Big Pharma payoffs to doctors cause an increase in opioid deaths… guns don’t kill people; DOCTORS do

Sunday, January 27, 2019
By Paul Martin

by: Isabelle Z.
NaturalNews.com
Saturday, January 26, 2019

The concept of doctors prescribing patients certain medications in exchange for money and gifts from pharmaceutical companies isn’t new, but it has taken on a whole new level of danger in the wake of the opioid crisis. For a long time, many of us wanted to believe that most doctors are above this sort of behavior, but the statistics tell a different tale: Pharmaceutical firm payoffs to doctors have been linked to rises in opioid deaths.

According to a study published in JAMA Network Open, in the time from August 2013 to December 2015, statistics show that drug makers shelled out nearly $40 million across 435,000 payments to 67,500 doctors throughout the U.S. The payments covered everything from meals to speaking engagements and travel costs. According to the data, the more marketing Big Pharma firms carried out to physicians in a particular county, the greater number of overdoses that were recorded there. This held true no matter how much money was actually spent; the number of interactions seems to be the biggest factor here.

The study found that in a county with a population of 100,000, just three extra payments to doctors were linked to an 18 percent higher number of prescription opioid deaths. Perhaps even more troubling, previous studies have found that more than nine out of every 10 marketing interactions with doctors were for a meal. This means it isn’t costing Big Pharma very much money to get doctors’ attention – and people are losing their lives so their doctor can get a free meal. It’s an outrage no matter how you look at it.

The study showed that payments were concentrated in counties that had a greater amount of unemployment, lower income inequality, higher median household income, lower poverty, and more high school graduates, suggesting that certain counties are being targeted.

NYU School of Medicine’s Dr. Magdalena Cerda said the findings “suggest what matters is not so much the high value of payments to a few doctors, but the low value of payments to many doctors, for such things as meals.”

Not surprisingly, many states, counties and cities across the nation are filing lawsuits against opioid makers for inappropriate prescription guidelines and downplaying the risks of the deadly drugs. A lawsuit filed by the Massachusetts attorney general alleged that Purdue Pharma influenced legislation and offered universities and medical facilities generous funding to tout OxyContin. To add insult to injury, it was revealed that one member of the family that owns the company was pushing a strategy to blame those who become addicted for overdoses rather than doctors or the pills themselves.

Opioids vs. guns

The Rest…HERE

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