Originally posted by: Marlin1975
Originally posted by: drinkmorejava
Pharms have absolutely nothing to do with "fucking doctors over." If anything, the good ones get paid extremely well for their consulting and professional advice to companies. You might feel you're getting fucked over--another argument completely--but doctors benefit greatly, most of the time legitimately and ethically, from their relationship with drug producers.
Drug makers give doctors gifts, trips to "seminars", and so forth. The expect them to push THEIR drugs and/or their name brand and not the cheaper same generic.
<-- Worked at a couple drug makers.
My father is an exec at one, and I have grown up with many sales reps and managers as family friends. In addition, I have met with some of the premier doctors and researchers in the US for dinner, as well as socializing in their own homes.
If you actually worked in sales or some department that specifically dealt with this, you would realize that the dynamics and ethical concerns are much more complicated than this.
Doctors, doctor's associations, etc all run as businesses and the boundaries between patient responsibility, doctor ethics, and corporate guidance are always blurred.
However, with your specific argument, it goes mostly like this.
Doctors getting the most private compensation are by and far the geniuses of our time providing their skill and personal experience to drug companies so they can better conduct and their own studies and improve their products
All other doctors (most) receive relatively inexpensive gifts in order to convince them to hear about a company's drug instead of another?s, the doctor has very little invested commercial interest in any one of these drugs that they hear about on a daily basis. They are not receiving checks for thousands of dollars every month for choosing specific drugs. This is not to be confused with corporate reimbursement programs where a doctor will receive compensation for drugs that are not fully covered by insurance, thus allowing them to provide them at lower cost.
Doctors are paid for consulting, sitting on boards, managing trials, running lectures. All of which are extremely important in the design, production, and distribution of drugs and are requiring of highly skilled doctors .They are not paid for meeting quotas on selling certain drugs.
As for patient responsibility, doctors are there to help provide for your healthcare, not be your baby sitter. It is your responsibility to ask if there is a generic if one is not offered, or if there are comparable drugs, just as it is your responsibility to seek a second opinion if you are not comfortable with a treatment or diagnosis.
Of course, there are doctors and sales reps who are not acting ethically, and it's impossible to defend an entire industry, however, the large majority are looking out for patient care.
In many cases, recent regulations put in place to increase transparency are leading to disturbing results--it might even be hilarious if it didn't deal with patient care
Take, for example, limits on doctors who have received any corporate compensation (almost all) only being able to sit on one FDA drug advisory panel a year. Guess what's happening, all of the great doctors have reached their limit and the panels approving drugs are now run by local GPs with little experience in the drug's area and generally little interest in the topic. If you?re knowledgeable on a topic and have a chance to listen in on one, they?re all public, some of the questions being asked these days are pretty laughable.
In another case, Minnesota, doctors can only receive compensation up to $50 from drug companies. The logical conclusion, that is showing itself to be true, is that the best doctors are no longer giving their time to companies seeking their help. Along the same lines, all gifts must be cataloged and made available to the public. Not necessarily a bad idea until you learn that a) the drug companies are being forced to pay for the system...I'll let you draw you own conclusions to what that means for prices b) uneducated patients looking up doctors' compensation will view those receiving the most with disgust, when, in reality, they are the doctors you would want to trust you life with.
So basically, that?s my view. The easiest way to protect yourself, though, is to ask you?re doctors questions about your care.