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Category Archives: Federal Government

Drugging In The News Again

The U.S. Department of Justice held a major news conference today when it announced that AstraZeneca has agreed to pay more than a half-billion dollars to settle federal claims that it illegally marketed Seroquel to be used to drug kids and elders with dementia.

This means that U.S. DOJ has found that all three of the most commonly used antipsychotics used to drug elders with dementia — Seroquel, Risperdal and Zyprexa — are being illegally marketed for this purpose. Eli Lilly agreed to pay $1.4 billion last year to settle such charges involving Zyprexa. The U.S. DOJ filed a lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson earlier this year for illegally peddling Risperdal to nursing home doctors.

Here is the DOJ press release:

Attorney General Eric Holder spoke at the press conference.

Here is his statement:

Here is a New York Times article. I’m sure there will be more news tomorrow.

The New York Times

April 26, 2010

For $520 Million, AstraZeneca Will Settle Case Over Marketing of a Drug

By DUFF WILSON

AstraZeneca has completed a deal to pay $520 million to settle federal investigations into marketing practices for its blockbuster schizophrenia drug, Seroquel. The Justice Department plans a news conference on Wednesday to disclose details of the case, according to two people close to the negotiations who were not authorized to discuss it publicly.
AstraZeneca becomes the fourth pharmaceutical giant in the last three years to admit to federal charges of illegal marketing of antipsychotic drugs, a lucrative category of medications that have quickly risen to the top of United States sales charts. Aggressive sales and promotional practices have helped expand the use of powerful new antipsychotic drugs for children and the elderly.
AstraZeneca will sign a corporate integrity agreement with the federal government over its marketing of Seroquel for unapproved uses, but will not face criminal charges, the people close to the negotiations said.

The company, based in London, has been accused of misleading doctors and patients by playing up favorable research and not adequately disclosing studies that show Seroquel increases the risk of diabetes.

AstraZeneca still faces more than 25,000 civil lawsuits filed on behalf of patients contending that the company did not disclose the drug’s risks.
The deal would make formal an agreement in principle the company reached last October with the United States attorney in Philadelphia. At that time, AstraZeneca said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had set aside $520 million in respect to the investigation.
The company was facing two federal investigations and two whistle-blower lawsuits involving Seroquel sales and marketing practices. One of the investigations related to physicians who had participated in clinical trials. The other inquiry involved sales staff. Details are expected to be announced Wednesday.
As a result of aggressive marketing, Seroquel has been increasingly used for children and elderly people for indications not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The drugs have caused rapid weight gain in children, and side effects including deaths have prompted warnings against giving the drugs to elderly patients for dementia.
Although doctors are permitted to prescribe any approved drug for off-label uses, it is illegal for drug makers to promote medications for any purpose not specifically approved by the F.D.A.
Tony Jewell, a company spokesman, declined to comment on Monday. Patricia Hartman, a spokeswoman for Michael L. Levy, the United States attorney in Philadelphia, said she would neither confirm nor deny the report. “We don’t have anything public on AstraZeneca,” Ms. Hartman said.
AstraZeneca, which reported $4.9 billion in Seroquel sales in 2009, plans to report its first-quarter financial results on Thursday.
The company will join a series of American pharmaceutical companies that have admitted to illegal marketing after federal investigations and whistle-blower filings and have signed agreements with the government to monitor and avoid such activity in the future.
In the largest such case, Pfizer paid $2.3 billion last September, including $1.3 billion in the biggest criminal fine of any type in United States history, for off-label marketing of the painkiller Bextra and other drugs. Bextra was withdrawn from the market in 2005. The Pfizer fine included $301 million for off-label marketing of its antipsychotic drug Geodon.
Eli Lilly paid $1.4 billion in January 2009 to settle investigations into illegal marketing of its antipsychotic drug Zyprexa. Lilly’s settlement included a $515 million criminal fine, which until the Pfizer case was the largest such fine ever imposed on a corporation.
In 2007, Bristol-Myers Squibb and a subsidiary paid $515 million to settle federal and state investigations into marketing of its antipsychotic drug Abilify.
The newer generation of antipsychotics has surpassed cholesterol-lowering drugs to become the nation’s top-selling category of medications, accounting for $14.6 billion of the nation’s $300 billion in drug spending last year, according to the research firm IMS Health.
Seroquel, a pill usually taken once or twice a day that sells for more than $4 each, was the fifth-best-selling drug in the United States last year, IMS said. As with other antipsychotics, much of that spending is by the federal government, through the Medicaid and Medicare programs.
AstraZeneca, with American headquarters in Wilmington, Del., has previously denied wrongdoing in the Seroquel investigations. It has paid $656 million to defend itself in court against more than 25,000 civil lawsuits, the company said in an S.E.C. filing in January. Those cases are only recently beginning to reach trial.
The company has argued that people who were found to have diabetes after taking Seroquel already had diabetes or had existing conditions that made them at high risk of the disease.
According to company e-mail unsealed in civil lawsuits, AstraZeneca “buried” – a manager’s term – a 1997 study that showed Seroquel users gained 11 pounds a year, while publicizing a study that claimed users lost weight. Company e-mail messages also refer to doing a “great smoke-and-mirrors job” on unfavorable studies.

Gardiner Harris contributed reporting.


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Michael Connors
Advocate
California Advocates for Nursing Home Reform (CANHR)
Tel:  415/974-5171
Fax: 626/796-6256
Email: michael@canhr.org

Visit our web site at http://www.canhr.org

To help support our efforts, please visit:
http://www.canhr.org/help.html

Posted in Articles, Drugs, Federal Government, Legislation, Newspapers/Books, Nursing Home.


Nursing Homes, Federal ratings give just part of the story

Care varies widely, so diligence needed, experts say
By Lee Bowman and Thomas Hargrove
Scripps Howard News Service


Photo by Juan Carlo, StarA statistical analysis of the federal government’s first ratings of nearly 16,000 nursing homes reveals an uneven level of quality across the nation and shows how complicated it is to find a good nursing home. The Scripps Howard analysis of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ Nursing Home Compare system shows that:

• Institutions run by for-profit corporations, which account for about two-thirds of all nursing facilities, generally get lower scores than those run by nonprofits.

• Homes with more nursing staff members per patient, which also tend to be run by nonprofits, generally do better in the ratings.

• Homes with more than 100 beds tend to get lower scores in all categories, including health of residents and levels of nursing care.

• Ratings are lowest in Southern states, particularly for nursing care and registered-nurse staffing, and highest for homes in the Northeast.

• Slightly more than 20 percent of nursing homes nationwide have been regularly given the lowest ratings, and 12 percent to 13 percent have received the top rating.

• While more than 500,000 Americans die in nursing homes each year, more than 2 million return home after a nursing home stay of less than three months.

• The bad news for families trying to find a good nursing home for a loved one is that behind the ratings — a five-star scale — are many complicated issues that make it difficult to assess which institutions offer the best care.

“Everyone wants to have an easy way to look up homes,” said Larry Minnix, chief executive of the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, which represents more than 5,000 mostly nonprofit nursing homes and other long-term-care providers. “The concept is a good idea, but they’re not really measuring the most meaningful things, like patient- and staff-satisfaction surveys, nor do the stars take into account the patient caseload.” Read More Here – Printer Friendly

I have reprinted this story from the Star showing how important it is to compare nursing homes and find the best match for yourself or a loved one.  The Long Term Care Services of Ventura County offer comprehensive information about long term care facilities through its Pre-placement Counseling Program.  – Sylvia Taylor-Stein

Posted in Articles, Budget Proposals, Federal Government, Letters of Support, Medicare and Medicaid, Nursing Home, Ventura County.