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The New York Times reports that Federal prosecutors have issued a subpoena
seeking information and all documents including transcripts of their testimony
produced in litigation relating to three prominent Harvard researchers...
--Drs. Joseph
Biederman, Thomas Spencer and Timothy E. Wilens. These
Harvard psychiatrists have been the focus of a Congressional investigation into
conflicts of interest in medicine.
Dr. Biederman's deposition, including his slide presentations have generated
much criticism: indeed they raise serious doubts about the integrity of his
research. The subpoena was issued by the
Federal District Court
for the Massachusetts District; it was sought by the United
States attorney in Massachusetts,
Michael J. Sullivan, and by the Health
and Human Services Department inspector general, Daniel R. Levinson.
Below, an OpEd article by Dr. Lawrence Diller, a pediatrician
who has not bought into the drug-centered paradigm of care for troubled
children, describes how Dr. Biederman and his team generated fear within the
club of child psychiatric researchers:
"Big Pharma money is most powerful
when promoting Biederman's research and point of view over competing models.
Drug companies copy and mail his important papers on psychiatric drugs to every
American physician working with children. A member of the Biederman team is at
every important meeting on children's psychiatric issues and medical education.
Their presence, and often the conference, itself, are supported by drug
industry dollars."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Only when 2-year-olds started
taking three psychiatric drugs simultaneously under a Biederman protocol for
bipolar disorder did the emperor's clothes become so invisible as to begin the
naming of names."
San
Francisco Chronicle
Powerful
proponent of psychiatric drugs for children primed for a fall
Lawrence Diller
Friday, March 27, 2009
Dr. Joseph Biederman, chief of the Massachusetts General Pediatric
Psychopharmacology Clinic, is already under investigation by Harvard University
and the National Institutes of Health for failing to report income received
from drug companies. Now, in newly released court documents, Biederman appears
to be promising drugmaker Johnson & Johnson in advance that his studies on
the antipsychotic drug risperidone will prove the drug to be effective when
used on preschool age children.
Biederman's status at Harvard and his research have arguably made him, until
recently, America's
most powerful doctor in child psychiatry. Biederman has strongly pushed
treating children's mental illnesses with powerful antipsychotic medicines.
Diagnoses like ADHD and pediatric bipolar disorder, along with psychiatric drug
use in American children, have soared in the last 15 years. No other country
medicates children as frequently.
Reports from court actions, along with an ongoing investigation of conflict
of interest charges led by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, threaten to topple
Biederman from his heretofore untouchable Olympian heights. Biederman has cried
foul.
He says the drug company dollars (declared and undeclared) have not
influenced him or his research. He had agreed temporarily to sever most of his
financial ties with the drug industry pending the outcome of the ongoing
inquiry.
He claims his science and publications are pure, supported by a peer-review
system that is supposed to verify accuracy and authenticity. Finally, he
challenges as office gossip reports of his legendary anger and intolerance of
those who disagree or don't support his proposals.
In a contentious exchange with a deposing lawyer, he also indicated he ranks
just below God in the Harvard faculty hierarchy or firmament.
Biederman's situation is emblematic of a very compromised medical research
and academic community that has become dependent on industry money for its
existence.
Virtually all researchers say they are not influenced by drug company money.
Doctors rarely out-and-out lie about their research, but spin influences how a
study is set up, its statistical analysis and interpretation. Research on drug
studies repeatedly shows that drug trial results are tilted toward a positive
description of the drug's effects when the research is funded by a drug company
rather than the government or an independent agency.
Big Pharma money is most powerful when promoting Biederman's research and
point of view over competing models. Drug companies copy and mail his important
papers on psychiatric drugs to every American physician working with children.
A member of the Biederman team is at every important meeting on children's
psychiatric issues and medical education. Their presence, and often the
conference, itself, are supported by drug industry dollars.
Only when children die or side effects are severe - as in the FDA hearings
on children and antidepressants in 2004, and in the recent publicity over
obesity and diabetes caused by the bipolar drugs - do opposing viewpoints get
the country's eyes and ears.
Biederman's conflict of interest problems have exposed his strong pro-drug
views to the public for scrutiny. Until now, fear of the Biederman team has
operated quietly on the small club of child psychiatric researchers. Only when
2-year-olds started taking three psychiatric drugs simultaneously under a
Biederman protocol for bipolar disorder did the emperor's clothes become so
invisible as to begin the naming of names.
Business ethics, whose main concerns are profit and legal operation, collide
with medical ethics, which are directed to the patient's benefit, when academic
research is dependent on industry money. We must formulate and enforce a new
set of rules to restore doctors' credibility.
The federal government has recently promised funds to compare existing drugs
with newer, more expensive competitors. This is a welcome shift of emphasis
away from previous drug-company-sponsored studies that only had to prove that
their drug, short term, was better than a placebo. In the meantime, Biederman's
personal travails tragically inform us about a crisis in academic medicine that
must be resolved.
Lawrence Diller, M.D., practices behavioral-developmental
pediatrics in Walnut Creek
and is on the clinical faculty of UCSF.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/27/EDAF16N963.DTL
This article appeared on page A-13 of the San Francisco Chronicle.
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