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Hooked
How Medicine's Dependence on the Pharmaceutical Industry Undermines Professional Ethics
Hooked
How Medicine's Dependence on the Pharmaceutical Industry Undermines Professional Ethics
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Description
For decades, medical professionals have betrayed the public's trust by accepting various benefits from the pharmaceutical industry. Both drug company representatives and doctors employ artful spin to portray this behavior positively to the public, and to themselves. In Hooked, Howard Brody argues that we can neither understand the problem, nor propose helpful solutions until we identify the many levels of activity connecting these purportedly noble industries. We can pass laws and enact regulations, but ultimately the medical profession must take responsibility for its own integrity. Hooked is a wake-up call for anyone expecting high quality, ethical medical care.
Table of Contents
Part 2 I. Overview
Chapter 3 1. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: A Story of Two Medications
Chapter 4 2. An Ethical Framework
Part 5 II. Specific Issues and Problems
Chapter 6 3. The Pharmaceutical Industry and the Free Market
Chapter 7 4. Patents, Generic Drugs, and Academic Science
Chapter 8 5. Research and Profits
Chapter 9 6. Suppression of Research Data
Chapter 10 7. The Quality of Pharmaceutical Research
Chapter 11 8. The Drug Rep: Historical Background
Chapter 12 9. The Drug Rep Today
Chapter 13 10. The Influence of Drug Reps: What the Data Show
Chapter 14 11. Continuing Medical Education
Chapter 15 12. Professional Organizations and Journal Advertising
Chapter 16 13. The Industry and the Consumer
Chapter 17 14. The FDA: From Patent Medicine to AIDS Drugs
Chapter 18 15. The FDA and the Industry, 1990-2004
Part 19 III. Toward Solutions
Chapter 20 16. Solutions: The Management and Divestment Strategies
Chapter 21 17. Solutions Requiring Enhanced Professionalism in Medicine
Chapter 22 18. Solutions Requiring Regulatory Reform
Chapter 23 Epilogue: Industry Woes and Professional Opportunities
Product details
Published | Dec 01 2006 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 382 |
ISBN | 9780742552180 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Dimensions | 243 x 161 mm |
Series | Explorations in Bioethics and the Medical Humanities |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Thoroughly documented, logically structured, and well written, [Brody's] book offers a good starting point for discussing ethical issues that impact us all. Recommended for all medical and public libraries.
Library Journal
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The single best, most balanced, most comprehensive guide to the current difficulties with the pharmaceutical industry that I have ever read.
Carl Elliott, University of Minnesota
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Physicians, policy makers, and the public should thank Dr. Brody for this major contribution to our understanding of the medical profession and the corrupting influence on the profession of its complex relationship with the pharmaceutical industry.
Philip R. Lee, MD, Stanford University, and author of Pills, Profits, and Politics
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[Brody] aims for the measured cadences of the ethicist . . . calmly laying out the relevant facts and then reasoning from basic principles to determine whether the medicine-pharmaceutical relationship, as it stands now, is an ethical one or not. That Dr. Brody manages to deliver a hundred-odd pages of determinedly objective analysis before he, too, lets the righteous indignation roll should not really be called a failure of methodology: even as he carefully lays out the facts in this impressively comprehensive book, those facts begin to speak damningly for themselves . . . for a detailed overview of this very jagged terrain, if not for a map of the pathway out, a better general guide than this one is hard to imagine.
The New York Times
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In this extraordinary book, Dr. Howard Brody, a medical ethicist, lays out in great detail what he judges to be Big Pharma's misdeeds and the seduction of U.S. docs. His targets are the influence of company drug reps, the suppression of negative research data, the abuse of patents, phony advertising and weak oversight by the FDA.
Chicago Tribune
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I highly acclaim and recommend this book to all physicians, medical students, and those in policy-making positions regarding our broken health-care system...It ought to be required reading for the medical profession as a whole and a call to action to help us regain the public's trust in our integrity, altruism, and professional ethics.
Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing