Drug Research Lies
Do you think that the drug research done by pharmaceutical
companies is honest? Think again. The Guardian newspaper recently
reported on many systematic reviews which demonstrate that pharmaceutical
industry studies show positive results far more often than those
funded by independent sources. Coincidence? They just happen
to get more of the results that they want? Not Likely.
It is also unlikely that drug companies directly tamper with
clinical drug trials in any criminal way. They aren't likely
to change the reported results afterwards either. This kind of
dishonesty is probably very rare in drug research, because it
isn't necessary. There are more subtle ways to get the results
you want.
First, a company can design a study in a biased way. For example,
even if a study is theoretically double-blind, a company could
create procedures which let doctors administering a new pharmaceutical
know who is getting it, versus who is getting a placebo. The
expectation of doctors that a patients condition will improve
has been shown to result in more reported improvement. This obviously
could bias the results. This is a fairly crude manipulation,
but there are certainly other ways to design a study to increase
the chance of positive results.
By far, the most common way to manipulate the results of drug
research, is to selectively report those results. Recent investigations
show that this is common. Negative data is often hidden or thrown
out.
To understand why this matters, consider a simple example.
A new drug is given to ten groups of people who share a given
disease or condition. On average, it appears to help the people
in five of the groups , but the subjects in the other five groups
have no improvement or get worse. This is common, since people
get better or worse for many reasons, and this is why many trials
are necessary to be statistically significant.
Now suppose, in this case, the company decided that only the
five trials with positive results are important enough to report,
and they quietly get rid of the data from the other five. Now,
a drug that has no real benefit appears to have helped in every
research trial - every one that the rest of the world hears about
anyhow. This is bad science, of course, and unfortunately is
just one of the ways that pharmaceutical companies play with
data.
By the way, scientists have been recommending a simple and
inexpensive solution to this problem for decades: a compulsory
international trials register. In order to use the results of
any drug research trials to get a new pharmaceutical approved,
a company would have to register the trial before it begins.
In this way trials that don't give the result wanted can't just
disappear.
Not surprisingly, the drug companies are against this simple
idea. It doesn't allow them as much control over the "truth."
As a result, we can expect dishonest drug research to continue.
Discover more lies in the e-book "99Lies", and more
on Medical and Health Secrets in Chapter Five of my ebook "You
Aren't Supposed To Know - A Book Of Secrets, " at: http://www.TheSecretInformationSite.com
99 Lies | Drug Research Lies |