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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 14715

Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.

 

Publication type: news

Carlat D.
Biederman, Goodwin, Greed, Arrogance
The Carlat Psychiatry Blog 2008 Dec 1
http://carlatpsychiatry.blogspot.com/2008/12/biederman-goodwin-greed-arrogance.html


Full text:

Thanksgiving week was a busy one for revelations of greed among two of our top academics in psychiatry: Dr. Joseph Biederman and Dr. Frederick Goodwin.

Apparently, in 2002 Dr. Biederman solicited hundreds of thousands of dollars for a “Johnson & Johnson Center for the study of pediatric psychopathology.” One of the publically stated goals of the center was to “move forward the commercial goals of J.& J.” I’m shocked, just shocked. Actually, this is not really as horrendous as it seems. Researchers like Biederman are always on the hunt for research funding. They prefer NIH funding, but that is increasingly scarce, so they hold out their hats to industry.

When you take research money from industry you are always making a deal with the devil. Your intentions are to produce serious research, but you know that your funders are not in the business of charity. They want to “move forward the commercial goals” of their companies, and you know that going in. Ideally, this represents a “confluence of interests,” using buzz-phrase popular among advocates of academic-industry collaboration.

In theory, there’s nothing inherently wrong with such collaborations, as long as the nature of the relationship is disclosed, and as long as the principal investigator takes great care to play by all the rules, both legal and ethical. Unfortunately, the New York Times article and a follow-up posting in Pharmalot imply that Biederman did not play by the rules. For example, Harvard and MGH rules stipulated that researchers doing company-funded trials are not allowed to get paid more than $10,000 in consulting or speaking income from the funding company. Biederman made much more than this and did not disclose it.

Basic ethical guidelines dictate that if a company doesn’t pay you a requested grant, you should not respond by pressuring colleagues not to use that company’s drug. But e-mails unearthed in court documents imply that Biederman did just that:

Mr. Bruins wrote that Dr. Biederman was furious after Johnson & Johnson rejected a request that Dr. Biederman had made for a $280,000 research grant. “I have never seen someone so angry,” Mr. Bruins wrote. “Since that time, our business became non-existant (sic) within his area of control.” Mr. Bruins concluded that unless Dr. Biederman received a check soon, “I am truly afraid of the consequences.”

Dr. Biederman comes across as petty and retaliatory. Is he also a brilliant, productive researcher who cares about children? Of course. But there is no excuse for this level of arrogance and greed.

Next up: Frederick Goodwin. Another brilliant, smart researcher who cares deeply about people with mental illness. He is former chief of NIMH, and co-writer of the major textbook on bipolar disorder.

He is also a passionate defender of the free enterprise system and an enemy of those who criticize the pharmaceutical industry. For example, he is on the board of directors of the rabidly pro-pharma organization, Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI), and has teamed up with its Vice President Robert Goldberg (not one to be tangled with—see this earlier slimefest on my blog) on articles such as this diatribe against Marcia Angell and Arnold Relman which is posted on the website of the conservative Manhattan Institute.

Okay, but so what? He’s a conservative, I’m a liberal, this tent is big enough for both of us.

My main beef with Goodwin stems from his participation in a May 2007 symposium at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. The symposium was organized by my friend and colleague Nassir Ghaemi, and was entitled “Uneasy Partners: The Pharmaceutical Industry and the Psychiatric Profession.” There were five speakers. Dr. Ghaemi reviewed the landscape of the controversies, I did a talk showing that 46/46 industry-sponsored symposia at the the 2006 meeting promoted a drug made by the sponsoring companies, David Healey discussed disease mongering, and both Howard Kushner and David Osser talked about the need for evidence-based medicine. Finally, Dr. Goodwin came to the podium as the “discussant,” presumably to comment on our presentations.

But instead of discussing our talks, Goodwin decided to use Marcia Angell’s book, The Truth about Drug Companies, as target practice. Angell was not on the program, and her book was only mentioned in passing by one of the presenters. But Goodwin seemed to despise her and her book. He went through her main points, rebutting them systematically, arguing that pharmaceutical companies are wonderful, that medications are very helpful, that there is nothing wrong with making money, and that drug companies are not as profitable as everybody thinks. Then, he went on a bizarre tangent about how one of the major networks is filled with scientologists.

I must say, I was amazed, dumbfounded, and profoundly embarrased for my profession. I had never met Goodwin before, but, like other psychiatrists, I revered him as a legend in the field. That all came crashing down as I watched him make a series of strident statements that were largely irrelevant to any of the points made during the symposium. He entertained the audience by being charismatic and at one point got a very cheap laugh by ridiculing the non-industry sponsored symposia at the meeting.

So when I heard about Goodwin’s lack of disclosure regarding The Infinite Mind, I was not surprised—only saddened. He, and Biederman, and Nemeroff, and many other less well known hired guns are bringing the profession of psychiatry to its knees.

 

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What these howls of outrage and hurt amount to is that the medical profession is distressed to find its high opinion of itself not shared by writers of [prescription] drug advertising. It would be a great step forward if doctors stopped bemoaning this attack on their professional maturity and began recognizing how thoroughly justified it is.
- Pierre R. Garai (advertising executive) 1963