Economic Incentives for Drug Companies Lead to       Aggressive Marketing of Defective & Ineffective Medications       and Need for FDA Regulations, Checks on Drug Marketing, and  Defective Drug Lawsuits            The       Pharmaceutical industry or "Big Pharma" has become extremely       rich and powerful over the last decade as the industry has changed  the way       drugs are regulated and marketed in the United States and       throughout the World.  It is estimated that the drug       industry will have drug sales       of over $300 Billion in the United States in 2010 and       over $750 Billion Worldwide.  These revenues are over       twice what they were 10 years ago.
      The       main reasons for this rapid growth are that the drug       industry has been able to put their own people in top       positions in the United States Food and Drug Administration to  change regulations to relax the drug       approval process, been able to help push through Medicare D       (a major giveaway to the drug companies that increased government  purchasing of drugs       & limited competition), and been       more aggressively marketing their drugs including off-label       marketing regardless of       dangers or effectiveness of the drug.  
      This article       is intended to help explain the economic incentives that are       encouraging the pharmaceutical industry to aggressively push       drugs for approved and off label uses regardless of the       effectiveness or potential dangerous side effects of the       drugs as well as       explain why additional safe guards are needed to help       protect consumers from dangerous drugs and to curtail the       drug industry's aggressive pursuit of profits regardless of       the potential dangers or effectiveness of specific drugs.  
            Significant Investments in Research and Development       Create Economic Incentives for Pharmaceutical Companies to       Aggressively Market Drugs Regardless of Effectiveness or       Potential Dangers
      Because of       the significant cost of researching and developing a drug,       pharmaceutical companies have tremendous investments in       making sure that a drug is profitable regardless of the       effectiveness or potential dangers of a drug.        Pharmaceutical professionals that have spent years and       significant resources developing a new drug often cannot       afford to risk their careers and company's       profitability by having a drug's approval delayed, a drug       taken off the market, or a drug sent back for further       research.  These precautions though often safer for       consumers could allow another drug company or pharmaceutical       professional to develop a similar drug and steal the       potential       market or cause potential profits to be delayed.  Thus, the  significant investment that a drug       company has in a particular drug combined with fierce       competition and the need for short term profitability create       a strong economic incentive for a drug company to       aggressively push patenting, approval, and marketing of a       drug regardless of its effectiveness or potential dangerous       side effects.
      Further,       once a drug is approved for a specific use there is also       tremendous economic pressure to start marketing and pushing       a drug for off label uses to increase the drug's       profitability regardless of effectiveness or potential       dangers.  Even in cases where one drug company has been       warned by the FDA not to market a drug for off label uses,       other companies have purchased the drug and found it more       profitable at least in the short term to market the drug and       later pay any fines and/or lawsuits (Yasmin        and Yaz example).
      These       economic incentives have led to increased emphasis on       marketing and promotions rather than more research and       development.  In fact,            studies have shown that the drug industry is now spending       more on marketing and promotions than it is on research and       development of new drugs.  This startling fact is       contrary to the drug industry's argument that most of their       large revenues are needed for research and development of       new drugs and suggests that new regulations are needed for       drug marketing as many drug companies have found it more       profitable to aggressively market drugs rather than to       develop new drugs and/or make sure their product is safe and       effective.
       Economic       Incentives Have Created More Aggressive Marketing       Departments that Push Drugs Through Advertising and Doctors       Regardless of Effectiveness or Dangerous Side Effects 
      Drug company       spending on sales and marketing has increased significantly       over the past decade.  This increased focus on       aggressive marketing has led to increased sales of drugs and       profits for the pharmaceutical industry, but has also caused       a large increase in off label use of drugs as well as the       use of drugs that can cause significant health problems or       death.   
      In pushing their  drugs to consumers,       some pharmaceutical marketing departments have        turned many doctors and health care providers into drug pushers  through incentive       based marketing, kick back programs, and propaganda given to the  doctors to       encourage off label use of drugs and a push towards the use       of more drugs and more expensive drugs regardless of       necessity or effectiveness.  The marketing departments have also in  some instances       taken control of the FDA to hide negative information about       potential dangers of some drugs.  These actions allowed the drug       companies to sell more drugs even when they had information       that the drugs were dangerous and could cause death or       serious injuries.
      Because of the  large profits       that have been made or can be made by the drug companies,       many pharmaceutical executives have been willing to risk       large fines for illegal and deceptive practices including       off-label marketing, misleading advertisements, and hiding       known dangers of drugs because they know that the profits       will be larger than the potential fines.  Pfizer       has paid a total of $2.75 billion in off-label penalties       since 2004 which is a little more than 1 percent of the       company’s revenue of $245 billion from 2004 to 2008.  (Pfizer        Broke the Law by Promoting Drugs for Unapproved Uses)
      Off-Label Drug Marketing and Off-Label       Pharmaceutical Marketing Medicare Fraud Lawsuits       
      Off-label marketing is the practice of       pharmaceutical marketing professionals creating financial       incentives and pressuring doctors to prescribe       pharmaceuticals for unapproved uses. In the United       States, the Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug       Evaluation and Research (CDER) reviews a company's New Drug       Application (NDA) for data from clinical trials to see if       the results support the drug for a specific use or       indication. If satisfied that the drug is safe and       effective, the drug's manufacturer and the FDA agree on       specific language describing dosage, route of       administration, and other information to be included on the       drug's label and package       insert. 
      The Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act (”FDCA”),        provides a specific regulation process for the approval of       new drugs and new drug formulations intended to be marketed       for use in interstate commerce. Under the FDCA, a new drug       product cannot be marketed unless the FDA approves the       product and determines that it is safe and effective for its       intended use. When the FDA approves a drug, it approves the       drug only for the particular use for which it was tested,       but after the drug is approved for a particular use, the       FDCA does not regulate how the drug may be prescribed by       doctors. Thus, a drug that has been tested and approved by       the FDA for one use only can also be prescribed by a       physician for another use, known as off-label. Though       physicians may prescribe drugs for off-label usage, the FDA       prohibits drug manufacturers from marketing or promoting a       drug for a use that the FDA has not approved. 
      In the past ten years some pharmaceutical       marketing departments have found it extremely profitable to       market their drug for non-FDA approved uses. The FDA's       inability to regulate physicians allowed the drug company       marketing departments and drug representatives to set up       elaborate schemes to encourage physicians to prescribe drugs       for off-label uses including misleading doctors as to the       efficacy of a drug for a particular treatment and forms of       kickbacks including vacations, conferences, initial free       samples, hiring physician's families. 
      These marketing schemes have been very       successful in increasing pharmaceutical profits, but have       led to            False Claims Act Off-Label Marketing Lawsuits by the       United States Department of Justice and            False Claims Act Lawyers.  These Off-Label       Marketing False Claims Act Lawsuits have led to            Billions of Dollars in Civil and Criminal fines against       large drug companies.  However, because of the       extremely large profits that have been and can be made by       off-label marketing, there is an economic incentive to       continue the practice. 
      Recent Letter from the       FDA Expresses Outrage at Wrongful and Criminal Actions of       some Top FDA Officials During the Bush Administration that       Changed Regulatory Procedures and Rubber Stamped Ineffective       and Dangerous Drugs
      Recent       allegations have been made that the United States Food and Drug  Administration       (FDA)       under the Bush administration in many instances ignored       science and did not protect consumers from known dangers       from pharmaceutical drugs.  A            letter dated April 2, 2009 from the Department of Health and       Human Services FDA, confirms that top FDA Officials were       suppressing science and information that could have hurt       profits for the pharmaceutical companies.  These FDA       officials, FDA attorneys, and lawyers from the       pharmaceutical companies, were working together in an effort       to use false data and suppressed data to not only sell more       dangerous drugs and medical devices to consumers, but also       were attempting to block consumers that were severely       injured or families that lost a loved one from defectively       dangerous drugs from seeking any recourse through the       justice system. 
      Fortunately,       brave whistleblowers including FDA physicians and scientists,  public advocacy       groups, and the press were able to       shine a light on some of the serious wrongdoing done by top       FDA officials resulting in the letter.  The letter       expressed the outrage of many FDA professionals and other       whistleblowers that are trying to root out FDA managers that       failed to protect consumers from dangerous drugs.  
      It appears       that the FDA is in the process of rooting out industry       insiders that have valued their careers and/or helping drug       companies make more money over the health and safety of       American consumers.  However, the fact that corrupt       officials loyal to the drug industry were able to hijack the       FDA is troubling.  These outrageous actions have led to       a call for new regulations and prohibitions against a       revolving door policy between the FDA and the drug industry.
      Product Liability       Litigation, Dangerous Drug Lawsuits, and Seeking       Compensation for & Protecting Consumers
      Medications can be  extremely beneficial, but when       they are used incorrectly, marketed for the wrong purpose,       or dangerous side effects are hidden; defective drugs can cause  serious       problems and catastrophic damages.  In our       modern society, the pharmaceutical companies have become       extremely rich and powerful.  Arguably this pooling of resources       into the pharmaceutical companies allows these large       corporations to spend billions of dollars on developing new       drugs, but also on aggressive marketing and lobbying.        Therefore, checks are need on how the drug industry uses       their massive resources and power including limits on drug       marketing, lobbying, and their influence on FDA regulations.
      Further, it       is important that consumers that have lost a loved one or       have been seriously injured by a drug which is known to be       unsafe have recourse in the United States justice system.        Like the Pinto cases from the 1970s, large companies       that determine that it is more profitable to aggressively       market       unsafe and dangerous drugs and pay any fine than it is to develop       new and better drugs need to be made to answer for the       damages that they cause.  Allowing consumers to seek       recourse from drug companies that have caused devastating       health problems and death is an important check on the       aggressive pharmaceutical marketing of drugs including off-label  marketing that is currently occurring.
      Defective drug lawsuits fall into       product liability law.       Product  Liability       Lawsuits that stem from defective medications can be       extremely complicated and expensive to develop.  Many       of these defective medication lawsuits have aspects of medicine,       science, evidence, and law to investigate, examine, and       prove.  To successful pursue defective and dangerous       drug litigation, it is common to hire multiple       experts to prove that a medication is defective and that       it caused harm to a particular person or particular group of       people.  For this reason       many defective medication lawsuits require severe       catastrophic damages       and/or multiple injured parties to be viable.
      Even when a       dangerous medication has caused catastrophic damages to many       people and families, it can be quite       a fight to prove that a medication is defective.        Fighting through industry produced research and discovering       hidden adverse research can be difficult.        This is because the product's manufacturer has typically       invested a significant amount of money in designing the       product, manufacturing the product, and marketing the       product.  For some dangerous drugs billions of dollars have       been invested in designing, manufacturing, marketing, and       distributing the defective drug.  As such, everyone in the       production and distribution lines have a stake in disproving       that the medication is defective or dangerous.
      Defective Drug Litigation, Bad Drug Lawsuits, and       other Drug Product Liability Lawsuits (Texas        Defective Drug Lawyer) 
      These highly       profitable, but aggressive, misleading, and sometimes illegal       marketing practices have brought crack downs by the United       States Department of Justice, the Food and Drug       Administration, and Product Liability Defective Drug       Lawyers.  For more information on some types of defective drug  litigation       that are now pending please feel free to click on the       following links: Chantix        Suicide       Lawsuits, Reglan        Tardive Dyskinesia Lawsuits,       Defective  Birth Control       (Yaz, Yasmine, & Ocella)       Lawsuits, Avandia  Lawsuits, Vioxx       Lawsuits, Ketek Lawsuits,        Gadolinium  Contrast Dye       Lawsuits, Trasylol  Lawsuits, Zyprexa       Lawsuits, Antidepressant  (SSRI) drug Lawsuits, and       other  defective       drug and medication       Lawsuits.  
       Reglan GERD Tardive Dyskinesia Lawsuits (Tardive       Dyskinesia Neuroleptic Medication Lawsuits) 
      Reglan is a neuroleptic medication used       to treat gastrointestinal problems that have had many cases       of Tardive Dyskinesia reported in response to it. Reglan is       supposed to increase the stomach and small intestine       contractions to help the passage of food. As every       medication, Reglan has side effects associated to it and       some of them are very serious. In February 1996, the FDA       warned that Reglan causes an increased risk of Parkinsonism.      
      Reglan is a dopamine antagonist that       increases lower esophageal sphincter pressure and improves       gastrointestinal emptying. The FDA approved Reglan, which is       manufactured by Baxter Healthcare Corporation, for       short-term treatment (between 4 and 12 weeks) of these       conditions only after conservative methods of treatment have       failed. However, it is common that patients are prescribed       Reglan for longer than 12 weeks, which is against FDA       recommendations. 
            This is problematic because prolonged use       of Reglan can cause Tardive Dyskinesia, a serious and often       irreversible movement disorder. Infants who are given Reglan       appear to be at an even greater risk for this serious drug       side effect. 
      The symptoms a person can experience from       Tardive Dyskinesia can vary from mild barely noticeable       facial ticks and involuntary movements to severe problems.       Severe cases of Tardive Dyskinesia can have a significant       impact on a person's life disabling them from normal       functioning.  Severe facial ticks and involuntary body       movements can be extremely embarrassing cause a person to       withdraw from social interactions.
      For more       information on Reglan and Tardive Dyskinesia, please go to       the following Reglan        Tardive Dyskinesia GERD Lawsuit Webpage.
      Chantix Suicide Lawsuits (Chantix Suicide       Litigation) 
      Chantix       is a stop smoking aid or smoking cessation medication that       has been linked to mood and behavior changes in people that       use the drug.  These behavior changes include suicidal       behavior and suicidal idealation.  These changes are       especially problematic when Chantix is used in combination       with alcohol.  
      Health care professionals, patients,       patients' families, and caregivers should be alert to and       monitor for changes in mood and behavior in patients treated       with Chantix. Symptoms may include anxiety, nervousness,       tension, depressed mood, unusual behaviors and thinking       about or attempting suicide. In most cases, neuropsychiatric       symptoms developed during Chantix treatment, but in others,       symptoms developed following withdrawal of varenicline       therapy. 
      -        Patients should immediately report        changes in mood and behavior to their doctor.         
-        Vivid, unusual, or strange dreams may        occur while taking Chantix.         
-        Patients taking Chantix may        experience impairment of the ability to drive or operate        heavy machinery.        
FDA will continue to update health care       professionals with new information from FDA's continuing       review or if new information is received on Chantix and       serious neuropsychiatric symptoms. 
      For more       information on Chantix Suicide and Attempted Suicide       Lawsuits, please go to the following      Chantix  Lawsuit       Webpage.
                  Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor Antidepressants (SSRIs)    
   Birth Defect Lawsuits
      Some medications  that have been linked to       birth defects include Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor       Antidepressants (SSRIs).  Women that have taken SSRIs       after the 20th week of pregnancy have a 6-fold       increased risk of developing persistent pulmonary       hypertension, a life-threatening lung disorder.       Infants with persistent pulmonary hypertension have       abnormal blood flow through the heart and lungs and do not       get enough oxygen to their bodies and may become very sick       or die.  For more information on Selective Serotonin       Reuptake Inhibitor Antidepressant Birth Defect Claims,       please go to our       SSRI  Birth Defect Claim Information Page.
      The SSRIs antidepressants that have been       linked to persistent pulmonary hypertension (PPHN) include       Paxil by GlaxoSmithKline, Zoloft marketed by Pfizer; Prozac       sold by Eli Lilly; Celexa and Lexapro by Forest       Laboratories, Effexor marketed by Wyeth, Luvox by Solvay,       and the generic makers of these drugs include Barr       Pharmaceuticals, Ranbaxy Labs and Genpharm.
      Infants born with PPHN often require       mechanical assistance to breath and even worse about 10% to       20% of the infants do not survive even when they receive       treatment. The PPHN babies that do survive often experience       developmental delays, brain abnormalities and hearing loss,       experts say.
      For more       information on PPHN, PPH and SSRI Birth Defect Lawsuits,       please go to the following       SSRI Antidepressant PPHN Birth Defect Lawsuit Webpage.
      Birth Control Medication  Lawsuits       (Yaz,  Yasmin, and Ocella Birth Control Drug Lawsuits)
      YAZ,        Ocella, and Yasmin are oral contraceptives that produced       over $1 Billion in sales in the United States and $1.8       Billion worldwide in 2008.  These birth control pills are       oral contraceptives that have been heavily marketed by Bayer       HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc., however, the FDA has found       that past marketing campaigns were misleading as it       minimized the potential health risks that have been       associated with these oral contraceptives.  These health       risks include sudden death, cardiovascular problems, blood       clots, heart attacks, stokes, and gallbladder disease
      YAZ and Yasmin are combined oral       contraceptive (COC) pills that contain ethinylestradiol (EE)       and drospirenone (DRSP).  These birth control medications       are manufactured by Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,       while Ocella is the generic equivalent of Yasmin that is       manufactured by Barr Laboratories. Each of these birth       control medications contain ethinyl estradiol and the new       "fourth generation" progestin drospirenone (DRSP).       Drospirenone is known for increasing the risk for       hyperkalemia and these DRSP oral contraceptives have been       associated with adverse health effects such as Death, Deep       Vein Thrombosis (DVT), Pulmonary Embolism (PE), Strokes,       Heart Attacks, Gallbladder Disease, and other health       problems.
      For more information on Yaz, Ocella, and       Yasmin Lawsuits, please go to the following            Yaz, Ocella, and Yasmin Lawsuit Webpage.
      Neurontin FDA Actions and Warnings (Gabapentin        and Antiepileptic Drug Suicide Lawsuits)       
      In December 2008, the U.S. Food and Drug       Administration announced it will require the manufacturers       of antiepileptic drugs to add to these products' prescribing       information, or labeling, a warning that their use increases       risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors (suicidality). The       action includes all antiepileptic drugs including those used       to treat psychiatric disorders, migraine headaches and other       conditions, as well as epilepsy. 
      The FDA is also requiring the       manufacturers to submit for each of these products a Risk       Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy, including a Medication       Guide for patients. Medication Guides are       manufacturer-developed handouts that are given to patients,       their families and caregivers when a medicine is dispensed.       The guides will contain FDA-approved information about the       risks of suicidal thoughts and behaviors associated with the       class of antiepileptic medications. 
      "Patients being treated with       antiepileptic drugs for any indication should be monitored       for the emergence or worsening of depression, suicidal       thoughts or behavior, or any unusual changes in mood or       behavior," said Russell Katz, M.D., director of the Division       of Neurology Products in the FDA's Center for Drug       Evaluation and Research. " Patients who are currently taking       an antiepileptic medicine should not make any treatment       changes without talking to their health care professional."      
      The FDA today also disseminated       information to the public about the risks associated with       antiepileptic medications by issuing a public health       advisory and an information alert to health care       professionals. Health care professionals should notify       patients, their families, and caregivers of the potential       for an increase in the risk of suicidal thoughts or       behaviors so that patients may be closely observed. 
            Gabapentin (brand name       Neurontin) has been aggressively marketed for many off-label       uses including to relieve pain, migraine headaches,       neuropathic pain, nystagmus, Complex Regional Pain Syndrome,       mood-stabilizing treatment for bipolar disorder,       menopausal hot flashes, and idiopathic subjective       tinnitus.  This off-label marketing for Neurontin is a       serious problem in that the FDA has issued a warning of an       increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors in       patients taking Neurotin. 
      It is estimated that over 90 percent of       Pfizer's revenue from Neurontin which is in the billions of       dollars is from off-label use.  Pfizer has paid a total of       $2.75 billion in off-label penalties since 2004 which is a       little more than 1 percent of the company’s revenue of $245       billion from 2004 to 2008.  (Pfizer        Broke the Law by Promoting Drugs for Unapproved Uses)
      For more information on Neurontin and       Antiepileptic Drug Suicide  Lawsuits, please go to the following            Neurontin, Off Label Marketing, and Antiepileptic Drug       Suicide Lawsuit Webpage.