In the largest criminal fine ever levied against any drug company in the world, a unit
of U.S.-based Pfizer, Inc. was sentenced to pay $1.3 billion in criminal fines and revenue
forfeiture. It's all part of a $2.3 billion settlement announced by the Justice
Department. The case centers around Pfizer's criminal "off-label marketing" of
four drugs, including the painkiller Bextra. After whistleblowers filed lawsuits in three
states, the U.S. Justice Department took an interest in the case and prosecuted Pfizer for criminal acts.
In the settlement, Pfizer admitted to a felony crime and agreed to pay $2.3 billion in
fines and other fees. The investigation of Pfizer reportedly turned up evidence that
Pfizer engaged in kickback payments to doctors for nine drugs, including Viagra and Lipitor.
Part of the reason the penalty against Pfizer was so large is because the company was
considered a "repeat offender" in promoting drugs for unapproved uses (which is
a violation of federal law).
So-called "off-label" marketing of drugs is rampant in the pharmaceutical industry.
Although the FDA, drug companies
and many conventional doctors claim the drug industry is guided by a "gold
standard" of scientific scrutiny, the truth is that pharmaceuticals are routinely
marketed and prescribed for health conditions for which they have never even been studied...
much less actually approved by the FDA.
The fact that this continues today makes a mockery of any "scientific
credibility" the pharmaceutical industry claims to possess.
Drug companies take advantage of this gaping hole in regulatory oversight by getting their
drugs approved by the FDA for one health condition, then heavily promoting it for numerous
unrelated conditions. A drug approved for high blood pressure, for example, could be
openly marketed for diabetes or Alzheimer's disease even though there is no
evidence whatsoever showing the drug to be either safe or effective for such conditions.
The same is true with the intended demographics of pharmaceuticals: Drug companies often
get their drugs approved for adults, then they market those drugs to children even though
the drugs have never been tested with children.
The result is a pharmaceutical industry that appears to be highly regulated, but
isn't. Virtually any drug can be pushed for any disease for almost any reason -- all with
virtually no oversight by the FDA. In fact, in this Pfizer case, even with the Justice
Department filing criminal charges against Pfizer, the FDA has stood by and done
absolutely nothing to prevent such actions from being repeated in the future by Pfizer or
another drug company. (Natural News, Mike
Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor) http://www.naturalnews.com/027276_Pfizer_drugs_the_FDA.html
Sources for this story include:
Bloomberg
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?...
Reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/rbss...
Eastern