Archive for September, 2011

Dollars for Docs Update: Now With 12 Companies, More Than $760 Million in Payments

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

ProPublica – September 7, 2011

by Dan Nguyen, Charles Ornstein and Tracy Weber

Drug companies have long kept secret details of the payments they make to doctors and other health professionals for promoting their drugs. But 12 companies have begun publicizing the information. ProPublica pulled their disclosures into a database so patients can search for their doctor.

For decades, drug companies kept the names of their speakers — and how much they paid them — secret. But over the past two years, companies have begun posting this information on their web sites, some as the result of legal settlements with the federal government.

ProPublica took these disclosures and assembled them into a single, comprehensive database that allows patients to search for their physician.

It was not easy. Some of the firms constructed their sites in a way that made it near impossible to analyze or, in some cases, even download their data. And each firm disclosed its data differently. Some, for example, simply included speaking. Others also detailed consulting. Sometimes, research, business travel costs and meals were listed, too.

ProPublica will update the database from time to time as additional companies release their payment data. Federal law requires that all companies publicly report this data beginning in 2013. That information will be posted on a government web site.

Several things to bear in mind about the data:

  • Only the companies that have disclosed payments on their web sites are included. Their combined prescription drug sales amounted to about 40 percent of the U.S. market in 2010. Though a substantial share, the data may not be wholly representative of the industry.
  • The data is from payments made in 2009, 2010 and, in some cases, the beginning of 2011. But not all companies reported payments for every quarter during that period.
  • Companies are continually updating their data, so the most recent additions may not be included in our database.
  • Although most of the money went to physicians, other practitioners, including nurses and pharmacists, also work with pharmaceutical companies and are listed. Some drug firms include these payments; others do not.
  • Practitioner names and addresses (city/state) are listed as the companies released them and may vary. For instance, some companies include a middle initial, and others do not. Some companies also list different cities for the same individual. This may happen because professionals may have practices in multiple locations or because they provided different addresses for payment.
  • As noted above, the companies’ reports cover different periods and include payments for different services. Some companies include payments only to speakers, while others include consultants and advisers, as well as research, meals and business travel. (Details are included on each company’s page.)
  • The reports include both the name of the health provider who performed the service as well as the entity paid. They may be different.
  • Research payments are distinct from speaking and consulting. Payments for clinical studies may include costs associated with patient care, supplies, as well as the time spent by health care professionals treating patients and managing the study. The figure listed may not reflect the actual compensation received by the physician listed as the principal investigator.
  • A physician on the list may be getting money from other companies that have yet to disclose payments.
  • Eli Lilly has in some cases used different middle initials for the same individual.
  • This list does not include payments for speaking at continuing medical education courses, which are run independently from the pharmaceutical companies.

http://www.propublica.org/

 

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Dozens arrested in Medicare mental health fraud

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Miami Herald – September 7, 2011

by Jay Weaver

Federal agents have arrested dozens of suspects charged with bilking Medicare of hundreds of millions of dollars in bogus services for mental health therapy and other types of healthcare.


Click to watch video

Agents with Health and Human Services and the FBI have fanned out across three South Florida counties, arresting clinic owners, healthcare employees, patient recruiters and assisted living facility owners who allegedly supplied hundreds of patients to the mental health clinics.

The sweep comes after the indictment of Miami-based American Therapeutic Corp., which was charged along with 24 employees and others over the past year. That case alone involved $200 million in false claims submitted to the federal healthcare program for the elderly and the poor.

American Therapeutic’s top executives and others have been convicted in recent months. The latest sweep entails clinics offering group therapy sessions, home healthcare, HIV services and medical equipment.

The U.S. attorney’s office is expected to have a news conference Wednesday afternoon to provide details of the cases and defendants.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/09/07/2394354/dozens-arrested-in-medicare-mental.html#ixzz1XIwqbWgR

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NaturalNews 2011 Book of the Year Award Winner: The Trillion Dollar Conspiracy by Jim Marrs

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

CCHR Human Rights Award Winners: New York Times Best-Selling Author Jim Marrs (left) and Mike Adams, Editor, Natural News (right)

NaturalNews – September 7, 2011

by Mike Adams

If you’re looking for a way to make sense of the world, look no further than the book, The Trillion Dollar Conspiracy (by Jim Marrs). It reveals a hard-hitting, big-picture overview of how things really work behind the scenes of our modern world (and who’s pulling the levers).

The title of the book is actually a bit of a misnomer. Jim’s original title was going to be “Zombie Nation” which I think is actually a better title because the book talks about “zombie banks” that are steeped in debt, “zombie politicians” who are totally controlled by a corporate agenda, and even “zombie people” who are drugged up on psychiatric medications. The publisher, however, insisted on the current name, and that’s why it isn’t called Zombie Nation.

Listen to my interview with Jim about his book at:
http://snd.sc/nrGd3P

How things really work behind the curtain

If you want to know why the world seems to be so crazy these days, just read this book and you’ll gain a keen understanding of the zombification of modern civilization and why it’s taking place. The Trillion Dollar Conspiracy touches on all the big issues and industries of our modern world: War and defense contractors, Big Pharma and the FDA, the fluoridation of the water supply, GMOs and the genetic pollution of our planet, the criminal banking industry and the Federal Reserve, stolen elections, corrupt politicians and a whole lot more.

It is, without question, the best book I’ve read all year. And that’s why I’m giving this book the NaturalNews Book of the Year Award. I’ve never actually given out this award before, but I’m planning on giving this out once a year to the most important book of each year. Of course, 2011 isn’t over yet, so there could still be some amazing books in 2011 that deserve consideration. It’s possible I may give out the award more than once if there’s another deserving book that comes along.

The next book for consideration of this award, in fact, is Bill Faloon’s upcoming book called Pharmacracy, scheduled to be released later this month. That’s a hard-hitting book on the tyranny of the FDA and the outrageous damage that has been caused by chemical medications. (www.LEF.org)

Getting back to Jim Marrs’ book, his website can be found at www.JimMarrs.com and there, you’ll find details on some of his other books. You can also just search Amazon.com for “Jim Marrs” or follow this link:

Click here for the Jim Marrs section on Amazon.com.

Jim Marrs is an award-winning journalist and his book is a shining example of the great lost art of factual journalism in America. He honestly deserves to win a Pulitzer prize for this latest book — it’s really that good. It’s also extremely well researched and cited. This isn’t some loose compilation of conjecture or conspiracy ranting; rather, it’s a coherent, well-organized presentation of the shocking details of how the world really operates (it’s far stranger than you might suppose).

Jim Marrs is also widely recognized as a top researcher of 9/11 truth and the Kennedy Assassination.

Listen to the interview with Jim Marrs

I recently interviewed Jim Marrs to discuss the financial chaos happening in our world, the coming debt collapse, and details about the growing “zombie nation” in which many of us live. You can hear that interview through SoundCloud at:

http://snd.sc/nrGd3P

Through this interview, you’ll learn a wealth of information about where our world is really headed. I might also mention that you can buy Jim’s latest book, The Trillion Dollars Conspiracy, as a downloadable audio book through Audible.com, which is of course owned by Amazon.com. Here’s the audio book link at Audible.com:
http://www.audible.com/pd/ref=sr_1_…

Enjoy!

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Popping Ritalin Won’t Improve Grades, Warns Medical Journal—Its a Myth

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Note from CCHR: Several  years ago, NBC interviewed a group of high school kids that were recreationally using drugs like Ritalin, Adderall and Concerta. They asked the kids why they would risk using drugs that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) classifies as a schedule ll drug, in the same highly addictive category as cocaine, morphine and opium. Drugs that have severe side effects including death.   The high school kids answer?  ‘We figured since they’re given out to 6-year-olds, how bad can they be?’

Enough said.

Popping pills won’t improve grades, warns Canadian medical journal

Toronto Star – September 6, 2011

by Theresa Boyle

Universities and colleges must crack down on illicit use of Ritalin and other stimulants, which are not the grade boosters many assume, an editorial in the Canadian Medical Association Journal urges

“Students who think simply popping a pill will improve their grades or give them new-found academic abilities are sorely mistaken,” says the editorial released online on Tuesday.

Students use stimulants like Ritalin and Adderall because they are perceived to boost to academic performance through enhanced attention and alertness. But these supposed benefits are not reality based, but are part of a “pervasive myth,” the CMAJ charges.

The vast majority of evidence shows that stimulants offer no cognitive improvements over placebos in healthy individuals.

Those who abuse these drugs seem unaware of the potential dangers. While data on the impact of these drugs on healthy individuals is sparse, studies show that inappropriate use by those diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) can lead to death, life-threatening hypertension, irregular heartbeat, overdose, addiction and depression.

An overdose can result in symptoms seen in abuse of amphetamines and cocaine, including severe hypertension, abnormally high fever, rapid heartbeat, severe agitation and psychosis.

Effects can be more pronounced in those who snort or inject stimulants, the editorial warns.

The CMAJ calls on universities and colleges to create education campaigns that debunk myths and expose risks.

Post-secondary institutions should also try to identify and address the root cause of stimulant abuse, the journal says. It’s plausible that unhealthy competition or “play-hard-work-hard” attitudes prevail, the opinion piece says. Clear expectations, peer mentorship, additional resources and a more structured environment may encourage proper study habits. Programs that help integrate students living away from home for the first time would also be helpful.

“We must remember that the majority of students who inappropriately use these medications have good intentions but may simply need reliable information or resource to make good choices.”

Universities should have a self interest in addressing the problem because they could be held legally liable for the consequences of stimulant abuse, the editorial cautions.

It also calls on campus health clinics to look out for students may have undiagnosed ADHD. It’s possible they may be self medicating. The clinics should warn students who are prescribed these drugs about repercussions of selling any “excess” supply.

“Like doping in sports, abuse of stimulants by our best and brightest students should be denormalized by being viewed as cheating or substance abuse, pure and simple,” the editorial says.

http://www.healthzone.ca/health/mindmood/mentalhealth/article/1049813–popping-pills-won-t-improve-grades-warns-canadian-medical-journal

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Australia—Deaths in mental health facilities: unexpected, unnatural and violent

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

 

Click Image to Read CCHR's Mental Health Declaration of Human Rights

 

The Sydney Morning Herald— September 3, 2011

by Richard Baker and Nick McKenzie

 

THIRTY-SIX people died unexpected, unnatural or violent deaths in Victorian mental health facilities between 2008 and 2010, Coroners Court files reveal.

Data released to The Saturday Age by the Coroner’s Prevention Unit reveals 119 of the 502 coronial inquests held in Victoria between 2008 and 2010 involved people with diagnosed mental illnesses.

Of those 119 mental health coronial cases, almost a third related to the deaths of patients while they were being treated at state-run and private mental health facilities.Other figures from the Department of Health show 975 people under the care of Victoria’s mental health system have died unnatural, unexpected or violent deaths between 2006 and 2010.

These include mental health patients under the care of the state who committed suicide outside psychiatric facilities, as well as those who died in car accidents and house fires or drowned. But they also include dozens of patients who died in Victorian psychiatric wards.

The Saturday Age today publishes an investigation into the deaths of three men who died in state-run psychiatric wards across Melbourne between 2007 and 2009: Adam White, 31, Anthony Travaglini, 40, and Jeffery Hartwig, 43.

Each case involves allegations that serious failings by senior mental health staff may have contributed towards their unexpected deaths. Evidence also suggests that the health services involved allegedly covered up or failed to collect important information about the deaths, possibly preventing a proper examination of their cause.

Mr White’s death was the subject of a coronial inquest this year but a finding has yet to be made. The deaths of Mr Travaglini and Mr Hartwig are to be investigated by a coroner at a later date.

Southern Health, the health service responsible for the care of Mr Hartwig and Mr White care, this week complained to the Coroner’s Court after receiving questions from The Saturday Age about their deaths. A suppression order was made by coroner John Olle preventing the newspaper from publishing important information about Mr Hartwig’s death. Despite this, the paper is determined to report as much as it can about these deaths.

Our investigation found:

■ Mr Travaglini, who died in September 2008 at Eastern Health’s Upton House psychiatric hospital in Box Hill, was killed by a combination of powerful anti-psychotic medications given to him by staff, according to a Victorian government pathologist. Staff and patients aware of the circumstances of his death say the 40-year-old was pleading not to be given more drugs on the night he died. Staff and patients also allege there was an attempt to conceal information about the circumstances of his death from his family.

■ Mr Hartwig died at the Monash Medical Centre in December 2009 after he went into a coma following a suspected overdose of illicit drugs supplied by unknown visitors. His family says the hospital’s psychiatric ward kept no visitor log nor did it supervise visits to patients. Police sources say the hospital’s legal department interfered with their investigation and ordered staff not to speak about the circumstances of Mr Hartwig’s death.

■ Mr White’s 2007 death at Dandenong Hospital’s psychiatric ward during a struggle with security guards was the subject of a recent inquest. A finding has yet to be made, but evidence to the inquest suggests Mr White was asphyxiated while being held face down by security staff. A witness told the inquest that Mr White apparently yelled ”I give up”, but security did not ease off. He died soon after.

The circumstances of the men’s deaths and the treatment of their families raise questions about whether there is a culture of cover-up in the Victorian mental health system. The families have complained of a lack of answers from health services responsible for the care of their loved ones.

Eastern Health declined to comment, citing the coming inquest into Mr Travaglini’s death.

In addition to asking that details of Mr Hartwig and Mr White’s deaths be suppressed, Southern Health said it was ”committed to patient-centred care and constant improvement in regards to the quality of service we provide to our patients”.

Health Department statistics show that 239 people, 162 of them men, under the care of Victoria’s mental health system died unexpected, unnatural or violent deaths in 2009-10.

Melbourne Health and Eastern Health had the highest rates of unexpected, unnatural or violent deaths, with 44 and 31 respectively.

In 2008-09, there were 302 such deaths. In 2007-08 there were 205 and in 2006-07 there were 229.

Victoria’s chief psychiatrist, Ruth Vine, admitted the performance of Victoria’s mental health system could improve.

Dr Vine said she could not comment on the specific issues identified in the three deaths.

But she said the mental health area was one of the most difficult for health professionals.

”I don’t wish to be defensive or an apologist because I’d be the first to admit that our care provided is not perfect all the time,” Dr Vine said.

”But it is difficult to manage fairly large, fairly aggressive men and I think it is the case in some of these [deaths] that there was a degree of physical unwellness underlying.”

Dr Vine said Victoria had taken steps in recent years to improve care given to mental health patients.

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Would Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn be diagnosed mentally ill and drugged?

Thursday, September 1st, 2011

Natural News – September 1, 2011

by Monica G. Young

Imagine if the beloved young characters in Mark Twain’s classic, “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” lived today. Based on current psychiatric criteria, Tom and Huck could be designated mentally ill and prescribed mind-altering drugs. Quiet, listless and numb, their legendary adventures would be over.

Describing a day in school, Twain wrote: “The harder Tom tried to fasten his mind on his book, the more his ideas wandered.” His “heart ached to be free, or else to have something of interest to do to pass the dreary time.” That’s a text book so-called symptom of ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder). A teacher today could refer him to a psychiatrist who would dope him with stimulants. Yet like any typical boy, Tom had no trouble focusing attention on something he found interesting – like finding a hidden treasure.

Tom’s friend Huckleberry might fare worse. An avowed non-conformist, a psychiatric checklist could tag him with ODD – oppositional defiant disorder. And having run away from an abusive father, Huck would land in the hands of Child Protective Services who would sedate him on psychoactive drugs subsidized by government funds.

Although no brain scan, blood test or x-ray had been done, the psych doctors would claim the boys’ mental illness stemmed from a neurobiological disorder involving chemical imbalances in the brain, probably hereditary.

Tom and Huck would likely experience insomnia, stomach aches, high blood pressure, stunted growth or some other “side” effects, and more drugs would be added to treat these. They would start feeling despondent and have mood swings, leading to probable depression or bipolar disorder diagnoses and more drug cocktails. The once spirited youths might end up as life-long pharmaceutical junkies.

Psychiatry revealed as an industry of fakers

Recently Harvard-trained psychiatrist Daniel Carlat exposed psychiatry as essentially a field of imposters. His book, “Unhinged; the Trouble with Psychiatry – a Doctor’s Revelations about a Profession in Crisis,” reads much like a confession – and rightly so.

Despite all their years in medical school, psychiatrists do not use any medical tests in diagnosing. Instead their labels are entirely subjective, opinionated and based upon a manual of disorders voted into existence by a psychiatric committee.

Yet these “experts” have transformed boyhood into “ADHD,” shyness into “social anxiety disorder” and menstrual discomfort into “premenstrual dysphoric disorder.” Some toddlers are labeled before given a chance to learn to talk.

Carlat states, “Psychiatrists have cordoned off the most painful versions of normal life, defined them as syndromes, and have given them medical-sounding names.” Yes, there are people who suffer from severe mental disturbances, but he says it’s “an illusion that we understand our patients when all we are doing is assigning them labels.”

Where is the science in all this? He writes, “While the scientific literature contains thousands of papers proposing neurobiological theories to explain PTSD [post traumatic stress disorder], depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and other psychiatric disorders, these theories remain unproven…” And he confides, “the shocking truth is that psychiatry has yet to develop a convincing explanation for the pathophysiology of any illness at all.”

In regards the chemical imbalance rant, Carlat says this is nothing more than a “convenient myth” so psychiatrists can appear authoritative and avoid looking ignorant with their patients.

This is an industry riveted to drugs, drugs and more drugs. Forget really listening to and understanding a patient’s troubles in life. Now it’s all about lucrative fifteen-minute monthly med checks – about as personal as Wendy’s drive-through.

Pharmaceutical industry influence has vast bearing on what medications psychiatrists use and how often. Carlat admits, “We have been seduced by the constant encouragement from drug companies to prescribe more medications…” Such seduction ranges from a drug rep bringing a doctor his favorite drink from Starbucks, to companies paying him up to a million or more to be their marketing mouthpiece.

Psycho-Pharma’s drug obsession diverts society’s attention off non-harmful solutions like teaching life skills, improving education, better nutrition and exercise, and addressing environmental factors.

In short, for all their diplomas, chic offices, puffed-up terminology and high fees, this is a field where greed and deception replace ethics and scientific methodology. Fortunately some like Daniel Carlat are blowing the whistle.

Most unforgivable is the dispensing of labels and drugs to millions of children. The leading gurus of this campaign have been psychiatrists deep in the pockets of Big Pharma, such as the exalted Dr. Joseph Biederman – flanked by an army of Pharma-paid “advocacy” groups.

Perhaps we should ourselves vote on labels to categorize such mentally-depraved individuals, such as conscience deficit hyper-lying disorder (CDHD) or better yet, false representation and underhandedness disorder (FRAUD).

Sources for this article include:

“The book, “Unhinged; the Trouble with Psychiatry – a Doctor’s Revelations about a Profession in Crisis,” by Daniel J. Carlat, M.D.

http://speedupsitstill.com/dangerou…

http://www.thefix.com/content/jj-su…

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