect on the routine type of depressions they are most often used to treat. The take-home message is–don’t take SSRI’s if you have normal, mild, or routine depression. It’s a waste of money, and the drugs have serious side-effects including loss of sexual drive.

Reason Two: A January 4 article in MedPage Today cites a study done at Columbia University and Johns Hopkins.  The study says that doctors routinely prescribe not one but two or three SSRI’s and other psychopharmological drugs in combination with few if any serious studies to back up the multiple usage.

Read entire article: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/obsessively-yours/201001/five-reasons-not-take-ssris

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Jet Lag Disorder joins host of ailments cooked up to sell drugs – p.s. No joke – jet lag is a mental disorder in the DSM

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Zeke Turner
BlackBook.com
January 7, 2010

Who has time for jet lag anymore? And why go through all the trouble of sleeping yourself into normalcy and maybe catching up on some late-night television when you could just stim yourself out and power through to the next time zone? These are the questions being asked by the drug-maker Cephalon as it seeks to market its newest stimulant, Nuvigil, for the treatment of jet lag and other causes of sleepiness, like working the graveyard shift. Meanwhile its anti-narcoleptic billion-dollar cashcow Provigil (aka trucker coke) inches closer to generic competition in 2012. The first step to marketing new stims is, of course, thinking of something that makes people tired normally and then turning it into a medical condition. Enter jet lag disorder.

The New York Times says,

A jet-lag antidote might seem to be the latest lifestyle drug, a further step in the “medicalization” of something that is not an illness. But sleep specialists, who call the affliction “jet lag disorder,” say that while not exactly a disease, it is a condition that can be dangerous — as when someone tries to drive a car right after arriving in a distant time zone … Some studies suggest that disruption of the daily rhythms can contribute to obesity, mental illness and other ailments.

Jet lag disorder joins a whole host of ailments that have been cooked up to sell drugs.

Read entire article: http://www.blackbookmag.com/article/drug-company-invents-jet-lag-disorder-sells-cure/14813

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Antipsychotic drug deaths in California tie into nationwide abuse: FDA estimates antipsychotics kill 15,000 per year

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

John Hendren
ABC World News
January 5, 2010

What happened in a bucolic nursing home nestled in the California mountains starting in 2003 shocked investigators. When residents at the Kern Valley Nursing Home complained or annoyed nursing director Gwen Hughes, prosecutors say she chemically restrained them with powerful anti-psychotic drugs. Her methods were so severe, three residents died.

Phyllis Peters’ mother Fannie Mae Brinkley was a feisty 97-year-old who suddenly lost energy. “I’d say, ‘I can’t get my mom awake,’” Peters remembers. “She just won’t rouse, she’s lethargic.”

No one told Peters that her mother had been given a powerful anti-seizure drug that prosecutors say killed her.

Peters says of her mother today, “I’m absolutely convinced she would have lived to be 100. Absolutely.”

Read entire article: http://abcnews.go.com/WN/abc-world-news-deadly-chemical-restraints-kill-california/story?id=9483981

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