Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThe Risks of Prescription Drugs explains in clear, concise, and unflinching language the consequences of ignoring the discrepancy between the drug industry's private interests and the public service we hope and naively expect from them. This book provides consumers with tools for self-defense and concerned citizens with a road map for rebalancing American medicine. -- John Abramson, Harvard Medical School, author of Overdosed America: The Broken Promise of American Medicine This volume introduces important debates on pharmaceutical promotion and marketing, needed drug evaluation and regulation, professional conflicts of interest, and increased medicalization of behavior. It explores important trends and policy questions that all engaged citizens should consider. -- David Mechanic, Rutgers Institute for Health, Health Care Policy, and Aging Research, and author of The Truth About Health Care: Why Reform Is Not Working in America This is a sensible, readable and constructive book that could in various respects open the reader's eyes, and then lead him, with his eyes wide open, along the road to a healthier world. -- M.N.G. Dukes International Journal of Risk and Safety in Medicine This well-referenced title will be of particular interest to prescribers, but I recommend it to all healthcare professionals. -- Roger Evans Nursing Standard
Table of Contents1. Bearing the Risks of Prescription Drugs, by Donald W. Light 2. The Food and Drug Administration: Inadequate Protection from Serious Risks, by Donald W. Light 3. The Commercialization of Medical Decisions: Physicians and Patients at Risk, by Howard Brody 4. Pharmaceuticals and the Medicalization of Social Life, by Allan V. Horwitz 5. Medicalization and Risk Scares: The Case of Menopause and HRT, by Cheryl Stults and Peter Conrad Epilogue. Toward Safer Prescribing and Better Drugs, by Donald W. Light List of Contributors