One evening in the late summer of 2015, Lisa Schwartz was watching television at her Vermont home when an ad for a sleeping pill called Belsomra appeared on the screen. Schwartz, a longtime professor at Dartmouth Medical College, usually muted commercials, but she watched this one closely: a 90-second spot featuring a young woman and two slightly cute, slightly creepy fuzzy animals in the shape of the words “sleep” and “wake.”
Schwartz had a reason to be curious about this particular ad. Two years earlier, she had been a member of the advisory panel that reviewed Belsomra for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration—and the process had not gone well for the manufacturer, Merck. The company saw its new drug as a major innovation, emphasizing that the medication acted on an entirely different mechanism within the brain than the previous generation of insomnia medicines like Ambien and Lunesta. During the drug’s development, Merck had suggested that it could treat insomnia more effectively and produce fewer side effects than existing medications. In 2012, one Merck scientist described the science underlying Belsomra as a “sea change.”
But when Schwartz and her colleagues scrutinized data from the company’s own large-scale clinical trials, what they found was a lot less impressive. People taking Belsomra fell asleep, on average, only six minutes sooner than people taking a placebo and stayed asleep for a mere 16 minutes longer. Some test subjects experienced worrying side effects, like next-day drowsiness and temporary paralysis upon waking. For a number of people, these effects were so severe that the researchers halted their driving tests, fearing someone would get into an accident. Because of these safety concerns, the FDA ended up approving the drug at a lower starting dosage than the company had requested—a dosage so low that a Merck scientist admitted it was “ineffective.”
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7 comments:
I can see this and the doctors are precipitous in this fraud, too. I went to the doctor for a physical and she listed problems that I told her already knew I had and asked why she was recording them. She said, "It's for insurance purposes..." Now, I am not a doctor nor in the medical field; however, it was odd given the fact I told her what I had and she put it on the bill as if she'd 'discovered' this situation. Dishonest.
10:15 It gets even more fun when you get on Medicare. They actually read down a script of questions that they are required to ask. No more, no less. Obama care will make everything more fun in less time. Why would anyone want to be a doctor today? Obscene medical school bills and then the government basically owns you. My doctor has so many patients it would be hard to count them all but is still accepting more. The money is now in volume.
1039, love your post and it's so very true. I like that part the money is in volume. Its now turned into Walmart Medicine. And you're right. It has.
Hillary is a cautionary tale. Every word out of her mouth is a spin doctored lie. Another White Noise person who can be ignored. She's liable to be in an orange jumpsuit with plastic ties or shackles before too long. If not, there is no justice in this country and we might as well hang it up!
There is some law, I think, I should google it first, but it is that a president can not be prosecuted until they are out of office.
She knows the indictment won't happen until after she is elected.
No worries for her.
The public will forget, and she will have built up an immunity.
How many presidents have been prosecuted for crimes? Did Nixon go to jail?
It's already a politically dead issue and she knows it, she knows how the system works.
Hey hildabeast take a look at my soon to be born grandson's sonogram pic and tell me that's not a living child that you and your kind have no trouble murdering.
My guess is she recorded it in her notes so that if something were to happen she couldn't be sued for malpractice by not reporting existing conditions you have. Therefore the "insurance" may just be for her own good.
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