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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 9092

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

Boseley S.
Vaccination campaign funded by drug firm
The Guardian 2007 Mar 26
http://society.guardian.co.uk/health/story/0,,2042916,00.html


Full text:

A campaign fronted by doctors and celebrities to persuade European governments, including the UK, to vaccinate all young girls against cervical cancer is being entirely funded by the drug company that markets the vaccine.

Sanofi Pasteur MSD, which markets Gardasil in Europe on behalf of the drug giant Merck, spent millions on what was billed as the “first global summit against cervical cancer”, held in Paris on Thursday with doctors and patient organisations from across Europe.

The revelation comes as public health experts express disquiet about the promotion of a vaccine that is only effective in young girls – possibly at the expense of screening programmes that are essential to protect adults. They also worry that the long-term effects of the vaccine are not known. The vaccine protects against the most common strains of the sexually-transmitted human papilloma virus (HPV) which causes cervical cancer.

Diane Harper, a professor at Dartmouth medical school in New Hampshire, who led two vaccine trials, said the vaccine would not protect against all strains of the virus, and that nobody knows whether vaccinated 10-year-old girls would still be protected in 10 years’ time, when they are sexually active and at risk. Mass vaccination programmes, she said, would be “a great big public health experiment”.

The Paris summit was believed to be the brainchild of Professor David Khayat, a Paris-based specialist in cancer treatment – not vaccines – who has in the past declared consultancy and lecture fees from Merck. The organisers were named as the Club Européen de la Santé, an institution that promotes public health, but its president, Dominique Dupont, told the Guardian she agreed to participate only on condition that Sanofi Pasteur paid.

Celebrities, doctors and journalists were shipped in from across Europe and the United States by PR agencies working for Sanofi. The summit, which resembled a political rally, called for country-wide vaccination programmes.

 

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Far too large a section of the treatment of disease is to-day controlled by the big manufacturing pharmacists, who have enslaved us in a plausible pseudo-science...
The blind faith which some men have in medicines illustrates too often the greatest of all human capacities - the capacity for self deception...
Some one will say, Is this all your science has to tell us? Is this the outcome of decades of good clinical work, of patient study of the disease, of anxious trial in such good faith of so many drugs? Give us back the childlike trust of the fathers in antimony and in the lancet rather than this cold nihilism. Not at all! Let us accept the truth, however unpleasant it may be, and with the death rate staring us in the face, let us not be deceived with vain fancies...
we need a stern, iconoclastic spirit which leads, not to nihilism, but to an active skepticism - not the passive skepticism, born of despair, but the active skepticism born of a knowledge that recognizes its limitations and knows full well that only in this attitude of mind can true progress be made.
- William Osler 1909