We have posted frequently about questionable financial links between commercial firms that produce health care goods and services (for example, pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device companies) and not-for-profit organizations and government agencies that provide or regulate health care (for example, hospitals, academic medical centers, and government agencies). The
latest example of such links, and one with global implications, comes from one of my now favorite outlets for investigative journalism, the British Medical Journal. [Day M. Who's funding WHO? Brit Med J 2007; 334: 338-340).
Serious questions have been raised about whether the World Health Organization is using patient groups as a conduit for receiving proscribed donations from the pharmaceutical industry. Email correspondence passed to the BMJ seems to show that in June 2006 Benedetto Saraceno, the director of WHO's department of mental health and substance abuse, suggested that a patient organisation accept $10 000 (£5000; {euro}7000) from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) on WHO's behalf. The sum was then to be passed on to WHO—ostensibly with the intention of obscuring the origins of the donation. GSK withdrew its offer of funding when it learnt that acceptance was conditional on obscuring its origin. However, the email exchange indicates that other sums of money originating from drug companies may have already been channelled to WHO through patient groups.
When asked about this correspondence, Dr Saraceno told the BMJ that his email to the patient organisation was 'clumsily worded' and that he had 'never intended to solicit donations from the pharmaceutical industry through' the patient organisation. In the email dated 16 June 2006, Dr Saraceno thanks Mary Baker of the European Parkinson's Disease Association (EPDA), for raising the $10 000 'requested by the WHO.' The money was to have funded a report on neurological diseases, including Parkinson's disease, for which GSK produces treatments.
Dr Saraceno then seems to advise Mary Baker on how to get round the WHO's rules forbidding drug industry funding. 'Unfortunately,' he says, 'WHO cannot receive funds from pharmaceutical industry. Our legal Office will reject the donation. WHO can only receive funds from Government agencies, NGOs, foundations and scientific institutions or professional organisations. Therefore, I suggest that this money should be given to EPDA and eventually EPDA can send the funds to WHO which will give an invoice (and acknowledge contribution) to EPDA, but not to GSK.'
According to paragraph 13 of the WHO's guidelines on interactions with commercial enterprises, which deals with cash donations, WHO should avoid indirect collaboration (particularly if arranged by a third party acting as an intermediary between WHO and a commercial enterprise).' Paragraphs 15 and 16 of the guidelines state that funds may not be sought or accepted from commercial enterprises that have a direct commercial interest in the outcome of the project and that caution should be exercised even when the business has an indirect interest. And paragraph 27 says that for reasons of transparency, contributions from commercial enterprises must be acknowledged.
Richard Nicholson, editor of the Bulletin of Medical Ethics, said: 'It would be very bad indeed if the WHO were trying to obtain money surreptitiously from drugs companies. Unfortunately it's also under-funded, and sadly there's always going to be the temptation of senior officials who ought to know better than to accept such money. But they should remember that there's always a price attached to such funding.'
He adds: 'This is in line with what we have done so far with other contributions to the report which all are coming from other professional organisations,' — suggesting that less than transparent transactions were the norm for this fundraising operation.
It turns out this has not been the first time that WHO was accused of being caught up in commercial entanglements.
Ralph Edwards, the director of the WHO's drug monitoring centre in Uppsala, Sweden, warns .... 'These days it's so hard to find anyone completely free of the pharmaceutical industry. A couple of years ago we wanted to publish a safety report on Lapdap [chlorproguanil-dapsone], the combination malaria treatment. The WHO's tropical disease research group had developed the treatment jointly with Glaxo, but Glaxo weren't happy with what we wanted to publish.'
'This was a bad situation and it was very, very difficult. We raised the issue with WHO because we thought that there had not been enough safety studies done. We managed to get the report published eventually, after a lot of lobbying and pressure—but it was delayed for more than a year,' said Dr Edwards.
'It's an example of how tortuous it is working with pharmaceutical industry money.'
This story is yet another reminder of how globally pervasive are financial ties amongst various health care organizations that naively physicians and the public may think are supposed to work at arms' length. However, if we want health care that puts the needs of patients first, we have to align the incentives with the mission, and eliminate opportunities for well-heeled vested interests to pay for increased influence.
One has to wonder how much pressure the NIH will be under in a review of Avastin vs. Lacentus, both produced by Genetech. We find this interesting article in the Feb. 22, 2007 Wall Street Journal titled Genentech's Big Drug For Eyes Faces a Rival.
ReplyDeleteLacentus cost nearly $2,000 per shot while Avastin cost around $40. Lacentus is approved for the treatment of vision problems while Avastin is a cancer treatment, although both work in a similar manner, cutting off blood flow. The NIH is now going to engage in a head to head competition that could result in the loss of $1B in sales to Genentech.
What is important here is that "Industry doesn't want an equivalency trial where there could be decisions on coverage. They are terrified," says William L. Rich, director of health policy at the American Academy of Ophthalmology, which backs the NIH trial.
Some say the trial is the first step toward making the U.S. resemble Britain. There the government studies the cost of drugs versus their effectiveness and refuses to pay for those that fail to make the grade. "It's a backdoor to what the U.K. does," says Anthony Adamis, chief scientific officer for a unit of OSI Pharmaceuticals Inc. that makes Macugen, a similar eye drug.
Unlike other industries that fragment and self-destruct due to competition, automobiles and airlines come to mind, the drug companies compete amongst themselves, but put forth a united front against regulation or other forces that could reduce profitability. This will be a test of pharm's influence, and it's ability to control the process.
Pharma has one message: Drugs are good.
Steve Lucas
It would be so easy to prevent some diseases like diabetes1, and autism, schizophrenia, and MS if the world knew that there was a connection between advancing paternal age and the risk of de novo genetic disease in offspring. WHO is increasingly alligned with the pharmaceutical industry and not at all interested in dispensing simple information that would positively impact world public health. http://ebdblog.com/paternalage/
ReplyDeleteWhat I wish is that the World Health Organization would take very seriously the growing evidence linking RadioFrequency Radiation from Cell Phones, Cell Towers and Wireless Internet and also Electromagnetic Fields from household wiring/grounding errors and proximity to high energy powerlines with human health problems.
ReplyDeleteThe growing Electrically Hypersensitive population is just one indication that people are beginning to drown by all this harmful energy.
The Scientific Studies indicating harm, build every day.
http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/science/studies.asp
http://www.wirelessstress.com/