"It's not like him to do something like this," said his mother, at home in Alabama. His friends agreed, saying they were baffled how a churchgoing family man and selfless volunteer could go so wrong on a short business trip to Southern California.
But the only reason they don't understand is they don't realize that anti-depressants cause insanity. His mother let the cat out of the bag. She said he has been taking "diet pills and other medication for depression".
So another one snaps. Like all crime suspects, he now has three names instead of two. Dennis Elliot Shellhouse, 45, attempted an abduction in Lake Sherwood, California, then led authorities on a 75-mile chase. When he was cornered he threatened suicide. Finally, after being shot, teargassed and bitten by a police dog he was take into custody.
Too bad, Mr. Shellhouse. It's too bad nobody warned you about that "medication for depression". Nothing depresses people quicker than that stuff. How do we know nobody warned you? Because here you went crazy (after taking the drugs that are supposed to handle mental problems, not before) and even your poor mother doesn't know it was the drugs. "He may have gone crazy," she correctly assumes, but she wonders why.
We know.
Thursday, June 09, 2005
Tuesday, June 07, 2005
Fraud Probes of Big Pharma
The current investigation of drug company fraud could net a billion dollars in fines, according to state and federal prosecutors.
The charges are that the drug companies cheat state and federal health-care programs by inflating prices, while giving secret discounts to non-governmental buyers. They also charge that they are selling more expensive drugs that aren't approved for the purposes they are being used for, instead of selling the right drug at a much lower price.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Peter Keisler, who oversees the Justice Department's civil-fraud unit, said that "the most frequent defendant in fraud cases today is in health care" and that the industry now accounts for "the lion's share of fraud, both in number of cases and dollar amounts -- and those numbers are going up."
The Journal goes on to give a shocking example of this behavior: [Drug maker] Abbott faces pricing-fraud claims brought two years ago by California's attorney general, based on alleged overcharges to government-paid drug programs for vancomycin, a powerful antibiotic. Abbott is alleged to have reported to the state Medi-Cal program an average wholesale price of $55 a dose while charging pharmacies only $6.29 a dose. The alleged scheme, apparently intended to help the drug gain market share, cheated taxpayers by falsely setting a high reimbursement rate, the suit said. Under Medicaid rules, companies are generally required to give the government the best price that they give to any purchaser of a drug.
But what do you expect from an industry that cares more about profits than lives?
The charges are that the drug companies cheat state and federal health-care programs by inflating prices, while giving secret discounts to non-governmental buyers. They also charge that they are selling more expensive drugs that aren't approved for the purposes they are being used for, instead of selling the right drug at a much lower price.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Peter Keisler, who oversees the Justice Department's civil-fraud unit, said that "the most frequent defendant in fraud cases today is in health care" and that the industry now accounts for "the lion's share of fraud, both in number of cases and dollar amounts -- and those numbers are going up."
The Journal goes on to give a shocking example of this behavior: [Drug maker] Abbott faces pricing-fraud claims brought two years ago by California's attorney general, based on alleged overcharges to government-paid drug programs for vancomycin, a powerful antibiotic. Abbott is alleged to have reported to the state Medi-Cal program an average wholesale price of $55 a dose while charging pharmacies only $6.29 a dose. The alleged scheme, apparently intended to help the drug gain market share, cheated taxpayers by falsely setting a high reimbursement rate, the suit said. Under Medicaid rules, companies are generally required to give the government the best price that they give to any purchaser of a drug.
But what do you expect from an industry that cares more about profits than lives?
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