Autoren-Bilder
8 Werke 22 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

Werke von John Virapen

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1943-02-04
Geschlecht
male

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Yes, this book will make people pay more attention to corruption in pharmacy/medicine field and find more information before taking next drug, BUT it is written unprofessionally and sometimes in very annoying way.
I, as a person, who studies and works in this field, felt offended. Although author mentions that it does not apply to all people in this field but it felt that way. And it seemed that the general reason for writing this book was to get revenge to company who fired him.

There were mentioned few very interesting facts and few questionable facts, both I will research further (and maybe I will even update my review).

Overall:
I would say it's worth reading this or any other book which touches this subject.
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Liene_G | 2 weitere Rezensionen | May 10, 2015 |
Terrifying book, one that makes man wonder when is enough money truly enough. Some of the elements laid out by the author are truly terrifying - way everything is done to achieve the goal of hoarding money on expense of patients worldwide.

I guess there will be critics of this books saying that things are exaggerated etc - but believe me, if only two percent of all the things author wrote in this book is true then it is extremely dangerous situation out there.

 
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Zare | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 4, 2012 |
This book, written by a pharmaceutical industry insider, exposes many of the secrets that led to drugs with major side effects, like Prozac, to be approved and widely prescribed.

Born in Guyana (northeast South America) to Indian parents, Virapen found himself, in the 1960s, in Europe, hungry and homeless. He went to Sweden, to live with a woman he met in his travels. It was there that he got a job as a sales representative for Eli Lilly and Co. He visited local physicians, bringing them small gifts and other things and generally encouraging them to prescribe Eli Lilly drugs. He rose quickly through the ranks, eventually running the entire operation in Sweden. Virapen was very involved in getting drugs like Prozac approved, with a corresponding rise in the gifts given to doctors. They now ranged from expensive "scientific conferences" in exotic places to brothel visits, to outright bribery. This book is an attempt to atone for what he has done in the drug industry.

Virapen spends much of the book talking about Prozac. The drug industry has no problems with creating "diseases" like ADD (Attention Deficit Disorder), to get otherwise healthy people to think that they are sick, and need a pill (an expensive pill, of course). If a clinical trial is not going well; for instance, if Drug X works just as well as Prozac, a drug company can stop the trial, and switch Drug X with another drug against which Prozac works really well. There is no obligation to tell the Food and Drug Administration, or any of its foreign counterparts, about this. Clinical trials on psychotropic drugs, like Prozac, last a couple of months, at the most. There has been no attempt to study the effects of such drugs over years.

When it came time to get Prozac approved in Sweden, the information supplied by Eli Lilly was to be evaluated by an independent doctor, who would send his recommendation to the national authorities. Virapen’s job was to figure out who that doctor would be and find out what it would take to get that doctor to give a favorable opinion. Unfortunately, that doctor was very willing to be bribed, even helping Eli Lilly to write the report the "right" way. Virapen mentions case after case of normal, well-adjusted people who, after taking Prozac for a very short time, kill other people or themselves.

On the positive side, this is a very interesting book that shows the lengths to which drug companies will go to create new markets for their drugs. On the negative side, if there are to be future printings of this book, it really needs a trip, or another trip, to a copyeditor or proofreader.
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plappen | 2 weitere Rezensionen | May 10, 2010 |

Statistikseite

Werke
8
Mitglieder
22
Beliebtheit
#553,378
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
10
Sprachen
4