2015 News

PharmedOut In the News - 2015

December 2015

November 2015

October 2015

  • Former PharmedOut interns Antonie Meixel, MD and Elena Yanchar, MD’s paper in the Journal of Medical Ethics “How continuing medical education was used to sell hypoactive sexual desire disorder” was picked up in international news including Wired, Segre, El Diario, La Opinión, Noticia al Dia, Efe Salud, Globo, and Caracol Radio.
  • On October 14th, Dr. Fugh-Berman's quote from last year's Slate article on "female Viagra" drug flibanserin/Addyi was picked up in the Alternet article "Addyi: Not the Women's Sex Pill You've Been Waiting For" by Sally Chew. She said, “women are more complicated, it’s not just increasing blood flow" that raises their libido.
  • On October 18th, Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in MedPage Today on bias in commercially funded continuing medical education (CME) for doctors. In "CME: Controversial Curricula Draw Fire" by John Fauber, Dr. Fugh-Berman said that "industry funded CME always sells the disease ...[and] in some cases, those diseases are invented."

September 2015

  • September 25: Dr. Fugh-Berman published "Flibanserin and Regulatory Failure" on BMJ's Journal of Medical Ethics blog, about how the FDA failed women with its August approval of Addyi, also called "female Viagra". She warns about the dangers of the drug itself, as well as the implication that women should take a drug for her sex life if her spouse is unhappy. "Note that even if the putative patient isn't distressed, she is still eligible for being drugged if her partner is creating interpersonal difficulty. Here's a thought – why not sedate [the partner] instead?" Addyi is expected to go on the market this month.

August 2015

June 2015

  • "Female Viagra" flibanserin took the spotlight again this month when an FDA advisory panel recommended approval of the drug. Dr. Fugh-Berman was widely interviewed and quoted about the problems and misinformation surrounding flibanserin in the Associated Press, ABC News, NBC News, CBS News (twice), New York Times, Diane Rehm Show, Today Show, Chicago Sun-Times, MinnPost, Vox, Jezebel, Bustle, and more. Her takeaway message and warning to the FDA is echoed in many of the articles, that "to approve this drug will set the worst kind of precedent — that companies that spend enough money can force the FDA to approve useless or dangerous drugs.”

May 2015

  • May 28: Science 2.0 covered the flibanserin issue with an article. Dr. Fugh-Berman is quoted as saying, "It's not sexist for the FDA not to approve a drug that it doesn’t believe is effective or safe. It’s a classic marketing technique to first create a problem, and then sell the solution, and that's what’s going on here."
  • May 19: The American Pharmacists Association wrote about the FDA hearing on homeopathic products and Dr. Fugh-Berman's testimony: “Homeopathic products, even if they are not truly homeopathic, get a pass" from FDA, she said, and named some examples.
  • May 13: Dr. Fugh-Berman was interviewed for CBS Chicago about flibanserin, also known as the "female Viagra." Although the drug's manufacturer, Sprout Pharmaceuticals, cites sexism as the reason the FDA has not approved flibanserin, Dr. Fugh-Berman cites the science: “15 percent of the women in flibanserin trials dropped out because of side effects of sedation and nausea and fatigue," and "it hasn’t been tested long-term.”
  • May 12: PharmedOut discovered that D.C.'s AccessRx law, which requires pharmaceutical companies to report payments made in the District, was in jeopardy of being repealed during a D.C. Council Budget Markup meeting scheduled for May 14th. What followed were two days of intense work and outreach.

April 2015

  • April 30: She also spoke about the issue as a guest on Forum with Michael Krasny on KQED Public Radio.
  • April 30: Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in an Times Free Press story on how Medicare spends more money on branded drugs compared to generics, and how changing this practice might save money in the program. She commented on certain branded drugs prescribed to seniors, including the antipsychotic Abilify, that have been shown to be dangerous for that age group.

March 2015

  • March 19: Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in the NPR story "Why Is Insulin So Expensive?" New treatments are often sold at a higher price, but they "aren't always better," Dr. Fugh-Berman said. "In government-funded studies that have compared older drugs to newer drugs, often older drugs come out looking better or equal to newer drugs."
  • March 15: Dr. Fugh-Berman was interviewed about PharmedOut's work for C-SPAN's show "Q&A". Watch the video here.
  • March 11: Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in the Santa Cruz Sentinel on California's new policy aimed at curbing excessive antipsychotics prescribing for foster kids in order to control behavior. Prescribers now have to take extra steps to demonstrate the need for these patients to use antipsychotics, and as a result, thousands of requests have been rejected due to lack of medical necessity. “It really shows the power of prior authorization,” Dr. Fugh-Berman said, "Just indicating that ‘we’re watching you’ makes a difference.”

February 2015

  • February 23: Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman’s interview about PharmedOut CSPAN’s Q&A with Brian Lamb, February 23, 2015
  • February 18: The Boston Herald quoted Dr. Fugh-Berman's contrast of flibanserin with Viagra: "It’s not a very effective drug. It has to be taken every day and we don’t know the long-term effects. ... Viagra and similar drugs actually work for erectile dysfunction. Erectile dysfunction is not libido. It’s really different."
  • February 17: Also this month, Katie Couric did a story on flibanserin for Yahoo. Dr. Fugh-Berman was interviewed, saying "Low desire is not a medical condition, and in fact the term hypoactive sexual desire disorder has been eliminated from the latest ‘Diagnostic [and] Statistical Manual. Low libido can be caused by a number of different things, including diabetes, depression, other medical conditions, medications — particularly antidepressants and relationship problems."
  • February 16: "Female Viagra" is back in the news! Dr. Fugh-Berman was interviewed for NPR's All Things Considered about the unapproved drug that claims to increase female sexual desire, flibanserin. Listen to the show or read the article.
  • February 12: Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in the Seattle Times on the exorbitantly high price of new hepatitis C drugs: "This drug tends to be talked about, like, ‘we can cure hepatitis C,’” she said, "but up to a quarter of people [treated] can relapse.”

January 2015

  • January 23: Dr. Fugh-Berman was quoted in Paul Thacker's article "Database may uncover conflicts of interest for TV doctors" in Columbia Journalism Review. Pharma payment data has revealed gifts made to Dr. Jonathan LaPook of the CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley, Dr. Jennifer Ashton of Good Morning America, Dr. Keith Ablow of Fox News, and others. "Viewers deserve to know whether an expert is being paid by a company, even if the link between the company and what they are saying isn’t clear," Dr. Fugh-Berman said.