Doctors think they make decisions
based on medical evidence.
But they don’t!
In fact, half of medical evidence is
hidden from your doctors. And the half that’s hidden is the half that shows
drugs don’t work.
The bad news is that drug companies
are not policed by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the way they should
be. A drug should be proven both effective and safe before it is prescribed to
millions of people.
Sadly, that often isn’t the case.
Let me share with you two recent
examples that highlight the dangerous collusion between drug companies and our
government agency. They show why the FDA should really stand for “Federal Drug
Aid.”
First, we now know that the
cholesterol-lowering drug Zetia actually causes harm and leads to faster
progression of heart disease despite lowering cholesterol 58 percent when
combined with Zocor.
This challenges the belief that high
cholesterol causes heart attacks and shakes the $40 billion dollar cholesterol
drug industry at its foundation.
Second, it’s come to light that
nearly all the negative studies on antidepressants – that’s more than half of
all studies on these drugs – were never published, giving a false sense of
effectiveness of antidepressants to treat depression..
Do not blame your doctor, instead,
blame deceptive scientific practices and industry-protective government policies.
Let’s talk a closer look at these findings and their implications.
When a drug company designs and
performs a study, it has to be registered with the FDA and all the results must
be submitted to the FDA. But it doesn’t work that way.
Instead, the pharmaceutical
companies only submit the data they want to get published to medical
journals. That means that any negative studies are hidden from the
scientific community and from the public.
And when drug studies are sponsored
by drug companies – as most are – they find positive outcomes at 4 times the
rate of independently funded studies. This is also true for nutrition studies
funded by the food industry that show the benefits of dairy or high-fructose
corn syrup.
The FDA does not release this
information.
Since drug companies fund most of
the research in the world, other therapies that work better – such as diet and
lifestyle or nutritional therapies – never get enough funding.
That was, it didn’t until 2004 when
all the major scientific journals banded together and refused to publish any
data from any drug study that did not list the results of all trials, either
positive or negative, in a central database.
Well, that sounds good – but listing
obscure, unpublished studies buried deep in a hard-to-navigate public database
run by the National Institutes of Health is hardly visible public disclosure.
The research studies are at least
listed, but try to find out the results. After a few hours searching
around on the website clinicaltrials.gov, I gave up.
Last year, Congress passed
legislation expanding how much detail must be listed, but at the end of the
day, who even looks at that? Most doctors don’t even have time to read
the medical journals they receive. They get tiny bits of information from drug
reps, whom come to their office with free lunch and a sound bite about their
drug.
They get slightly more information
from researchers who are funded by pharmaceutical companies and present their
findings at conferences sponsored by pharmaceutical companies, using
presentations prepared for them by pharmaceutical companies. Not exactly
independent, evidence-based medicine!
Now let’s get back to the news about
Zetia. Zetia is a new drug that lowers cholesterol by a different
mechanism than statin drugs like Lipitor and Zocor.
Why does this matter?
Well, doctors have been brainwashed
to think that cholesterol is the cause of heart attacks even though half of all
people who have heart attacks have normal cholesterol. And it seemed like
the statins, which lowered cholesterol, actually reduced heart attacks.
Seems logical. If you lower
cholesterol, you reduce heart attacks, right?
No!
The reason statins lower risk is not
because they lower cholesterol, but because they reduce inflammation. In
fact, studies by Dr. Paul Ridker of Harvard show that the risk of heart attacks
was only reduced if inflammation was lowered along with LDL cholesterol – but
not if LDL cholesterol was lowered alone.
So then along comes a drug that can
be combined with statins to lower cholesterol even more. Great idea? Not
really.
You see, the FDA approved Zetia
without any proof that it lowered heart attacks or reduced the progression of
heart disease. The drug was approved solely on the basis that it lowered
cholesterol.
Yet Zetia was given to 5 million
people – and made the drug companies $5 billion a year. That’s almost $14
million a day! And once Zetia was approved, its makers had no incentive
to prove that it actually did what it was thought to do – lower heart attacks.
They dragged their feet doing the
studies and then released the negative data (which they did only under pressure
from news agencies and Congress) after a long delay. Wouldn’t you drag your feet too if
you were making $14 million a day?
But the FDA had the negative data on
Zetia – and it didn’t speak up. The data that was withheld proved that
Zetia did not reduce heart attacks but actually increased fatty plaques in the
arteries despite lowering cholesterol.
Let that sink in for a moment.
That’s right: Lowering cholesterol
led to more heart disease!
That turns our whole medical model
upside down. It shows us that high cholesterol is not a disease and may or may
not be related to heart attacks.
Another recent study put another
nail in the coffin of the Cholesterol Myth.
A major new cholesterol drug,
torcetrapib, was pulled from the pipeline in December 2006 because despite
lowering LDL cholesterol and raising HDL cholesterol in 15,000 people, it
caused MORE heart attacks and strokes. This was to be the new cholesterol
wonder drug. Oops.
This points to a big research mess
that is flawed in three ways.
First, what gets studied depends on
who is funding it.
Since drug companies fund most of
the research in the world, other therapies that work better – such as diet and
lifestyle or nutritional therapies – never get enough funding.
Second, drug companies are aided by
the FDA, which suppresses, hides, and doesn’t publish negative studies on
drugs, only positive ones. This leads doctors to think they have all the
evidence when they don’t.
Third, doctors, patients, and the
media believe they have the whole truth, often until it is too late, like with
Zetia or Premarin or Vioxx. The evidence was there, but no one
looked or publicized it. This makes it very difficult for consumers to
get the best treatments for their health and the whole truth about drugs.
Here is advice on how to make sense of things.
- Follow the money. Look carefully at who funded the study. Be suspicious if it was funded by drug companies.
- Call or email your congressperson or Senator to demand better legislation providing an easy-to-navigate database of all drug trials, with consumer-friendly summaries of both published and unpublished data submitted to the FDA so you can look up the drug you are prescribed and have a balanced opinion.
- Don’t assume that drugs are the answer to your health problems. Heart disease is not a Lipitor deficiency but the result of your lifestyle interacting with your genes.
- Learn to ask the question “why?” – and search for the answers. Dealing with lifestyle and environmental factors (the basis of UltraWellness) almost always works better for chronic illnesses. Drugs are there as a backup only if needed.
So take a closer look at the
information you’ve been given about drugs. You might be surprised by what you
find.
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