We all know that doctors accept gifts from drug companies, ranging from pens and coffee mugs to free vacations at luxurious resorts. But as the former Editor-in-Chief of The New England Journal of Medicine reveals in this shocking expose, these innocuous-seeming gifts are just the tip of an iceberg that is distorting the practice of medicine and jeopardizing the health of millions of Americans today.
In On the Take, Dr. Jerome Kassirer offers an unsettling look at the pervasive payoffs that physicians take from big drug companies and other medical suppliers, arguing that the billion-dollar onslaught of industry money has deflected many physicians' moral compasses and directly impacted the everyday care we receive from the doctors and institutions we trust most. Underscored by countless chilling untold stories, the book illuminates the financial connections between the wealthy companies that make drugs and the doctors who prescribe them. Kassirer details the shocking extent of these financial enticements and explains how they encourage bias, promote dangerously misleading medical information, raise the cost of medical care, and breed distrust. Among the questionable practices he describes are: the disturbing number of senior academic physicians who have financial arrangements with drug companies; the unregulated "front" organizations that advocate certain drugs; the creation of biased medical education materials by the drug companies themselves; and the use of financially conflicted physicians to write clinical practice guidelines or to testify before the FDA in support of a particular drug.
A brilliant diagnosis of an epidemic of greed, On the Take offers insight into howwe can cure the medical profession and restore our trust in doctors and hospitals.
Kassirer takes the cynical view; in fact, he's all but resigned to having the government police his colleagues' ethical behavior. "It shouldn't have to be patients' responsibilities to protect themselves against the medical profession," Kassirer writes. Bravo to that.
More Reviews and RecommendationsJerome P. Kassirer is Distinguished Professor at Tufts University School of Medicine and Adjunct Professor of Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine. Editor-in-Chief of New England Journal of Medicine for more than 8 years, he has been honored by membership in the Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has been referred to as the "Conscience of American Medicine." He lives in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
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June 30, 2006: Fascism, Mussolini said, is the control of the State by the Corporations. And he certainly knew! Most Pharmas have links to Nazi chemical corporations. Years ago, a founder of Merck stated that he would like all people to be on drugs to keep them well. Big Pharma and its subsidiaries make up half the stock market - a dangerous amount. The contributions of Big Pharma to charities, nonprofits and governments almost guarantee that what the donor wants, not what the people need, will be done. We need to stop being 'sheeple'. and become responsible for our own health. There is much that we can do for ourselves with diet, exercise and vitamins. We should question what drugs are being advertised to us and why doctors, who now seem to 'swear by the Dollar', push medications on us.
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April 24, 2005: Dr. Kassirer has taken an extreme view and paints the entire medical profession with his cynical brush. His statements about how easily highly respected academic physicians serve as stooges for drug companies are without foundation and an insult to the hard-working men in women in that profession.