The Therapeutic Nightmare - Corporate Power and Drug Safety - the Battle over the World's Most Controversial Tranquilliser (Hardcover)

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This volume demonstrates the complex interplay between industrial, professional and government interest in drug regulation and the secrecy that surrounds it. The authors assess the safety procedures devised by governments in the UK and the US to control medicines and protect consumers. Focusing on the control of tranquilizers, and the drug Halcion in particular, Abraham and Sheppard explain why such drugs are so valuable to pharmaceutical companies. In particular the authors examine how and why controls to protect patients against Halcion failed. Developed in the 1970s, Halcion was phenomenally successful. In the 1980s it was licensed in 35 countries, became the world's tranquilizer of choice by 1986, and by 1991 had sales worth US$237 million. In the 1990s accusations that patients were suffering powerful and adverse side-effects from Halcion brought together the manufacturers, the medical profession and even the government, in a high-profile legal battle to maintain the drug's credibility. Abraham and Sheppard examine this case in the context of the enormous commercial power and influence of drug companies, widespread patient vulnerability and the over-pessimism of British and Am

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Product Description

This volume demonstrates the complex interplay between industrial, professional and government interest in drug regulation and the secrecy that surrounds it. The authors assess the safety procedures devised by governments in the UK and the US to control medicines and protect consumers. Focusing on the control of tranquilizers, and the drug Halcion in particular, Abraham and Sheppard explain why such drugs are so valuable to pharmaceutical companies. In particular the authors examine how and why controls to protect patients against Halcion failed. Developed in the 1970s, Halcion was phenomenally successful. In the 1980s it was licensed in 35 countries, became the world's tranquilizer of choice by 1986, and by 1991 had sales worth US$237 million. In the 1990s accusations that patients were suffering powerful and adverse side-effects from Halcion brought together the manufacturers, the medical profession and even the government, in a high-profile legal battle to maintain the drug's credibility. Abraham and Sheppard examine this case in the context of the enormous commercial power and influence of drug companies, widespread patient vulnerability and the over-pessimism of British and Am

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Pluto Press

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

December 1998

Availability

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Authors

,

Dimensions

215 x 135mm (L x W)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

240

ISBN-13

978-0-7453-1372-6

Barcode

9780745313726

Categories

LSN

0-7453-1372-8



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