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Critics question ethics of stepped-up pharma data mining

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CVS Caremark
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Eli Lilly & Co
Data Mining

With the crackdown on gifts to physicians, and a slowing in direct-to-consumer advertising, the pharmaceutical industry is turning to data mining of physician prescribing habits to fuel the marketing machine. And, as with so many other pharma marketing techniques, controversy is brewing.

"Critics see data mining as an invasion of privacy, for both patients and providers," writes Naomi Freundlich on the Health Beat blog. Many physicians seem unaware that their profiles are being sold to pharma companies--and that the American Medical Association earns $44 million a year from selling access to its Physician Masterfile. And aggregated patient data that drug companies buy from the likes of IMS Health and Verispan might not be stripped of individual identifiers, Freundlich writes.

Physician bloggers are helping to shed light on this issue. Massachusetts psychiatrist Dr. Daniel Carlat, proprietor of The Carlat Blog, reports receiving a "confidential letter" from PBM and pharmacy chain CVS Caremark that he says was a poorly cloaked advertisement for Eli Lilly's blockbuster drug Cymbalta. "How much is Eli Lilly paying CVS Caremark to perpetrate this deception? Which executive at CVS became so overcome with greed that he or she approached Eli Lilly about this joint venture? Has CVS Caremark informed its patients that it is selling their pharmacy information to a drug company?" Carlat asked.

For more about pharma data mining:
- check out this Health Beat blog post
- read Carlat's blog post about CVS/Caremark's ties to Lilly

Related Articles:
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Putting data breach genie back in bottle? Good luck
Pharmas protest NH drug info law

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If information being provided/sold includes patient health information that is identifiable, then this should be a violation of HIPAA, right? Seems like drug/prescription information with PHI being "sold" without explicit authorization from the patient is a clear violation of HIPAA (IMO).

Eli Lilly sells a drug {ZYPREXA} that can cause diabetes and then turn a profit on the drugs that treat the condition that they may have caused in the first place!

Eli Lilly has made $38 billion on Zyprexa and it was way oversold and caused diabetes and in some cases sudden death.
Eli Lilly has received a huge criminal fine over their Zyprexa cash cow,add it all up comes to $4.6 billion, in Zyprexa settlements,fines,litigation.

Addictive Zyprexa was pushed by Lilly Drug Reps.
They called it the "Five at Five" (5 mg at 5 pm to keep nursing home patients subdued and sleepy) and "VIVA ZYPREXA" (Zyprexa for everybody) campaigns to off label market Eli Lilly Zyprexa as a fix for unapproved usage.

Eli Lilly is 'reaping the whirlwind' for aggressive marketing of Zyprexa that has caused suffering and deaths.
There must be millions out there harmed by this drug.

Daniel Haszard

[Did you know that Lilly made nearly $3 billion last year on diabetic meds, Actos,Humulin and Byetta?

Yes! They sell a drug that can cause diabetes and then turn a profit on the drugs that treat the condition that they may have caused in the first place!]

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