Difference between revisions of "Money"

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(Created page with " == Big Pharma funding of the anti-tobacco industry == Is Big Pharma funding smoking bans and other extreme anti-smoking campaigns? The money trail speaks for itself and t...")
 
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<blockquote>ASH has a small shareholding in GSK and I will be attending with others to question you and the Chairman on this situation.  (...) More than anything, I would like to resume normal and constructive relations with GlaxoSmithKline. (...)</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>ASH has a small shareholding in GSK and I will be attending with others to question you and the Chairman on this situation.  (...) More than anything, I would like to resume normal and constructive relations with GlaxoSmithKline. (...)</blockquote>
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Some examples of financial conflicts of interest between the anti-tobacco industry and Big Pharma:
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*:[http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2009/01/new-study-shows-that-nicotine.html New Study Shows that Nicotine Replacement Therapy is Ineffective for Gradual Smoking Cessation, But Concludes the Opposite ]
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*:[http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2008/09/chantix-lawsuits-piling-up-dangers-from.html Chantix Lawsuits Piling Up; Dangers from Severe Financial Conflicts of Interests of Tobacco Control Researchers and Institutions Revealed ]
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*:[http://cagecanada.blogspot.ca/2009/09/how-long-will-this-billion-dollar.html HOW LONG WILL THIS BILLION DOLLAR CHARADE CONTINUE? - John R. Polito ]
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*:[http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2010/10/guidelines-for-determining-eligibility.html FDA Guidelines for Determining Eligibility for Advisory Committees are Ridiculous and Ensure that Conflicts of Interest Will Continue to Plague Agency ]
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*:[http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2007/02/wall-street-journal-article-highlights.html Wall Street Journal Article Highlights Financial Conflicts of Interest of Chair of Federal Smoking Cessation Guidelines Panel ]
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*:[http://cagecanada.blogspot.ca/2011/05/ontario-lung-association-charity.html ONTARIO LUNG ASSOCIATION - CHARITY ORGANIZATION OR BIG PHARMA FRONT GROUP? ]

Revision as of 12:31, 17 June 2012

Big Pharma funding of the anti-tobacco industry

Is Big Pharma funding smoking bans and other extreme anti-smoking campaigns? The money trail speaks for itself and this is only a very partial list :

WHO LAUNCHES PARTNERSHIP WITH THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY TO HELP SMOKERS QUIT

Excerpt:

The strength of the Partnership Project lies in the fact that it has brought together three major pharmaceutical companies, Glaxo Wellcome, Novartis Consumer Health and Pharmacia & Upjohn, all manufacturers of treatment products for tobacco dependence, to support a common goal that will have a significant impact on public health. The Project provides a model which can provide a basis for future partnerships with the private sector in other important health areas.


Smoking bans: good public policy? Or simply a great pharmaceutical marketing plan?

Excerpt:

(...) upon some preliminary investigation it is clear that these NGO's are backed by $446,000,000.00 from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) which has direct ties to the Johnson & Johnson Company, and J & J is the manufacturer of Nicoderm & Nicoderm CQ via its wholly owned subsidiary ALZA. Recently, the buyout of Pfizer Consumer Health(see page 4 or 61) means J & J profits even more from the passage of smoking bans thru additional sales of Nicotrol, Nicorette, Commit, (see pgs 32,33,56) and any other over the counter smoking cessation drugs once manufactured by Pfizer Consumer Health division. Global Health Partnerships

Tobacco control grantees of a $47 000 000 grant from Pifzer to combat cancer and tobacco use included :

Alliance for Control of Tobacco Use (Brazil), Hellenic Thoracic Society (Greece), SAMBA (Sweden), and Umberto Veronesi Foundation (Italy)

• Developing Tobacco Control Capacity: Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) International/Framework Convention Alliance (FCA) (Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Mexico, Colombia, Chile and Costa Rica; Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE and Lebanon), and Mexican Council on Tobacco • Protecting Nonsmokers from Secondhand Smoke: American Cancer Society (Algeria and Tunisia) and Chinese Association on Tobacco Control

• Helping Smokers Quit: Comprehensive Cancer Center at Freiburg University Medical Center (Germany), Health Promotional Foundation (Poland), Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario (Canada), Hungarian Academy of Teaching Family Physicians, Japan Medical-Dental Association for Tobacco Control, Partnership for Prevention (U.S.), Philippine Business for Social Progress, QUIT UK/European Network of Quitlines (Central and Eastern Europe)


The following link leads to a letter from ASH, UK to GSK about how disgusted they are that Derek Bonham, Chairman of Imperial Tobacco sits on the board of GSK.

Links between ASH, UK and Glaxo Smith Klein (GSK)

Excerpts:

ASH has worked closely with both Glaxo and SmithKline Beecham staff and always welcomed the active collaboration. (...) We have worked with GSK under the auspices of the WHO-Europe Partnership Project on tobacco dependence and at various one-off opportunities. ASH was instrumental in securing greater government commitment to smoking cessation products in the NHS National Plan and we have helped with PR for both Zyban and Niquitin CQ. Our involvement with GSK staff has, I believe, been mutually beneficial, and we have gained from exposure to the company's arguments and insights (...)

This experience is replicated in many organisations, many countries and in business areas beyond the smoking cessation category. (...)

There are clear conflicts of interest - every time someone successfully uses a GSK smoking cessation product the market for tobacco declines. Every time a smoker switches to 'lights' as an alternative to quitting the market for smoking cessation is diminished.

Most of the measures that drive people to want to quit smoking and use GSK products are exactly those that are opposed by tobacco companies. Such measures include:

Restrictions on smoking in public places and workplaces
Marketing restrictions on tobacco companies
Higher tobacco taxation
Greater NHS involvement in smoking cessation
Regulatory measures to be applied to tobacco products

(...)

ASH has a small shareholding in GSK and I will be attending with others to question you and the Chairman on this situation. (...) More than anything, I would like to resume normal and constructive relations with GlaxoSmithKline. (...)

Some examples of financial conflicts of interest between the anti-tobacco industry and Big Pharma: