Big Pharma Shoves America Off the Wagon

Ryan Goldberg  Jul 09, 2009 1:00 pm

Big Pharma Shoves America Off the Wagon
 
Percentage of people using prescription drugs is staggering.
 

As expected, most industries have retrenched during this recession. Not so the pharmaceutical industry: It keeps spending, and spending, and spending -- on lobbying, to beat back health-care reform, and on advertising, to inspire people to buy its sweet, sweet drugs.

In the first 3 months of 2009, the pharmaceutical and health-care-products industry spent more than $66.5 million on lobbying Congress -- about $1.2 million per day, or $50,000 an hour, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. And big pharma’s total spending on advertising certainly hasn’t declined significantly, either: Advertising Age recently reported that it spent $12.7 billion on marketing in 2008, with more money than ever dumped into television commercials. Fourteen of the top 100 advertisers are pill-pushers.

The recession has presented drug companies with an opportunity to tell everyone that a cure for depression, impotence, and the sniffles is only a tiny pill away. Close to 10% of men and women in America are now taking drugs to combat depression, and, in the United Kingdom, 2.1 million more antidepressant prescriptions were written in 2008 than in 2007.

Rare conditions have a way of becoming common when a drug is developed for them.




And in this recession, former big shots whose stars have fallen are looking for a quick fix for what ails them, and the list is long: depression, panic disorders, attention deficits, and (gasp) erectile dysfunction can all result from chronic stress and general misfortune -- or so big pharma would have you believe. Sources of such stress could mean anything from being on the end of a losing trade to going bankrupt when your company collapses. 

And chronic stress can lead to reduced testosterone -- which means diminished sexual desire, possible marital conflict, and lower self-esteem. Drug makers know this, and have flooded our TV sets with commercials for erectile-dysfunction drugs: There’s Viagra, and Cialis (GSK), and Levitra (SGP) -- all just what the doctor ordered.
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Comments (9) See All Comments »
07-10-2009, 8:32 am
The cost of direct to consumer advertising by the Pharm industry adds a huge amount to our outrageous healthcare costs. Doctors believe it is innane, and we and New Zealand are the ONLY two countries permitting it! "Ask your doctor if he
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07-10-2009, 11:23 am
I have been complaining about this insanity for over a decade.

My Sister (a pediatrician) tells me that the pharmacy reps make almost as much as she does, and try and grease her palms with free skybox tickets and other bribes...er...&qu
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07-10-2009, 11:27 am
I forgot to add...

The Levitra advertisement on this page kept popping up as I tried to read the comments!

It has a golf game you can play!?!? Then get your free samples!

Why don't they just hand out the
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07-10-2009, 11:50 am
My sister in law is a drug rep and makes more than some physicians I know. She has a degree in history but is cute and a quick study so when a new product comes out she's off to her doc's with samples and "goodies". Of course
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07-10-2009, 12:58 pm
Finally someone in the press got it right. We don't need lower cost drugs, we need people to take less of them. Like you discuss, there are many, many people who are getting these drugs that really don't need them.

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