Health Care’s Legal Drug Deals on
Legitimate Medicines
By: Dr. Ada M. Fisher
I repeatedly cringe when I hear politicians talk about the
corruption in the way medicines are patented, made, dispensed and regulated as
if they aren’t part of the problem. The regulations in place regarding
medicines are keeping or delaying the entry of some onto the market because
they have not met the required safety trials and had enough case studies to
identify potentially hazardous side effects. The manner in which medicines are
manufactured is not controlling shortages of essentials including epinephrine
used to treat shock, potential vaccines, cancer chemotherapeutic agents and
hospital drugs mainly including sterile injectibles. The movie “Contagion”
spells out clearly what problems we face if we don’t plan better.
Was the Human Papilloma Vaccine (HPV)’s production hastened
since another manufacturer was threatening to encroach on the money to be made
from this vaccine as Congresswoman Bachman hints? Should only girls have been
targeted since boys carry the virus? Were enough study cases done before the
vaccine was brought to market to insure its safety?
In my opinion, one of the worst federal legislative moves
was to give vaccine producers an exemption from liability if they made them
believing that this would prompt more to compete for this business and decrease
the costs. So who will bear the financial burden created by those who now
develop side effects from these vaccines such as that had with Guillian Barre
Syndrome (a form of paralysis) caused by a previous Swine Flu vaccine? Is the
government now liable for these costs, particularly when companies may not have
shown due diligence in completing adequate safety research?
As our baby boomers continue to age into the over 55
generation, our problems with medication availability for those diseases
associated with aging such as cancer will increase. Doxcil (AIDS, Ovarian
Cancer, Breast Cancer), Taxol (breast cancer, ovarian cancer), Cisplastin
(ovarian, bladder, lung cancers) and 5 FU (invented by one of my professors
Charles Heidelberger who played a critical role in my medical school training)
are a few of the 213 drugs all in short supply on any given day depending on
your location and facility’s connection to the manufacturing pipeline. Even Propofol,
a drug used for anesthesia which Michael Jackson had no problem acquiring, is
in short supply in many hospitals. This means that doctors are being asked to
play G-d and decisions on care are increasingly rationed by criteria that are
neither universally acknowledged nor sanctioned by some medical body.
The drug pipeline slows when drugs are made into generics.
Some companies may lose money that could have been shuffled to research and
pocketed profits or drug company consolidations have forced out some research
drugs which have high need value but low profitability reality. Designer drugs
specifically targeted to diseases are are costly and more difficult to make
which insurance doesn’t always want to cover; meaning if the government won’t
pay the bill or a patient is not in a research protocol he is not likely to get
it. Third party payers are increasingly dictating who can get what without
regard to life saving potential, curative benefit or necessary research study
value. In other words if you don’t have the money up front, you aren’t always
likely to get what you need.
Is anyone asking for a full disclosure of the ties of our
politicians to drug and pharmaceutical concerns and lobbyists?
Who is going to pay the bill to extend our lives even when
we abuse our bodies?
Who should be the judge of what care is available?
Who should have priority for treatment?
Are we really ready for the big time of Nationalized Health
Care—more rationing of care?
Dr. Ada M. Fisher is a PHYSICIAN,
licensed teacher for secondary education in mathematics and science, previously
elected school board member, POET, WRiter, Columnist and NC Republican National
COmmitteewoman. Contact her at P. O. Box 777; Salisbury, NC 28145; DrFisher@DrAdaMFisher.COM
PS I was struck by how many of the drugs in shortage affect
women particularly those used to treat breast cancer!