Posts Tagged ‘Front group’

Why Mental Health “Advocacy” Groups Aren’t Calling for Psychiatric Drug Investigation in Arizona Shooting: They’re Pharma Funded

Friday, January 14th, 2011

Note from CCHR:  In the wake of the Jared Loughner shooting in Arizona, we pointed out that the press seemed more interested in featuring Pharma-funded mouthpieces speculating on why Loughner wasn’t “treated” (drugged)  and using this tragedy to start banging the drum for more government funding for more mental health treatment, (drugs) before even bothering to find out whether or not Loughner was, or had been, on psychiatric drugs.  The logical question for anyone concerned with mental health would be;  Was Loughner yet another in the long list of  mass shooters already under the influence of psychiatric drugs documented to cause mania, psychosis, violence, homicidal and suicidal ideation that have resulted in 54 dead and 105 wounded in 10 such similar massacres? Isn’t that something we should know before spending billions more dollars on a pharmaceutically based mental health agenda?  Shouldn’t we be investigating that instead of using this tragedy to get more funding for mental health “treatment”?     So let’s just cut to the chase.   The most prominent “mental health” groups using this shooting to cry out “give us billions more funding,” are themselves, funded by Pharma.   Perhaps this sheds light on why despite the overwhelming evidence psychiatric drugs cause violence and even homicide,  groups such as the National Alliance for Mental Illness (NAMI), which claims to be a “patient’s rights” organization for the “mentally ill”  are not calling for an investigation of what, if any role, psychiatric drugs played in this or any other mass shooting in the last 10 years,  we are.

To find out more about these pharmaceutical front groups and their real agenda, click here.

Study: Drug firms fund health advocacy group

The Chicago Tribune – January 13th, 2011
by Judith Graham

Many health advocacy organizations rely on financial support from drug companies. But few disclose the extent of that funding or make information easily accessible, according to a new report published Thursday by researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

The groups often sit on important federal advisory boards and press lawmakers for greater funding for medical research, more generous reimbursement for brand-name drugs, and easy access to diagnostic tests and medical devices for people afflicted by various illnesses.

Because of this, “our feeling is that a lot more openness and disclosure needs to take place,” said Sheila Rothman, lead author of the report in the American Journal of Public Health and a professor at the Mailman School.

The study analyzed data from Eli Lilly & Co. from the first half of 2007 and found that only 25 percent of 161 organizations disclosed funding they received from the drug giant on their Web sites. Just 18 percent acknowledged Lilly’s grants in their annual reports, and 1 percent listed Lilly on a corporate sponsors page.

Lilly gave $3.2 million to advocacy groups during this period, 10 percent of all the grants awarded to doctors, medical organizations, non-profits and other entities.

Rothman called the information a “baseline picture” of how secretive organizations were about industry funding before pharmaceutical firms began releasing this information under terms of legal settlements. Lilly began releasing details of its grants in May 2007, becoming the first drug company to do so.

“These were practices at the time,” she said.

Since then some groups have changed their practices, prodded by heightened concern over potential conflicts of interest and an ongoing, high-profile investigation of drug industry funding to physicians and non-profit health groups by Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa.

While complete results of Grassley’s investigation are not yet available, some details have emerged. For instance, the New York Times reported that the National Alliance on Mental Illness received almost $23 million from pharmaceutical firms between 2006 and 2008; state NAMI chapters have received millions more, according to a letter sent to the organization by Grassley’s office last year.

NAMI now lists corporate grants of $5,000 or more for its national operations on its Web site, but individual chapters’ funding sources aren’t included. The organization has a strict policy against endorsing specific products or services, its Web site says.

Lilly targeted funding to advocacy groups representing patients with neurological or psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, bipolar illness, and depression; endocrine disorders such as diabetes; and cancer, the new report found. These were the three largest categories of U.S. sales, worth $10.1 billion for the drugmaker in 2007.

The researchers arrived at their conclusions by checking advocacy organizations’ 2007 annual reports and federal tax forms and performing a comprehensive review of their Web sites between Sept. 30, 2008, and Jan. 12, 2009. All mentions of Eli Lilly funding were noted, but some information may have been missed if it was posted on Web sites earlier.

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National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) – A Pharma front group

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) states it is no wonder that the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), a group that claims to be an advocacy organization for people with “mental illness,” opposed the black box warnings on antidepressants causing suicide for under 18 year olds in 2004, and black box warnings on ADHD drugs causing heart attack, stroke and sudden death in children in 2006, when you look at their biggest source of funding: Pharma.

Today’s New York Times article, “Drug Makers Are Advocacy Group’s Biggest Donors” states “A majority of the donations made to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, one of the nation’s most influential disease advocacy groups, have come from drug makers in recent years, according to Congressional investigators. The alliance, known as NAMI, has long been criticized for coordinating some of its lobbying efforts with drug makers and for pushing legislation that also benefits industry. Last spring, Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, sent letters to the alliance and about a dozen other influential disease and patient advocacy organizations asking about their ties to drug and device makers. The request was part of his investigation into the drug industry’s influence on the practice of medicine.

The mental health alliance, which is hugely influential in many state capitols, has refused for years to disclose specifics of its fund-raising, saying the details were private. But according to investigators in Mr. Grassley’s office and documents obtained by The New York Times, drug makers from 2006 to 2008 contributed nearly $23 million to the alliance, about three-quarters of its donations.”

Read NY Times article here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/22/health/22nami.html?_r=2

More on NAMI:

    • NAMI’s pharmaceutical funding was first exposed in the November 1999  Mother Jones article  “An influential mental health nonprofit finds its grassroots funded by Pharmaceutical millions,”  Internal documents obtained by Mother Jones found 18 drug firms gave NAMI a total of $11.72 million between 1996 and mid-1999. These include Janssen ($2.08 million), Novartis ($1.87 million), Pfizer ($1.3 million), Abbott Laboratories ($1.24 million), Wyeth-Ayerst Pharmaceuticals ($658,000), and Bristol-Myers Squibb ($613,505).  And that NAMI’s leading donor was Eli Lilly and Company, maker of Prozac, which gave $2.87 million during that period. In 1999 alone, Lilly will have delivered $1.1 million in quarterly installments, with the lion’s share going to help fund NAMI’s ‘Campaign to End Discrimination’ against the mentally ill.”

    • In a 2000 Insight Magazine article, NAMI spokesperson Bob Carolla stated, “Mental illness is a biologically based brain disorder” and deferred to the U.S. Surgeon General’s 1999 Report on Mental Health as evidence of this. Yet the author of the article, Kelly Patricia O’Meara reviewed the entire report looking for this evidence, and found, “The Surgeon General’s report does not provide a single piece of scientific data supporting mental illness as a brain disorder or disease.”

    Factually, the Surgeon General’s report admitted there is no medical proof to substantiate NAMI’s claims. The report states, “The diagnoses of mental disorders is often believed to be more difficult than diagnoses of somatic or general medical disorders since there is no definitive lesion, laboratory test or abnormality in brain tissue that can identify the illness.”

    Psychiatrist Loren Mosher, former Chief of Schizophrenic Research Studies National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) stated, “The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) gets the pharmaceutical money and then says they spend it on their ‘antistigma’ campaign. They say that mental illness is a ‘brain disease.’ And it works well for the people who suffer from this to use their drugs. This is why NAMI is pushing for forced medication. It is an amazing selling job on the part of NAMI.”

    • December 18, 2003, The New York Times reported that NAMI bused scores of protestors to a hearing in Frankfort, Kentucky, took out full page ads in Kentucky newspapers, and sent angry faxes to state officials, all protesting a state panel proposal to exclude the antipsychotic drug Zyprexa from Medicaid’s list of preferred medications. According to the article, “What the advocacy groups did not say at the time was that the buses, ads and faxes were all paid for” by the manufacturer of the antipsychotic drug Zyprexa, Eli Lilly.

    In 2004, NAMI opposed the FDA issuing “black box” warnings on antidepressants about their increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors in under 18-year-olds.

    In 2006, despite overwhelming evidence of serious adverse cardiac events and sudden deaths caused by ADHD drugs, NAMI took the position that the “black box” warning on ADHD drugs was “premature.”

If NAMI was truly a patient’s rights advocacy group as they purport to be, the question must be asked why they opposed legislation that forwards patients rights.

Take for example the Child Medication Safety Act, a bill that passed the House of Representatives 425-1 in 2003. The bill stated that as a condition of receiving federal funds, states develop policies and procedures that prohibit schools from requiring a child to take psychiatric drugs as a condition of attending school. NAMI reported in their Policy Alerts section of their Beginnings newsletter that summer that they were “not opposed to the intent of the bill.” However, in the same article they stated “given the bill’s stern enforcement provisions—threatening the loss of federal education funds—it’s enactment would inevitably have a chilling effect on schools across the country.” They went on to encourage people contact their Senators to “express concern” about the bill.

Despite NAMI’s efforts, the bill, hailed as a protection for parents rights, was passed in December 2004 as the Prohibition on Mandatory Medication Amendment, a bill CCHR and many other concerned groups had been strongly in support of, after numerous parents came forth stating they had been forced to have their children take psychiatric drugs as a condition of attending school, and even had been charged with medical neglect for failing to comply.

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