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Bad Pharma: How Drug Companies Mislead Doctors and Harm Patients (Audiobook)
By Tantor Audio
4.5 out of 5 stars (170 Reviews)
List Price: $31.49
Our Price: $26.95
$4.54 (14%)
Availability:  Available for immediate delivery.
Publisher:  Tantor Audio
Published:  February 5, 2013
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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Should be read by all, March 24, 2016
By Doc Terry
Should be read by all doctors

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5.0 out of 5 stars.  Not only do the drug companies mislead doctors, hospitals ..., March 20, 2016
By Ted Ryersbach
Not only do the drug companies mislead doctors, hospitals and patients, but the FDA is complicit in this manipulation of facts.

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Rather scary stuff., February 24, 2016
By booksmyth
It was not exactly a horror novel, but there was plenty of frights. At one point I was taking notes and just started adding jokes so I wouldn't fall into depression. I hope this is not accurate, but I'm afraid it probably is.

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Sickeningly Good, February 22, 2016
By staypuftman
Bad Pharma hits the pharmaceutical industry hard from the opening paragraph and never quits. What's so impactful about a book like this is that Goldacre is making lots of scientific points, not just lobbing poorly constructed logic at these monied interests. Even 20 pages into the book, you're already disgusted at the practices being laid out.

The book has sections that rail into advertising, study design, government, ethics boards, the FDA, medical schools, journals and everyone in between. Goldacre makes highly specific points about where government regulation has been ineffective and how journals have enabled all these bad study practices for huge kickbacks from Big Pharma itself. He's not making any friends in the industry here - except readers with his honesty - just muckraking in the grand tradition. I too was reminded of Upton Sinclair in reading this work.

The core of this book's argument is that no one is allowed to know which drugs are best. Goldacre keeps harping on the fact very few comparison studies are done; far more common are new drug studies going against placebo pills everyone knows don't work. This helps inflate findings, making new drugs look more effective than older drugs because they were never compared against each other.

There are some downsides to this title, however. The first hundred or so pages in the book are in dire need of an editor - they really come off disorganized and caused my lovely lady (a librarian no less) to put the book down outright. Once Goldacre settles in, his voice comes through and the prose stabilizes. Stay with him: the arguments and evidence are worth wading through some badly worded passages. Overall, the book is worth the ride, definitely recommended.

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5.0 out of 5 stars.  Well worth your time, essential if you work in drug development, February 05, 2016
By Ruben Faelens
I work in drug development myself
The book really struck a nerve. It is well written and is tries to remain as light and accessible as possible. Well worth your time.

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Must read for anyone before committing to medical drug treatment, but could be written much better, January 07, 2016
By A Customer
First off, this is a must read for anyone interested in the shortcomings and pitfalls of drug marketing. Well documented, and a real eye opener. Overall makes you wonder if any drugs, especially still under patent, do what they claim. However he offers little insight about the quality of any particular drugs, a few special cases are mentioned, , it mostly is about how drugs are developed, tested and marketed. Not technical, though he does go over some of the basic testing methodology needed to understand his points.

The one thing I came away from with this is research any drug you've been prescribed before taking it blindly, even at your doctor's recommendation, assuming it's not an emergency situation, and be proactive with your doctor if you do not get the results expected, or you have side effects. There's almost always more than one treatment plan.

The author seems passionate and sincere about his subject. What I don't like about it is the writing style is preachy, a little sensational ("as we shall see in the next chapter" "horror story" etc. at least once every chapter) and redundant, the same info could have been presented much more concisely and convincingly in half the space or less. In fact if you just google and read various reviews of the book you'll get pretty much all the major points. Maybe he's trying to be careful to show the pharm companies in a bad light without getting sued- a real life concern, and/or really back up what he's saying. He notes citations for most if not all of his claims, though it's a little ironic he points to studies that show studies are not accurate, kind of like saying 82.6% of statistics shown as percentages are false.

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