Lex Fridman Podcast - #263 – John Abramson: Big Pharma
Episode Date: February 11, 2022John Abramson is faculty at Harvard Medical School and a family physician for over two decades. He's the author of the new book Sickening about how big pharma broke American healthcare and how we can ...fix it. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Noom: https://trynoom.com/lex - Notion: https://notion.com/startups to get up to $1000 off team plan - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - Onnit: https://lexfridman.com/onnit to get up to 10% off EPISODE LINKS: John's Website: https://hcp.hms.harvard.edu/people/john-david-abramson Sickening (book): https://amzn.to/3gsVHef Overdosed America (book): https://amzn.to/3LmrWKn PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (14:29) - Biggest problem with big pharma (23:30) - Advertising (43:22) - Corruption (59:38) - Pfizer vaccine data (1:08:30) - Vaccine profits (1:19:25) - Censorship (1:40:11) - FDA (1:48:45) - NIH (1:57:42) - Live longer (2:01:13) - Medications (2:09:37) - Doctors (2:13:44) - Advice for young people (2:14:40) - Big pharma's influence (2:19:24) - Mortality (2:21:15) - Meaning of life
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with John Abramsen, faculty at Harvard Medical School, a family
physician for over two decades, and author of the new book Sickening about how big farmer
broke American health care and how we can fix it.
This conversation with John Abramsen is a critical exploration of the pharmaceutical industry.
I wanted to talk to John in order to provide a countervailing
perspective to the one expressed in my podcast episode with the CEO of Pfizer Albert Borla.
And here, please allow me to say a few additional words about this episode with the Pfizer CEO.
And in general, about why I do these conversations and how I approach them.
If this is not interesting to you, please skip ahead.
What do I hope to do with this podcast?
I want to understand human nature, the best and the worst of it.
I want to understand how power, money, and fame change people.
I want to understand why atrocities are committed by crowds that believe they are doing good.
All this, ultimately, because I want to understand how we can build a better world together,
to find hope for the future, and to rediscover each time through the exploration of ideas,
just how beautiful this life is.
This is human civilization in all of its full complexity, the forces of
good and evil, of war and peace, of hate and love. I don't think I can do this with a heart
in mind that is not open, fragile, and willing to empathize with all human beings, even those in
the darkest corners of our world. To attack is easy. To understand is hard. And I choose
the hard path. I have learned over the past few months that this path involves me getting
more and more attacked from all sides. I will get attacked when I host people like Jay but
Acharya or Francis Collins, Jamie Merzel or Vincent Ruckan yellow.
When I stand for my friend Joe Rogan, when I host tech leaders like Mark Zuckerberg,
Gila Mosque and others, when I eventually talk to Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama,
and other figures that have turned the tides of history. I have, and I will get called stupid, naive,
weak, and I will take these words with respect, humility and love, and I will get better. I
will listen, think, learn, and improve. One thing I can promise is there is no amount
of money or fame that can buy my opinion or make me
go against my principles.
There's no amount of pressure that can break my integrity.
There's nothing in this world I need that I don't already have.
Life itself is the fundamental gift.
Everything else is just a bonus.
That is freedom. That is freedom.
That is happiness.
If I die today, I will die a happy man.
Now, a few comments about my approach and lessons learned
from the Albert Burla conversation.
The goal was to reveal as much as I could
about the human being before me,
and to give him the opportunity to contemplate
in long form the complexities of his role, including the tension between making money and helping
people, the corruption that so often permeates human institutions, the crafting of narratives
through advertisements, and so on. I only had one hour, so this wasn't the time to address these issues deeply, but to show
if Albert struggled with them in the privacy of his own mind.
And if he would, let down the veil of political speak for time to let me connect with a man
who decades ago chose to become a veterinarian, who wanted to help lessen the amount of suffering
in the world.
I had no pressure placed on me.
There were no rules.
The questions I was asking were all mine and not seen by Pfizer folks.
I had no care whether I ever talked to another CEO again.
None of this was part of the calculation in my limited brain computer.
I didn't want to grill him.
The way politicians
grill CEOs in Congress, I thought that this approach is easy, self-serving, dehumanizing,
and it reveals nothing. I wanted to reveal the genuine intellectual struggle vision
and motivation of a human being, and if that fails, I trusted the listener to draw their
own conclusion and insights from the
result, whether it's the words spoken, or the words left unspoken, or simply the silence.
And that's just it.
I fundamentally trust the intelligence of the listener.
You.
In fact, if I criticize the person too hard or celebrate the person too much, I feel
I fail to give the listener a picture of the human being that is uncontaminated by my
opinion or the opinion of the crowd.
I trust that you have the fortitude and the courage to use your own mind, to empathize
and to think.
Two practical lessons I took away.
First I will more strongly push for longer conversations of 3, 4 or more hours versus
just 1 hour.
60 minutes is too short for the guests to relax and to think slowly and deeply.
And for me to ask many follow-up questions or follow interesting tangents.
Ultimately, I think it's in the interest of everyone including the guests
that we talk in true long form for many hours. Second, these conversations with leaders can be
aided by further conversations with people who wrote books about those leaders or their industries.
Those that can steal man each perspective and attempt to give an objective analysis.
I think of Teddy Roosevelt's speech
about the man in the arena. I want to talk to both the men and women in the arena, and
the critics and the supporters in the stands. For the former, Aline Toward wanting to understand
one human being's struggle with the ideas. For the latter, Aline Toward's understanding
the ideas themselves. That's why I lean towards understanding the ideas themselves.
That's why I wanted to have this conversation with John Abramson, who is an outspoken critic of
the pharmaceutical industry. I hope it helps add context and depth to the conversation I had with
the Pfizer CEO. In the end, I may do worse than I could have or should have.
Always, I will listen to the criticisms without ego, and I promise I will work hard to improve.
But let me say finally that cynicism is easy.
Optimism, true optimism, is hard.
It is the belief that we can and we will build a better world
and that we can only do it together. This is the fight worth fighting. So here we go.
Once more into the Breach Dear Friends. I love you all.
And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description.
It's the best way to support this podcast.
First is Noom, a habit establishing system that helps you get fit.
Second is Notion, a note-taking and team collaboration tool.
Third is Inside Tracker, a service I use to track my biological data.
Fourth is Athletic Greens, the all-in-one nutrition drink I drink twice a day, and 5th is on it,
a nutrition supplement and fitness company. So the choice is making habits, taking notes,
or being healthy. Choose wise and my friends. And now, unto the full adreets. As always,
no ads in the middle. I try to make this interesting, but if you skipped them, please still check out the sponsors I enjoy their stuff.
Maybe you will too.
This episode is brought to you by NUME, which is a behavior and habit changing system that
helps you get fit and lose weight.
Got a try NUME.com slash select to take a short survey about yourself and it will generate a custom program for you.
This includes helping you find why you want to do it.
Small goals along the way and guide you to 10 minutes a day for better habits.
The why is where it all begins, dear friends.
And I'm obviously a huge fan of forming habits.
Whether it's using an app or a sheet of paper or the power of your mind.
I do believe tools help, so noon was a great tool you should definitely try out.
Try to also not have an existential crisis when you take their survey because it really
forces you to reflect on your life.
I think that's important.
That's step number zero for changing things
is self-reflection, self-evaluation, honesty, radical honesty with yourself. Go to trinum.com
slash Lex and fill out the quick survey. That's all you have to do. Go to trinum.com slash
Lex. This show is also brought to you by aion, a note-taking and team collaboration tool.
It combines note-taking, document-sharing, wikis, project management, and much more.
To one space that's simple, powerful, and beautifully designed.
People love Notion.
I have been talking to a bunch of people about notetaking.
I am obsessed with note-taking.
I use a bunch of people about note-taking. I am obsessed with note-taking. I use a bunch of tools.
And this is the cool new hip thing that people always recommend to me is notions.
I've been using a notion for quite a bit of my note-taking.
If you want to be rigorous, notions were set for startups,
which is what notion really wants to highlight here.
It's the team part.
Notion can provide a full-on operating system for running every aspect of your company
as it grows quickly.
Notion is running a special offer just for startups, get up to $1,000 off Notion's team plan
by going to notion.com slash startups.
To give you a sense that's almost a year of free notion for a team of 10, go to notion.com slash startups. Give you a sense that's almost a year of free notion for a team of 10.
Go to notion.com slash startups.
That's notion.com slash startups.
This show is also brought to you by Inside Tracker.
A service I use to track biological data,
they have a bunch of plans,
mostly which include a blood test that gives you
a lot of information that you can make decisions based on.
They have machine learning algorithms that analyze your blood data, DNA data,
and fitness tracker data to provide you with a clear picture of what's going on inside you
and to offer you science-backed recommendations for positive diet
and lifestyle changes.
Now, I sound like Andrew Huberman, the brilliant Andrew Huberman,
with the protocols, with the advice that is science-backed and data-driven.
Anyway, I love the idea of inside tracker. You should be making lifestyle decisions and changes
and so on based on actual data from your body, not population data. Your body is a unique
miracle in the full history and span of the universe. How does that John Mayor
song go? Your body's a wonderful hand. That's actually pretty good. So that
guy is an amazing guitarist. Anyway, this has nothing to do with anything. For
limited time, you can get 25% off the entire inside tracker store if you go to
inside tracker.com slash Lex. That's inside tracker.com slash Lex. This show is brought to you by Athletic Greens and it's newly renamed AG1 Drink which is
an all-in-one daily drink to support better health and peak performance.
It replaced the multivitamin for me and went far beyond that with 75 vitamins and minerals.
It's the first thing I drink every day, I drink it twice a day. It forms the nutritional basis for the madness
That is my physical and mental pursuits. I do all kinds of diets either carnivore or keto or I
Do crazy stuff. Sometimes, you know
There's some whiskey involved. Sometimes I even get crazy. I party a little bit with carrots
There's an apple in there somewhere. Sometimes a granny smith apple. I know how to party in case you didn't know.
But given all that, even if I get wild with the apples and the carrots, I can trust the fact that my nutrition needs are all met
because I'm taking athletic greens. So day, drinking athletic greens. Anyway, they'll give you one month's supply of fish oil when you sign up to
athletageans.com slashlex. That's athletageans.com slashlex.
This episode is also brought to you by Onnet Nutrition Supplement and Fit This Company.
They make Alpha Brain, which is a Neutropic that helps support memory,
mental speed, and focus.
I don't take it every day. I take it on special occasions as a super boost rocket launcher
for the mind. When I know there's a long, deep work session for a particularly difficult
problem that I'm working on, it helps me be confident that I can persevere through the rigor of sort of mental side roads that lead nowhere.
That's the hardest part about thinking, about stuff, about design.
It's not solving problems. It's when you hit a dead end. That's painful.
That's where maintaining focus, keeping an optimism is hard.
And that's the most draining on the mind.
And so you want to make sure
that you have all the energy you need.
So for me, alpha brain helps.
Go to LexFreedman.
That's my name.
.com slash on it,
to get up to 10% off alpha brain.
That's LexFreedman.com slash on it. This is the Lex
Friedman podcast and here is my conversation with John Abramson.
Your faculty at Harvard Medical School, your family physician for over two decades, rated one of the best family physicians in Massachusetts.
You wrote the book Overdose to America and the new book coming out now called Sickening
about how big farmer broke American healthcare,
including science and research and how we can fix it.
First question, what is the biggest problem with big farmer that if fixed would be the most
impactful? So if you can snap your fingers and fix one thing, what would be the most impactful,
you think? The biggest problem is the way they determine the content, the accuracy and the completeness
of what doctors believe to be the full range of knowledge that they need to best take
care of their patients, so that with the knowledge having been taken
over by the commercial interests primarily the pharmaceutical industry, the purpose of
that knowledge is to maximize the profits that get returned to investors and shareholders
and not to optimize the health of the American people. So rebalancing that equation would be the most important thing to do
to get our health care back aimed in the right direction.
Okay, so there's a tension between helping people and making money.
So if we look at particularly the task of helping people in medicine
in health care.
Is it possible if money is the primary sort of mechanism by which you achieve that as a motivator is it possible to get that right?
I think it is Lex, but I think it is not possible without guardrails that maintain the integrity and the balance of the knowledge.
Without those guardrails,
it's like trying to play a professional basketball game
without referees and having players call their own fouls.
But the players have paid to win
and you can't count on them to call their own fouls.
So we have referees who are in charge.
We don't have those referees in American health care. That's the biggest
way that American health care is distinguished from health care and other wealthy nations.
So, okay, so you mentioned Milton Friedman, and you mentioned his book called Capitalism and Freedom.
He writes that there are only three legitimate functions of government to preserve
law and order, to enforce private contracts, and to ensure that private markets work.
You said that that was a radical idea at the time, but we're failing on all three, how
are we failing?
And also maybe the bigger picture is what are the strengths and weaknesses of capitalism when it comes to medicine and healthcare?
Can we separate those out because those are two huge questions? So
how we're failing in all three and these are the
minimal functions that
our guru of free market capitalism said the government should perform. So this is the absolute baseline.
On preserving law and order, the drug companies routinely violate the law in terms of their
marketing and in terms of their presentation of the results of their trials.
I know this because I was an expert in litigation
for about 10 years.
I presented some of what I learned in civil litigation
to the FBI and the Department of Justice,
and that case led to the biggest criminal fine
in US history as of 2009.
And I testified in a federal trial in 2010, and the jury found Pfizer guilty of fraud
and racketeering violations.
In terms of violating the law, it's a routine occurrence. The drug companies have paid $38 billion worth of fines from I think 1991 to 2017.
It's never been enough to stop the misrepresentation of their data, and rarely are the fines greater than the profits that were made.
See, executives have not gone to jail for misrepresenting data
that have involved even tens of thousands of deaths in the case of Viox,
oxycontin as well.
And when companies plead guilty to thelonies, which is not an unusual occurrence.
The government usually allows the companies,
the parent companies to allow subsidiaries to take the plea so that they are not one step closer to getting disbarred from Medicare,
not being able to participate in Medicare.
So in that sense, there is a mechanism that is appearing to impose law and order on drug
company behavior, but it's clearly not enough.
It's not working.
Can you actually speak to human nature here?
Are people corrupt?
Are people malevolent, are people ignorant that work at the low
level and at the high level advisor, for example, at big pharma companies.
How is this possible?
So I believe just in a small tangent that most people are good.
And I actually believe if you join big pharma, so a company like Pfizer,
your life trajectory often involves dreaming and wanting and enjoying helping people.
Yes. And so, and then we look at the outcomes that you're describing. And it looks, and that's why the narrative takes hold,
that like Pfizer CEO, Alpabrola, who I talk to,
is malevolent.
The sense is like these companies are evil.
So if the different parts, the people are good,
and they want to do good, how are we getting these outcomes?
Yeah. I think it has to do with the cultural milieu that this is unfolding in.
And we need to look at sociology to understand this, that when the cultural milieu year is set up to maximize the returns on investment for shareholders and other venture
capitalists and hedge funds and so forth.
When that defines the culture and the higher up you are in the corporation, the more you're
in on the game of
getting rewarded for maximizing the profits of the investors. That's the culture they live in.
And it becomes normative behavior to do
things with science that
look normal in that environment and our shared values within that environment by good people whose self-e good American people have the expectation that the
drug companies are trying to make money, but that they're playing by rules that aren't
part of the insider milieu.
It's fascinating.
The game, they're playing modifies the culture, you know, of inside the meetings, inside
the rooms, day to day, that there's a bubble
of that forms, like we're all in bubbles of different sizes. Right. And that bubble allows you to drift
in terms of what you see as ethical and unethical, because you see the game as just, you know,
it's just part of the game., it's just part of the game.
So marketing is just part of the game.
Right.
And paying the fines is just part of the game.
Of science.
Yep.
Yep.
And without guard rails, it becomes even more part of the game.
You keep moving in that direction if you're not bumping up against guard rails. And I think that's how
we've gotten to the extreme situation we're in now.
So like I mentioned, I spoke with Pfizer CEO Albert Burla, and I'd like to raise with
you some of the concerns I raised with him. So one, you already mentioned, I raised the
concern that Pfizer is engaged in aggressive
advertising campaigns.
As you can imagine, he said, no.
What do you think?
I think you're both right.
I think that the, I agree with you, that the aggressive advertising campaigns do not add value to society. And I agree with
him that they're for the most part legal. And it's the way the game is played.
Right. So sorry, Jim, to wrap up, but oftentimes his responses are, especially now he's been
CEO for only like two years, three years.
He says Pfizer was a different company we've made mistakes.
Right, in the past, we don't make mistakes anymore.
That there's rules, and we play by the rules.
So like with every concern raised, there's very, very strict rules, as he says.
In fact, he says sometimes way too strict,
and we play by them.
And so in that sense, advertisement,
it doesn't seem like it's too aggressive
because it's playing by the rules.
And relative to the other, again, it's the game,
relative to the other companies,
it's actually not that aggressive.
Relative to the other big, far more companies.
Yes, yes.
I hope we can quickly get back to whether or not they're playing by the rules, but in general,
but let's just look at the question of advertising specifically.
I think that's a good example of what it looks like from within that culture and from outside
that culture.
He's saying that we follow the law on our advertising.
We state the side effects and we state the FDA approved indications and we do what the
law says we have to do for advertising.
And I have not been an expert in litigation for a few years and I don't know what's going
on currently, but let's take him at his word.
It could be true. It might not be, but it could be.
But if that's true, in his world, in his culture,
that's ethical business behavior.
From a common sense person's point of view,
a drug company paying highly skilled media folks
to take the information about the drug and create
the illusion, the emotional impact and the takeaway message for viewers of advertisements that
grossly exaggerate the benefit of the drug and minimize the harms.
It's sociopathic behavior to have viewers of ads leave the ad with an unrealistic impression
of the benefits and harms of the drug.
And yet he's playing by the rules.
He's doing his job as CEO to maximize the effect of his advertising.
And if he doesn't do it, this is a key point.
If he doesn't do it, he is a key point. If he doesn't do it, he'll
get fired in the next guy will.
So the people that survive in the company, the people that get raises in the company and
move up in the company are the ones that play by the rules. And that's how the game solidifies
itself, but the game is within the balance of the law. Sometimes, most of the time, not
always. We'll return to that question. I'm actually more
concerned about the effect of advertisement in a kind of much larger scale on the people that
are getting funded by the advertisement in self-sensorship just like more subtle more
the advertisement in self-sensorship, just like more subtle, more, more passive, pressure to not say anything negative.
Because I've seen this, and I've been saddened by it, that people sacrifice integrity in
small ways when they're being funded by a particular company.
They don't, they don't see themselves as doing so,
but you could just clearly see that the space of opinions
that they're willing to engage in
or a space of ideas they're willing to play with
is one that doesn't include negative,
anything that could possibly be negative
about the company.
They just choose not to, because, you know, why?
And that's really sad to me that, you know,
if you give me a hundred bucks,
I'm less likely to say something negative about you.
That makes me sad, because like,
the reason I wouldn't say something negative about you,
I prefer is the pressure of friendship
and human connection that those kinds of things.
So I understand that.
That's also a problem, by the way.
So I started having dinners and shaking hands and all our own friends, but the fact that
money has that effect is really sad to me.
On the news media, on the journalists, on scientists, that's scary to me.
But of course, the direct advertisement to consumers, like you said,
it's potentially a very negative effect. I wanted to ask if what you think is the most negative
impact of advertisement? Is it that direct to consumer on television? Is it advertisement
of the doctors? Which I'm surprised to learn, I was vaguely looking at, is more than the advertisement,
I'm surprised to learn how vaguely looking at is more than the advertisement. More spent on advertising to doctors than to consumers.
That's really confusing to me. It's fascinating actually.
And then also obviously the law side of things is the lobbying dollars,
which I think is less than all of those.
But anyway, it's in the ballpark.
What concerns you most?
Well, it's the whole nexus of influence.
There's not one thing and they don't invest all,
they don't put all their eggs in one basket.
It's a whole surround sound program here.
But in terms of advertisements,
let's take the advertisement.
Trulicity is a diabetes drug, a type 2 diabetes
an injectable drug. And it lowers blood sugar just about as well as metformin does. Metformin
costs about $4 a month. Trulicity costs I think $6,200 a year. So $48 a year versus $6,200.
Trulicity has distinguished itself because the manufacturer did a study that showed that
it significantly reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in diabetics.
And they got approval on the basis of that study, that very large study being statistically
significant.
What the, so the ad, the ad's obviously extoll the virtues of truilicity because it reduces
the risk of heart disease and stroke and that's one of the major morbidities, risks of
type 2 diabetes.
What the ad doesn't say is they have to treat 323 people to prevent one nonfatal event
at a cost of $2.7 million.
And even more importantly than that, what the ad doesn't say is that the evidence shows
that engaging in an active, healthy lifestyle program reduces the risk of heart disease
and strokes far more than truplicity does.
Now, to be fair to the company, the sponsor,
there's never been a study
that compared truplicity to lifestyle changes.
But that's part of the problem of our advertising.
You would think in a rational society
that was way out on a limb
as a lone country, besides New
Zealand, that allows direct-to-consumer advertising that part of allowing direct-to-consumer advertising
would be to mandate that the companies establish whether their drug is better than, say, healthy
lifestyle adoption to prevent the problems
that they claim to be preventing.
But we don't require that.
So the companies can afford to do very large studies so that very small differences become
statistically significant.
And their studies are asking the question, how can we sell more drug?
They're not asking the question, how can we prevent cardiovascular drug? They're not asking the question, how can we prevent
cardiovascular disease in people with type 2 diabetes? And that's how we get off in this,
we're now in the extreme arm of this distortion of our medical knowledge of studying how to sell
more drugs than how to make people more healthy. That's a really great thing to compare to
how to make people more healthy. That's a really great thing to compare to as lifestyle changes, because that should be
the bar.
If you do some basic diet, exercise, all those kinds of things, how does this drug compare
to that?
Right.
Right.
And that study was done, actually, in the 90s.
It's called the Diabetes Prevention Program.
It was federally funded by the NIH so that there wasn't
this drug company imperative to just try to prove
your drug was better than nothing.
And it was a very well designed study, randomized controlled
trial in people who were at high risk of diabetes, so-called
prediabetics.
And they were randomized to three different groups,
a placebo group, a group that got treated with metformin,
and a group that got treated with intensive lifestyle
counseling.
So this study really tested whether you
can get people in a randomized control trial,
assigned to intensive lifestyle changes, whether that works.
Now, the common wisdom amongst physicians, and I think in general, is that you can't get people
to change. You know, you can do whatever you want, you can stand on your head, you can beg and
plead, people won't change. So give it up, and let's just move on with the drugs and not waste any
time. Except this study that was published in the New England Journal, I think, in 2002,
shows that's wrong.
That the people who were in the intensive lifestyle group ended up losing 10 pounds,
exercising time to week, maintaining it,
and reduced the risk of getting diabetes by 58 percent,
compared to the metformin group, which reduced its risk of getting diabetes by 58% compared to the metformin group which reduced its risk of getting diabetes by 31%.
So that exact study was done and it showed that lifestyle intervention is the winner.
Who, as a small tangent, is the leader who is supposed to fight for the side of lifestyle changes. Where's the big
pharma version of lifestyle changes? Who is supposed to have the big bully pulpit, the
big money behind lifestyle changes in your sense? Because that seems to be missing in a
lot of our discussions about health policy. Right. That's exactly right.
And the answer is that we assume that the market has to solve all of these problems, and
the market can't solve all of these problems.
There needs to be some way of protecting the public interest for things that aren't financially
driven, so that the overriding question has to be
how best to improve American's health,
not companies funding studies to try and prove
that their new and expensive drug is better and should be used.
Well, some of that is also people sort of like yourself.
I mean, it's funny.
You spoke with Joe Rogan. He constantly
spouses lifestyle changes. So some of it is almost like understanding the problems
that big farmers creating society and then sort of these influential voices
speaking up against it. So whether they're a scientist or just regular communicators.
Yeah, I think you got to tip your hat to Joe for getting that message out. And he clearly
believes it and does his best. But it's not coming out in the legitimate avenues in the legitimate
channels that are evidence-based medicine and the from the sources that the docs are trained to listen to
and modify their patient care on.
Now, it's not 100%.
I mean, there are articles in the big journals
about the benefits of lifestyle,
but they don't carry the same gravitas
as the randomized controlled trials that test this drug against placebo
or this drug against another drug.
So the Joe Rogan's of the world keep going, you know, I tip my hat, but it's not going
to carry the day for most of the people until it has legitimacy of the medical establishment.
Yeah, like something that the doctors really pay attention to.
Well, there's an entire mechanism established for testing drugs.
There's not a entire mechanism established for in terms of scientific rigor of testing
lifestyle changes.
I mean, it's more difficult, I mean, everything is difficult in science, with science that
involves humans, especially.
But it's just, these studies are very expensive,
they're difficult, it's difficult to find conclusions
and to control all the variables.
And so it's very easy to dismiss them
unless you really do a huge study that's very well funded.
And so maybe the doctor is just lean
towards the simpler studies over and over,
which is what the drug company's fund.
They can control more variables.
See, but the control there is sometimes by hiding things too, right?
So sometimes you can just say that this is a well-controlled study by pretending there's
a bunch of other stuff,
just ignoring the stuff that could be correlated, it could be the real cause of the effects
you're seeing, all that kind of stuff.
So money can buy ignorance, I suppose, in science.
It buys kind of blinders that don't look outside the reductionist model.
And that's another issue is that we kind of, nobody says to doctors in training only
listen to reductionist studies and conclusions and methods of promoting health.
Nobody says that explicitly, but the respectable science has to do with controlling the factors.
And I mean, it just doesn't make sense to me.
I'm going to pick on truilicity because it's such an obvious example, but it's not more egregious than many others.
It doesn't make sense to me to allow a drug to be advertised as preventing cardiovascular disease
when you haven't included lifestyle changes
as an arm in the study. It's just so crystal clear that the purpose of that study is to
sell true illicit. It's not to prevent cardiovascular disease. If we were in charge, I would try to
convince you that anywhere that study, the results of that study were presented
to physicians, it would be stamped in big red letters.
This study did not compare trillicity to lifestyle changes.
They need to know that.
The docs are trained, these blinders get put on, and they're trained to forget that that's
not there. Do you think, so first of all,
that's a small or big change to advertisement.
That seems obvious to say,
like in force that it should be compared
to the lifestyle changes.
Do you think advertisements period in the United States
for pharmaceutical drugs should be banned?
I think they can't be banned,
so it doesn't matter what I think.
Okay.
What say you are a dictator and two, why can't they be banned?
Okay.
Answer either one.
I believe, I've been told by lawyers who I trust that the freedom of speech in the
US Constitution is such that you can't ban them. That you could
ban cigarettes and alcohol, which have no therapeutic use, but drugs have a therapeutic
use, and they advertise about them can't be banned. Let's assume that they can't be, because
we know they won't be, anyway. But let's assume they can't be. And especially
our Supreme Court now would be unlikely to take that seriously. But that's not the issue.
The issue is that if drugs want to, if the drug companies want to spend their money advertising,
they should have to have independent analysis of the message
that the viewers are left with about the drug
so that it's realistic.
What's the chance the drug will help them?
Well, in true illicit, it's one out of 323.
322 people aren't gonna benefit
from the cardiovascular reduction, risk reduction.
What's the true cost?
When drugs advertise that you may be able to get this for a $25
copay or something, a tens of thousands of dollars a year drug for a $25 copay?
What an enormous disservice that is to misrepresent the cost to society.
That should not be allowed.
So you should have to make it clear to the viewers how many people are going
to benefit, what's your chance of benefiting, how does it compare to lifestyle changes or
less expensive therapies, what do you give up if you use a less expensive therapy or gain
perhaps?
And how much you cost? How much you cost. Now that can go either way because if you say
Humiricust $72,000 and it's no more effective as a first line drug than Methotrexate,
which costs $480, people might say,
I want the expensive drug,
because I can get it for $25.00.
So you'd have to temper that a little bit.
Oh, you mean people are so, they don't care.
They don't care, their insurance is gonna cover it
and it's a $25.ay, but we could figure out how
to deal with that.
The main point is that if we assume that advertisements are going to keep going, and
they are, we could require that there be outside evaluation of the message that reasonable unbiased viewers take away from the ads,
and the ads would have to tell the truth about the drug.
And the truth should have sub-truth guardrails,
meaning the costs that we talked about,
the effects compared to things that actually lifestyle changes.
Just these details, very strict card rails of what actually has to be specified.
And I would make it against the law to have family picnics or dogs catching frisbees in the ads.
So, you mean 95% of the ads, yes.
I mean, there's something dark and authentic
about those advertisements.
But they see, I mean, I'm sure they're being done
because they work for the target audience.
And then the doctors too.
Can you really buy a doctor's opinion?
Why does it have such an effect on doctors? and then the doctors too. Can you really buy a doctor's opinion?
Why does it have such an effect on doctors?
Advertisement to doctors. You as a physician, again, from everything I've seen, people love you.
And I've just...
People should definitely look you up from...
There's a bunch of videos of you giving talks on YouTube and it's just,
just, it's so refreshing to hear just a clarity of thought about health policy, about health care,
just the way you think throughout the years. So, like, it's easy to think about, like, maybe
you're criticizing Big Farmer, that's part of one part of the message that you're talking about,
but that's not like your brilliance actually shines
in the positive and the solutions and how to do it.
So as a doctor, what affects your mind?
And how does Big Farmer affect your mind?
Number one, the information that comes through
legitimate sources that doctors have been
taught to rely on, evidence-based medicine, the articles in peer-reviewed journals, the
guidelines that are issued.
Now, those are problematic because when an article is peer-reviewed and published in
a respected journal, people and doctors obviously assume that the peer
reviewers have had access to the data and they've independently analyzed the data and
they corroborate the findings in the manuscript that was submitted or they give feedback to
the authors and say we disagree with you on this point
and would you please check our analysis
and if you agree with us making it.
That's what they assume the peer review process is,
but it's not.
The peer reviewers don't have the data.
The peer reviewers have the manuscript
that's been submitted by the usually in conjunction with
or by the drug company that manufactures the drug.
So peer reviewers are unable to perform the job that doctors think they're performing
to vet the data to assure that it's accurate and reasonably complete. They can't do it.
And then we have the clinical practice guidelines, which are increasingly more important as
the flow of information keeps getting brisker and brisker, and docs need to get to the bottom line quickly.
Clinical practice guidelines become much more important.
And we assume that the authors of those clinical practice
guidelines have independently analyzed the data
from the clinical trials and make their recommendations
that set the standards of care based on their analysis.
That's not what happens.
The experts who write the clinical trials rely almost entirely
on the publications presenting the results of the clinical trials,
which are peer reviewed, but the peer reviewers haven't had access to the data.
So we've got a system of the highest level of evidence that doctors have been trained
over and over again to rely on to practice evidence-based medicine to be good doctors that has not been verified.
Do you think that data that's coming from the pharma companies? Do you think there,
what level of manipulation is going on with that data? Is it at the study design level? Is it literally there's some data that you just keep off, you know,
keep out of the charts, keep out of the aggregate analysis, then you then publish, or is it the
worst case, which is just change some of the numbers?
It happened, all three happened. I can't, I don't know what the denominator is, but I spent about 10 years in litigation.
And for example, in Viox, which was withdrawn from the market in 2004, in the biggest drug
recall in American history, the problem was that it got recalled when a study that Merck
sponsored showed that Viac's doubled the
risk, more than doubled the risk of heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots, serious blood clots.
It got pulled then.
But there was a study, a bigger study, that had been published in 2000 in New England
Journal of Medicine, that showed that Viac's was a better drug for arthritis and pain, not
because it was more effective.
It's no more effective than a lever, Advil.
But because it was less likely to cause serious GI complications, bleeds and perforations
in the gut.
Now, in that study that was published in the New England Journal,
that was never corrected, it was a little bit modified 15 months
after the drug was taken off the market, but never corrected.
Merck left out three heart attacks, and the FDA knew
that Merck left out three heart attacks,
and the FDA's analysis of the data from
that study said that the FDA wasn't going to do the analysis without the three-hearted
tax in it.
The important part of this story is that there were 12 authors listed on that study
in the New England Journal.
Two were Merck employees.
They knew about the three-hearted attacks that had been omitted.
The other 10 authors, the academic authors,
didn't know about it.
They hadn't seen that data.
So Merck just, they hadn't excused,
it's complicated and the FDA didn't accept it,
so there's no reason to go into it.
But Merck just left out the three heart attacks.
And the three heart attacks, it may seem three heart attacks in a 10,000 person study,
may seem like nothing, except they completely changed the statistics so that had the three
heart attacks been included, the only conclusion that Merck could have made was that Viox
significantly increased the risk of heart attack.
And they abbreviated their end point from heart
attacks, strokes, and blood clots to just heart attacks. So those are maybe in their mind, they're
also playing by the rules because of some technical excuse to mention that was rejected. How can this
process let me interrupt? No, that's not true. The study was completed, the blind was broken,
meaning they looked at the data in March of 2000.
The article was published in the New England Journal
in November of 2000, in March of 2000.
There was an email by the head scientist
that was published in the Wall Street Journal
by the head scientist that was published in the Wall Street Journal.
That said the day that the data were unblinded, that it's a shame that the cardiovascular events are there. But the drug will do well and we will do well.
But removing the three heart attacks, how does that happen? Like, uh,
Who has to convince themselves? Is this pure malevolence?
You have to be the judge of that, but the person who was in charge of the data safety monitoring board
issued a letter that said they'll stop counting cardiovascular events a month before the trial is over and
they'll continue counting GI events and that person got a contract to consult
with Merck for $5,000 a day I think for twelve days a year for one or two years
that was signed that
contract
was signed
within two weeks of the decision
to stop counting heart attacks
i want to understand that man or woman
i want to
i want it's the uh... been reading a lot about Nazi Germany and thinking a lot
about the good Germans, because I want to understand so that we can each encourage each other
to take the small heroic actions that prevents that, because it feels to me removing malevolence from the table, or it's just a pure psychopathic
person, that there's just a momentum created by the game, like you mentioned.
And so it takes reversing the momentum within a company, I think requires many small acts
of heroism.
Not gigantic, I'm going to leave and become a whistleblower
and publish a book about it, but small quiet acts
of pressuring against this.
Like, what are we doing here?
We're trying to help people.
Is this the right thing to do?
Looking in the mirror constantly and asking,
is this the right thing to do?
I mean, that's how, that's what integrity is.
Acknowledging the pressures you're under and then still be able to zoom out. I think what is the right thing to do here?
But the data hiding the data
Makes it too easy to live in ignorance. So like within those inside those companies
So your idea is that the reviewers should see the data.
That's one step.
So to even push back on that idea is,
I assume you mean that data remains private
except to the peer reviewers.
The problem with, of course, is you probably know
as the peer review process is not perfect.
You know, it's individuals.
It feels like there should be a lot more eyes
on the data than just the peer reviewers.
Yes, this is not a hard problem to solve.
When a study is completed,
a clinical study report is made.
And it's usually several thousand pages.
And what it does is it takes the raw patient data and it tabulates it in the ways,
it's supposedly and usually in the ways that the company has pre-specified.
So that you then end up with a searchable,
let's say, 3,000 page document.
As I became more experienced as an expert in litigation,
I could go through those documents pretty quickly,
quickly, maybe in 20 hours or 40 hours,
but it doesn't mean three months of my work.
And see if the companies, if the way the company has analyzed the data
is consistent with the way with their statistical analysis plan and their pre-specified outcome
measures. It's not hard. And I think you're right. Peer reviewers, I don't peer review clinical
trials, but I peer review other kinds of articles.
I have to do one on the airplane and way home.
And it's hard.
We're just ordinary mortal people volunteering to unpaid.
The motivation is not clear.
The motivation is to keep, to be a good citizen in the medical community. And to be unfriendly terms with the journals,
so that if you wanna get published
this sort of an unspoken incentive.
As somebody who enjoys game theory,
I feel like that motivation is good,
but could be a lot better.
Yeah, so you should get more recognition
or in some way academic credit for it.
It should go to your career advancement.
It's an important paper and you recognize it's an important paper as a great peer reviewer
that this is not in that area where it's like clearly piece of crap paper or clearly
an awesome paper that doesn't have controversial aspects to it and it's just a beautiful piece of work
Okay, those are easy and then there is like the very difficult gray area
Which may require many many days of work on your part as a peer reviewer. So it's not you know
It's not just a couple hours, but really
Seriously reading like some papers can take
months to really understand.
So if you really want to struggle, there has to be an incentive for that struggle.
Yes.
And billions of dollars.
Right.
On some of these studies and lies.
Right.
Right.
Not to mention.
Right.
But it would be easy to have full-time statisticians hired by the journals or shared by the journals
who were independent of any other financial incentive to go over these kind of methodological
issues and take responsibility for certifying the analyses that are done and then pass it on to the volunteer peer reviewers.
I believe even in this, in the sort of capitalism or even social capital, after watching Twitter in the time of COVID,
and just looking at people that investigate themselves. I believe in the citizenry.
People, if you give them access to the data,
like these like citizen scientists arise.
A lot of them on the, it's kind of funny.
A lot of people that are just really used
to working with data.
They don't know anything about medicine,
and they don't have actually the biases
that a lot of doctors and medical,
and a lot of the people that read these papers,
they'll just go raw into the data
and look at it with, like, they're bored almost,
and they do incredible analysis.
So, there's some argument to be made
for a lot of this data to become public,
like, de-inonymized, no, sorry, anonymized,
all that kind of stuff, but for a lot of it to be public, especially when you're talking about things as impactful as some of these drugs.
I agree 100%. So let's turn the micrisc... let's get a little bit more granular.
Sure. On the peer review issue, we're talking about pre-publication transparencies. And that is critically important.
Once a paper is published, the horses are out of the barn.
And docs are going to read it, take it as evidence-based
medicine, the economists call what then happens
as stickiness, that the docs hold on to their beliefs.
And my own voice in size says, once doctors start doing things to their patient's bodies,
they're really not too enthusiastic about hearing it was wrong.
Yeah, that's the stickiness of human nature.
So that bar, once it's published, the doctors, that's when the stickiness emerges as well.
It's hard to put that toothpaste back in the tube.
Now, that's pre-publication transparency,
which is essential.
And you could have whoever saw that data pre-publication
could sign confidentiality agreements
so that the drug companies couldn't argue
that we're just opening the spickets of our data
and people can copy it and block all the excuses they make.
You could argue that you didn't have to, but let's just let them do it.
Let the peer reviewers sign confidentiality agreements, and they won't leak the data.
But then you have to go to post publication transparency, which is what you were just
getting at, to let the data free and let citizens and citizen scientists and other doctors who are interested have added.
Kind of like wiki Wikipedia have added. Let it out and let people criticize each other.
Okay, so speaking of the data, the FDA asked 55 years to release Pfizer vaccine data.
This is also something I raised with Alper Brawla, the Pfizer.
There's several things I didn't like about what he said.
So some things are expected and some of it is just revealing the human being, which is
what I'm interested in doing.
But he said he wasn't aware of the 75 and the 55.
I'm sorry with it. He wasn't aware of the 75 and the 55. I'm sorry, women.
He wasn't aware of the how long.
So here, I'll explain what he...
Do you know that since you spoke to him, Pfizer has petitioned the judge to join the
suit in behalf of the FDA's request to release that data over 55 or 75 years,
Pfizer's fully aware of what's going on.
He's aware, I'm sure he's aware in some formulation,
the exact years he might have not been aware,
but the point is that there is,
that is the FDA, the relationship of Pfizer and FDA
in terms of me being able to read human beings,
was the thing he was most uncomfortable with, that he didn't want to talk about the FDA.
And that, that relate, it was clear that there was a relationship there that if, if the words
you use may do a lot of harm, potentially because like you're saying there might be lawsuits going on
There's litigation. There's legal stuff all that kind of stuff and then there's a lot of games being played in this space
so I don't know how to interpret it if he's actually aware or not but
The deeper truth is that he's deeply uncomfortable
Bringing light to this part of the game.
Yes, and I'm going to read between the lines and Albert Borla
certainly didn't ask me to speak for him.
But I think, but when did you speak to him? How long?
Wow, time flies when you're having fun two months ago, two months ago.
So that was just recently, it's come out just in the past week. Wow time flies when you're having fun two months ago two months ago. So
That was just recently it's come out
Just in the past week. It's come out that
Pfizer isn't battling the FDA Pfizer has joined the FDA in
the opposition to the request to release these
these documents in the same amount of time that the FDA took to evaluate them.
So Pfizer is offering to help the FDA to petition the judge to not enforce the timeline that he seems to be moving towards.
So for people who are not familiar, we're talking about the Freedom of Information Act request
to release the Pfizer vaccine study data to release as much of the data as possible, like the raw data, the details,
or actually not even the raw data, it's data, doesn't matter, there's details to it.
And I think the response from the FDA is that, of course, yes, of course, but we can only
publish some X number of pages a day,
500 pages.
500 pages of data.
It's not a day, though.
It's a...
Whatever.
A week, I think.
The point is, whatever they're able to publish is ridiculous.
It's like, my printer can only print three pages a day.
And we cannot afford a second printer.
So it's some kind of bureaucratic language for,
there's a process to this.
And now you're saying that Pfizer is obviously more engaged
in helping this kind of bureaucratic process prosper
in its full absurdity, Kafka-esque absurdity.
So what is this?
This really bothered people.
This is really troublesome.
And just to put it in just plain English terms,
Pfizer's making the case that it can't,
the FDA and Pfizer together are making the case
that they can't go through the documents,
it's going to take them some number, a hundredfold, hundreds of folds more time to go through
the documents than the FDA required to go through the documents to approve the vaccines,
to give the vaccines full FDA approval.
And the FDA's argument, talk about Kafka-esque, is that to do it
more rapidly would cost them $3 million. $3 million equals one hour of
vaccine sales over two years. One hour of sales. And they can't come up with the
money. And now Pfizer has joined the suit to help the FDA fight off this judge,
this mean judge who thinks they ought to release the data,
but evidently, Pfizer is an offering
to come up with the $3 million either.
So bought for $3 million, I mean, maybe the FDA
should do a go-fun me.
Well, obviously the money thing, I mean, I'm sure if Elon Musk comes along and says,
I'll give you a hundred million, publish it now.
I think they'll come up with another.
So I mean, that there is clear that there is cautiousness.
I don't know the source of it from the FDA. Well, there's only one explanation that I can think of, which is that the FDA and Pfizer
don't want to release the data.
They don't want to release the three or 500,000 pages of documents.
And I don't know what's in there.
I want to say one thing very clearly, I am not an anti-faxor.
I believe the vaccines work.
I believe everybody should get vaccinated.
The evidence is clear that if you're vaccinated,
you reduce your risk of dying of COVID by 20 fold.
And we've got new sub variants coming along.
And I just want to be very clear about this.
That said, there's something I would give you 10 to 1 odds
on a bet that there's something in that data
that is gonna be embarrassing to either FDA
or Pfizer or both.
So there's two options.
I agree with you 100%.
One is they know of embarrassing things.
That's option one, and option two, they
haven't invested enough to truly understand the data. Like, I mean, it's a lot of
data that they have a sense that there might be something embarrassing in
there. And if we release it, surely the world will discover them embarrassing and
to do sort of to steal men their argument. They'll take
the small the press, the people will take the small embarrassing things and blow them
up into big things. Yes, and support the anti-vax campaign. I think that's all possible.
Nonetheless, the data are about the original clinical trial. And the emergency youth's authorization
was based on the first few months of the data from that trial. And it was a two-year trial.
The rest of that data has not been opened up, and there was not an advisory committee meeting
to look at that data when the FDA granted full authorization. Again, I am pro-vaccine.
I am not making an antivax argument here.
But I suspect that there's something pretty serious in that data.
And the reason why I'm not an anti-vaxer, having not been able to see the data
that the FDA and Pfizer seem to willing not just to put effort into preventing the release of,
but seem to have quite a bit of energy into preventing,
investing quite a bit of energy in not releasing that data.
The reason why that doesn't tip me over into the anti-vaxicide is because that's clinical trial data,
early clinical trial data that involved several thousand people. We now have millions of data points from people
who have had the vaccine.
This is real world data showing the efficacy of the vaccines.
And so far, knock on wood, there aren't side effects
that overcome the benefits of vaccine.
So I'm with you.
I'm now, I guess, three shots of the vaccine.
But there's a lot of people that are kind of saying,
well, even the data on the real world use large scale data
has, is messy.
The way it's being reported, the way it's being interpreted But well one thing is clear to me that it is being politicized that it's I mean if you just look objectively
Don't have to go to at the shallow surface level
It seems like there's two groups
that
I can't even put a term to it because it's not really pro vaccine versus
anti vaccine because it's it's it's pro vaccine triple mask, Democrat, liberal, and then
anti mandate, whatever, whatever those groups are, I can't quite because they're changing
anti mask, but not really
kind of. So those two groups that feel political and nature, not scientific and nature,
it's, they're, they're bickering and then it's clear that this data is being interpreted by the
different groups differently. It's very difficult for me as a human being to understand where the truth lies, especially
given how much money is flying around on all sides.
So the anti-vaxxers can make a lot of money too.
Let's not forget this.
From the individual perspective, you can become famous being an anti-vaxxer.
So there's a lot of incentives on all sides here. And there's
real human emotion and fear and also credibility. You know, scientists don't want to ruin their
reputation if they speak out in whatever, like, speak their opinion or they look at some slice of the data and begin to interpret
it in some kind of way.
They're very, it's clear that fear is dominating the discourse here, especially in the scientific
community.
So I, I don't know what to make of that.
And the only happy people here, it's Pfizer. It's just plowing all ahead, I mean,
with every single variant, there's,
you know, there's very, I would say, outside of
arguably a very flawed system, there's a lot of
incredible scientific and engineering work being done
in constantly developing new, like antiviral
drugs, new vaccines to deal with the variants. So they're happily being a capitalist machine.
And it's very difficult to know what to do with that.
And let's just put this in perspective for folks. The best-selling drug in the world has been Humira
for a number of years.
It's approved for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis
and eight other indications.
And it sold about $20 billion globally
over the past few years.
It leveled out, it peaked at that level.
Pfizer expects to sell $65 billion of vaccine
in the first two years of the pandemic. So this is by far the biggest selling and most profitable
drug that's ever been come along. I can ask you a difficult question here?
In the fog that we're operating in here, on the Pfizer biotech vaccine, what was done
well and what was done badly that you can see now?
It seems like we'll know more decades from now.
Yes.
But now in the fog of today, well, the $65 billion flying around, where, where do you
land?
So we're going to get to what I think is one of the key problems with the pharmaceutical
industry model in the United States about being profit driven.
So in 2016, the NIH did the key infrastructure work to make mRNA vaccines.
That gets left out of the discussion a lot. And Pfizer, biotech, actually paid royalties
voluntarily to the NIH. I don't know how much it was. I don't think it was a whole lot of money.
But I think they wanted to avoid the litigation that Moderna got itself into by just taking that 2016 knowledge and having that be the foundation of their product.
So Pfizer took that and they did,
there are indeed, they paid for their R&D
having received that technology.
And when they got the genetic code from China
about the virus,
they very quickly made a vaccine and the vaccine works.
And President Trump, to his credit, launched Operation Warp Speed and just threw money at
the problem.
They just said, we spent five times more per person than the EU early on.
Just pay them whatever they want.
Let's just get this going. And Americans were
vaccinated more quickly. We paid a lot of money. The one mistake that I think the federal
government made was they were paying these guaranteed fortunes. And they didn't require
that the companies participate in a program to do global vaccinations. So the companies participate in a program to do global vaccinations.
So the companies doing their business model distributed the vaccines where they would make
the most money.
And obviously they would make the most money in the first world.
And almost I think 85% of the vaccines early on went to the first world.
And very, very few vaccinations went to the third world.
So what happened is, there was such a low vaccination rate in May of 2021. There was
all hands-on deck, cry for help from the World Trade Organization, the World Health Organization, the IMF and the World Bank, made
a plea for $50 billion so that we could get to 40% vaccination rate in the third world by the
end of 2021. And it was unrequited. Nobody answered.
And now Africa has about a 8.9% vaccination rate
indeed is coming up, but it's been very low.
The problem with all this is, I believe those mRNA vaccines
are excellent vaccines.
But if we leave the third world unvaccinated,
we're going to have a constant supply of
variants of COVID that are going to come back into the United States and harm Americans
exactly like Delta and Omicron have.
So we've made a great drug.
It reduces the risk of mortality in Americans who get it by a lot.
But we're not doing what we need to do to protect Americans from home of the crime.
You don't have to be an idealist and worry about global vaccine equity.
If you just ordinary selfish people like most of us are and you're worried about the health
of Americans, you would ensure global vaccine distribution.
Let me just make one more point.
That $50 billion that was requested by the four organizations
back in May of 2021,
$32 billion, made $50 billion from the vaccines at that point.
Took it into their private wealth.
So what had been taken, this enormous amount of money
that had been taken into private wealth was enough to do what those organizations said needed to be done to prevent the
subvariance from coming back and doing what they're doing.
The money was there, but how does the motivation, the money drove a motivation of big pharma
lead to that kind of allocation of vaccines.
Because they can make more money in the United States.
They're gonna distribute their vaccines
where they can make the most money.
Right.
Is there a malevolent aspect to this where, boy,
I don't like saying this, but,
that they don't see it as a huge problem.
That variance will come back to the United States.
I think it's the issue we were talking about earlier on, where they're in a different culture.
And their culture is that their moral obligation, as Milton Friedman would say,
is to maximize the profits that they return to shareholdings.
And don't think about the big picture.
The collateral damage. Don't think about the collateral damage.
And also kind of believe, convince yourself that if we give into this capitalist machine in this
very narrow sense of capitalism that in the end they'll do the most good. This kind of belief that like,
if we just maximize profits, we'll do the most good.
Yeah, that's an orthodoxy of several decades ago,
and I don't think people can really say that in good faith.
When you're talking about vaccinating the third world,
so we don't get hurt,
it's a little bit hard to make the argument
that the world's a better place because the profits of the investors went up. Yeah, but at the same time,
it's, I think that's the belief you can hold. I mean, I've interacted with a bunch of folks that kind of,
it's the, I don't want to mischaracterize Iran, okay? I respect a lot of people, but there's, it's a belief
that can take hold. If I just focus on this particular maximization, it'll do the most
good for the world. The problem is when you choose what to maximize and you put blinders
on, it's too easy to start making gigantic mistakes that have a big negative impact on
society. So it really matters what you're maximizing.
Right. And if we had a true democracy and everybody had one vote, everybody got decent information and had one vote,
and Rand's position would get some votes, but not many. And it would be way outvoted by the common people.
Let me ask you about this very difficult topic.
I'm talking to Mark Zuckerberg of meta,
the topic of censorship.
I don't know if you've heard,
but there's a guy named Robert Malone and Peter McCalla
that were removed from many platforms for speaking about the COVID vaccine as being risky.
They were both on Joe Rogan's program.
What do you think about censorship in this space?
In this difficult space where so much is controlled by it, not controlled, but influenced by advertisements from Big Pharma.
And science can even be influenced by Big Pharma.
Where do you lean on this? Should we allow, should we lean towards freedom and just allow all the voices, even those that go against
the scientific consensus, is that one way to fight the science that is funded by big
pharma, or is that do more harm than good, having too many voices that are contending here.
Should the ultimate battle be fought
in the space of scientific publications?
And particularly in the era of COVID,
where there are large public health ramifications
to this public discourse, the ante is way up.
So I don't have a simple answer to that.
I think everyone's allowed their own opinion. I don't think everyone's allowed their own scientific
facts. And how we develop a mechanism that's other than an open internet where whoever is shouting the loudest gets the most clicks and
rage creates value on the internet. I think that's not a good mechanism for working this out.
And I don't think we have one. I don't have a solution to this. I mean, ideally, if we had a
philosopher king, we could have a panel of people who were not conflicted
by rigid opinions decide on what the boundaries of public discourse might be.
I don't think it should be fully open.
I don't think people who are committed to an anti-vaccine position
and will tailor their interpretation
of complex scientific data to support their opinion,
I think that can be harmful.
Constraining their speech can be harmful as well.
So I don't have an answer here.
But yeah.
I tend to believe that it's more dangerous
to censor anti-vax messages. The way to defeat anti-vax messages
is by being great communicators, but it being great scientific communicators. So it's not that we
need to censor the things we don't like. We need to be better at communicating the things we do like, or the things that we do believe represent a deep scientific truth.
Because I think if you censor, you get worse at doing science, and you give the wrong people power. So I tend to believe that you should give power to the individual scientists and also give
them the responsibility of being better educators, communicators, expressors of scientific ideas,
put pressure on them to release data, to release that data in a way that's easily consumable,
not just like a very difficult to understand, but in a way that can easily consumable, not just like a very difficult to understand,
but in a way that can be understood by a large number of people. So the battle should be thought
in the open space of ideas versus in the quiet space of journals. I think we no longer have that
comfort, especially at the highest of stakes.
So this kind of idea that a couple of peer reviewers decide the fate of billions,
is doesn't seem to be sustainable, especially given a very real observation now that the
reason Robert Malone has a large following is there's a deep distrust of institutions,
deep distrust of scientists, of science as an institution, of power centers, of companies,
of everything, and perhaps rightfully so.
But the way to defend against that is not for the powerful to build a bigger wall.
It's for the powerful to be authentic and maybe a lot of them to get fired and for new
minds and for new fresh scientists, one who are more authentic, more real, better communicators
to step up.
So I fear censorship because it feels like censorship is a even harder job to do it
well than being good communicators. And it seems like it's always the C students that
end up doing a censorship. It's like it's always the incompetent people and not just the incompetent but the biggest winers. So like what happens is
the people that get the most emotional and the most outrage will drive the censorship.
And it doesn't seem like reason drives the censorship. That just objectively observing how
censorship seems to work in this current, So there's so many forms of censorship.
You know, you look at the Soviet Union with the propaganda or Nazi Germany. It's a very different
level of censorship. People tend to conflate all of these things together. You know, social media trying
desperately to have trillions or hundreds of billions of exchanges a day and like try to make sure that their platform
has some semblance of like quote, healthy conversations.
Like people just don't go insane.
They actually like using the platform and they sense they're based on that.
That's a different level of censorship.
But even there, you can really run a foul of the people they get.
The whiny C students controlling too much of this censorship. I believe that you should actually
put their responsibility on the self-proclaimed holders of truth aka scientists at being better communicators.
scientists at being better communicators. I agree with that.
I'm not advocating for any kind of censorship, but Marshall McCluwen was very influential when
I was in college and his, that meme, the medium is the message.
It's a little bit hard to understand when you're comparing radio to TV and saying radio's
hotter or TV's hotter or something.
But we now have the medium as the message in a way that we've never seen, we've never
imagined before, where rage and anger and polarization are what drives the traffic on the
internet.
And we don't, it's a question of building the commons.
Ideally, I don't know how to get there.
So I'm not pretending to have a solution.
But the commons of discourse about this particular issue
about vaccines has been largely destroyed by the edges,
by the drug companies and the advocates on the one side,
and the people who just criticize and think that even though the data are flawed,
that there's no way vaccines can be beneficial. And to have those people screaming at each other,
does nothing to improve the health of the 95% of the people in the middle who want
to know what the rational way to go forward is and protect their families from COVID and
live a good life and be able to participate in the economy.
And that's the problem.
I don't have a solution.
Well, there's a difficult problem for spotifying YouTube.
I don't know if you heard this is a thing that Joe Rogan is currently going through as a platform,
whether to censor the conversation that, for example, Joe is having.
So I don't know if you heard, but Neil Young and other musicians have kind of spoke out
and saying they're going to leave the platform because
Joe Rogan is allowed
to be on this platform having these kinds of conversations with the likes of Robert Malone.
And it's clear to me that spotifying YouTube are being significantly influenced by these
extreme voices, like you mentioned, on each side.
And it's also clear to me that Facebook is the same.
And it was going back and forth.
In fact, that's why Facebook has been oscillating on the censorship as like one group gets louder than the other,
depending on whether it's an election year.
There's several things to say here.
So one, it does seem, I think you put it really well, it would be amazing if these platforms could find mechanisms to listen to the center,
to the big center that's actually going to be affected by the results of the our pursuit of
scientific truth. Listen to those voices. I also believe that most people are intelligent enough
to process information and to make up their own minds.
Like they're not in terms of, it's complicated, of course, because we've just been talking
about advertisement and how people can be influenced.
But I feel like if you have raw, long form podcasts or programs where people express their
mind and express their argument in full.
I think people can hear it to make up their own mind.
If those arguments have a platform on which they can live, then other people could provide
better arguments if they disagree with it.
Now, we as human beings, as rational as intelligent human beings, can look at both
and make up our minds. And that's where social media can be very good at like this collective
intelligence. We together listen to all of these voices and make up our mind, humble ourselves
actually often. You know, you think, you know, like you're an expert, say you have a PhD
and a certain thing, so there's
this confidence that comes with that.
And the collective intelligence, uncensored, allows you to humble yourself eventually.
Like as you discover, you know, all it takes is a few times, you know, looking back five
years later realizing, I was wrong.
And that's really healthy for a scientist that's really healthy for anybody to go through and only through having that open discourse can you really have that that said Spotify also just like Pfizer is a company Why? This podcast, I don't know if you know what RSS feeds are, but podcasts can't be censored.
So Joe is in the unfortunate position. He only lives on Spotify. So Spotify has been actually
very good at saying we're staying out of it for now. But RSS, this is pirate radio. Nobody
can censor. It's the internet. So financially in terms of platforms,
this cannot be censored, which is why podcasts are really beautiful. And so if Spotify or YouTube
wants to be the host of podcasts, I think where they flourish is free expression, no matter how crazy.
Yes, but I do want to push back a little bit on what you're saying.
I have anti-facts, friends who I love.
They're dear, cherished friends, and they'll send me stuff and it'll take me an hour to go
through what they sent to see if it is credible.
And usually it's not.
It's not a random sample of the anti-vax argument.
I'm not saying I can disprove the anti-vax argument, but I am saying that it's almost like we were
talking about how medical science, clinical trials, the presentation of clinical trials
to physicians could be improved.
And the first thing we came up with is to have pre-publication transparency in the peer
review process.
So bad information, biased information,
doesn't get out as if it's legitimate
and you can't put it back, recapture it once it gets out.
I think there's an element of that
in the arguments that are going on about vaccines.
And they're on both sides,
but I think the anti-vax side puts out more units of information,
claiming to show that the vaccines don't work.
And I guess in an ideal situation,
there would be real-time fact checking by independent people,
not to censor it, but to just say that study was set up
to do this, and this is what the conclusions were,
so the way it was stated is on do this and this is what the conclusions were so the way
it was stated is on one side of this argument. But that's what I'm arguing. I
agree with you. What I'm arguing is that this big network of humans that we have
that is the collective intelligence can do that real-time if you allow it to, if you
encourage people to do it. And the scientists opposed to listen I interact with a lot of colleagues a lot of friends that are scientists. They roll their eyes their responses like
Like they don't want to interact with this, but it that that's just not the right response
When I huge number of people believe this it is your job as communicators to defend your ideas.
It is no longer the case that you go to a conference and defend your ideas to two other
nerves that have been working on the same problem for, I mean, sure, you can do that, but
then you're rejecting the responsibility you haveit or implicitly accepted when you go into this field that you will defend the ideas of truth
And the way to defend them is in the open battlefield of ideas and become a better communicator
I mean and I believe that when you have a lot you said you invested one or two hours in this particular
But that's the little ants interacting at scale. I think that allows us to progress
Towards truth at least you know at least that hope so I think you're an optimist
I want to work with you a little bit on this
Let's say a person like Joe Rogan who by the way had me on his podcast and let me
Amazing conversation everything you write it it. Well thank you.
I did too.
And I didn't know Joe, I didn't know much about his podcast.
And he pushed back on Joe a bunch, which is great.
And he was a gentleman.
He was a gentleman.
And we had it out.
In fact, he put one clip at one point, he said something that was a little bit wrong and
I corrected him.
And he had the guy who...
Jamie.
He had Jamie check it and was very forthright and saying, yeah, you know, John got
a right here.
We got to modify this in any of that in any of it.
You got him.
Well, I wasn't trying to get him.
I just tried to.
Yeah, you're totally was there's a beautiful exchange.
There's so much respect in the room pushing back and forth.
That was great.
Yeah.
So I respect him.
And I think when he has somebody on who's a dyed in the wool anti-faxor, the question
is how could you balance if it needs balance in real time?
I'm not talking about afterwards.
I'm talking in real time.
Maybe you record, well, he does record it obviously
But maybe when there's a statement made that is
Made as if it's fact-based
maybe that statement should be checked by
some folks who
imaginary folks who are trustworthy and
who imaginary folks who are trustworthy. And in real time, as that discussion is being played
on the podcast, to show what independent experts say
about that claim.
That's a really interesting idea.
By the way, there's for some reason this idea popped
into my head now is, I think real time is very difficult.
And it's not difficult, but it kind of ruins the conversation because you want the idea of breathe.
Yeah.
I think what's very possible is before it's published, it's the pre-publication, before it's published, you let a bunch of people review it and they can add their voices in post.
Before it's published, they can add arguments,
arguments against certain parts. That's very interesting.
It's sort of as one podcast,
publish like addendums,
publish the peer review together with the publication.
That's very interesting.
I might actually do that.
That's really interesting.
Because I've been doing more debates
where at the same time, have multiple
people, which has a different dynamic because both people, I mean, it's really nice to have
the time to pause just by yourself, to fact check, to look at the study that was mentioned,
to understand what's going on.
So the peer review process, to have a little bit
of time, that's really interesting. I actually would, I'd like to try that to agree with you
on some point in terms of anti-vax. I've been fascinated by listening to arguments from
this community of folks that's been quite large called flat earthers, the people that believe the earth is flat. And I don't know if you've ever
listened to them or read their arguments, but it's fascinating how consistent and convincing it all
sounds when you just kind of take it in. Just like just take it in like listening normally. It's all very logical. Like if you don't think very well, no, I
So the thing is
the reality is
At the very basic human level with our limited cognitive
capabilities the earth is pretty flat when you go outside and you look at flat
So like when you use common sense reasoning
It's very easy to play to
that to convince you that the earth is flat. Plus this powerful organizations that want to manipulate
you and so on. But then there's, you know, the whole progress of science and physics of the past.
But that's difficult to integrate into your thought process. So it's very true that the people should listen to flat earthers because
It was very revealing to me how easily it is how easy it is to be convinced of basically anything
by
Charismatic arguments, right and if we're arguing about whether the flat earth is flat or not
As long as we're not navigating airplanes
and doing other kinds of things, trying to get satellites to do transmission, it's not
that important, what I believe.
But if we're arguing about how we approach the worst public health crisis in, I don't
know how long, I think we're getting worse than the Spanish flu now, I don't know what
the total global deaths with Spanish flu were, but in the United States,
we certainly have more deaths than we had from Spanish flu.
Was the economic pain and suffering?
Yes.
Yes.
And the damage to the kids and school and stuff.
We got a problem, and it's not going away, unfortunately.
So when we get a problem like that, it's not just an interesting bar room conversation
about whether the earth is flat.
There are millions of lives involved.
Let me ask you, yet another question that issue I raised with Pfizer, CO Albert Burla.
It's the question of revolving doors.
That there seems to be a revolving door between Pfizer, FDA and CDC.
People that have worked at the FDA now work at Pfizer, and vice versa,
including the CDC and so on. What do you think about that? So first of all, his response once
again is there's rules, there's very strict rules and we follow them. Do you think that's a problem?
Who, huh?
And also, maybe this is a good time to talk about this Pfizer play by the rules.
Let's one at a time.
One at a time.
Okay, and this isn't even about Pfizer, but it's an answer to the question.
Yes.
So, there's this drug, Agihilm helm that was approved by the FDA maybe six months ago.
It's a drug to prevent the progression of low grade Alzheimer's disease.
The target for drug development for Alzheimer's disease has been the amyloid reducing the amyloid
plaques in the brain, which correlate with the progression of Alzheimer's.
And biogen showed that its drug adje helm reduces amyloid plaques in the brain.
They did two clinical trials to determine the clinical efficacy, and they found that neither trial showed a meaningful benefit.
And in those two trials, 33% more people in the adje helm group developed symptomatic
brain swelling and bleeding than people in the placebo group.
There was an advisory committee convene to debate and determine how they felt about the
approvability of Agile Helm given those facts. And those facts aren't in dispute. They're in
biogen slides as well as FDA documents. The Advisory Committee voted 10 against approval
voted 10 against approval and one abstain. So that's essentially universal, unanimous vote against approving adje helm. Now the advisory committees have been pretty much cleansed
of financial conflicts of interest. So this advisory committee votes 10, no, one extension.
And the FDA over rules the unanimous opinion of its advisory committee
and approves the drug.
Three of the members of the advisory committee resign.
They say, we're not going to part.
If the FDA is not going to listen to a unanimous vote against approving this drug,
which shows more harm than benefit, undisputed.
We're not going to participate in this.
And the argument against approval is that the surrogate endpoint,
the reduction of amyloid, the progression of amyloid plaques,
is known by the FDA not to be a valid clinical indicator.
It doesn't correlate 27 studies have shown.
It doesn't correlate with clinical progression.
Interrupting the MRI plaques doesn't mean that your Alzheimer's doesn't get worse.
So it seems like it's a slam dunk and the FDA made a mistake and they should do whatever they do to protect their bureaucratic reputation
So the head of the Bureau of the FDA, the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research that approves new drugs
who had spent 16 years as an executive in the pharmaceutical industry, issued a statement and said, what we should do in this situation
is to loosen the prohibition of financial ties of interest
with the drug companies,
so we get less emotional responses.
Said this, it's in print.
People are just too emotional about this. People were just too emotional, the 10 people who voted against it, and the no people who
voted for it, it's all too emotional.
So this gets back, this is a long answer to your short question.
I think this is a wonderful window into the thinking of the FDA that financial conflicts of interest
don't matter in a situation when I think it's obvious that they would matter.
But there's not a direct financial conflict of interest.
It's kind of like it's not like like Albert said, there's rules.
I mean, you're not allowed to have direct financial conflict of interest.
It's indirect.
Right.
But what I'm saying is, I'm not denying what he said is true.
But the FDA, a high official in the FDA, is saying that we need to allow conflicts of
interest in our advisory committee meetings.
Power.
And that, she wants to change the rules.
So Albert Borla would still be playing by the rules, but it just shows how one side of
the thinking here is.
But you think that's influenced by the fact that there were pharmaceutical executives
working at the FDA and vice versa. And they think that's influenced by the fact that there were pharmaceutical executives working at the FDA and vice versa.
And they think that's a great idea.
Who gets to fix this? Do you think it should be just banned?
I don't know. Two separate questions.
One is, should the officials at the FDA come from Pharma and vice versa?
Yes. That's one question.
And the other question is should advisory committee members
be allowed to have financial conflicts of interest? I think in my opinion and people might say on
bias, I think I'd advisory committee people should not have conflicts of interest. I think there
are only interest ought to be the public interest. And that was true from my understanding of this situation.
It's the afterward in my book, I spend some time studying at a bad adje home.
I think it's a slam dunk that there ought to be no conflicts of interest.
Now the head of Cedar, Center for Drug Evaluation Research, thinks that that's going to give you
a biased result because we don't have company influence. And that I think shows how, how biased their thinking is,
that not having company influence is a bias.
That let me try to load that in.
I'm trying to empathize with the belief
that companies share of a voice at the table.
I mean, yeah, it's part of the game. They've convinced themselves that this is how it should be played.
But they have a voice at the table.
They've designed the studies.
Right.
That's their voice.
That's the whole point.
That's the data.
I mean, what bigger voice do you deserve?
But I do also think on the more challenging question, I do think that there should be a ban.
If you work at a pharmaceutical company, you should not be allowed to work at any regulatory
agency.
Yes.
You should not.
I mean, that, going back and forth, it just, even if it's 30 years later.
I agree.
And I have another nomination for a band.
We're in this crazy situation where Medicare is not allowed
to negotiate the price of drugs with the drug companies.
So the drug companies get a patent on a new drug.
Unlike every other developed country,
they can charge whatever they want.
So they have a monopoly on a utility,
because no one else can make the drug. Charge whatever they want and Medicare they have a monopoly on a utility, because no one else can make the drug.
Charge whatever they want and Medicare has to pay for it.
And you say, how did we get in this crazy situation?
So how we got here is that in 2003,
when Medicare Part D was passed,
Billy Towson was head of the Ways and Means Committee
in the House played a key role
in ushering this through with
the non-negotiations clause of it.
And after it was passed, Billy Thousand did not finish out his term in Congress.
He went to Pharma for $2 million a year job.
This is incredible.
You might think that a ban on that would be a good idea.
I spoke with Francis Collins, head of the NIH on his podcast. He and NIH have a lot of power over funding in science.
What are they doing right?
What are they doing wrong?
In this interplay with Big Pharma, how connected are they doing wrong in this interplay with big pharma?
How connected are they?
Again returning to the question. What are they doing right? What are they doing wrong in your view?
So my knowledge of the NIH is not as granular as my knowledge of pharma.
That said in broad brushstrokes, the NIH is doing the infrastructure work for all drug development.
I think they've participated in 100% of the drugs that have been approved by the FDA over
the past 10 years or so.
They've done infrastructure work.
What they do is not work on particular drugs, but they develop work on drug targets on targets
in the human body that can be affected by drugs and might be beneficial to turn on or off.
And then the drug companies, when they find a target that is mutable and potentially beneficial, then the drug companies can take
the research and choose to invest in the development of the drug, a specific drug. That's our model.
Now, 96% of the research that's done in clinical trials in the United States is about drugs and
devices, and only a fraction of the 4% that's left over is about preventive medicine and how to
make Americans healthier.
I think, again, from the satellite view, the NIH is investing more in science that can
lead to commercial development.
Rather than, as you said, at the beginning of the podcast,
there's no big fitness and lifestyle industry
that can counter pharma.
So I think at the NIH level, that countering can be done.
And the diabetes prevention program study that we talked about before,
where lifestyle was part of a randomized trial
and was shown to be more effective than metformin at preventing the development of diabetes.
That is absolute proof positive that investing in that kind of science can produce good
results.
So, I think that we're aimed at drug development and what we ought to be aimed at is an epidemiological
approach to improving the health of all Americans.
We rank 68th in the world in healthy life expectancy, despite spending an extra trillion and a
half dollars a year.
And I believe strongly that the reason why we've gotten in this crazy position is because the knowledge that we're producing
is about new drugs and devices, and it's not about improving population health.
In this problem, the NIH is the perfect institution to play a role in rebalancing our research
agenda.
And some of that is on the leadership side with Francis Collins and Anthony Fauci, not just speaking about basically everything that just leads to drug development, vaccine
development, but also speaking about healthy lifestyles and speaking about health, not
just sickness.
Yes.
And investing.
And investing.
I mean, it's like one fee is the other.
One you have to communicate to the public,
the importance of investing in health,
and that leads to you getting props
for investing in health,
and then you can invest in health more and more,
and that communicates, I mean,
everything that Anthony Fauci says,
or Francis Collins says, has an impact on scientists.
I mean, it know, it's, it's, it's sets the priorities.
I don't think they, it's the sad thing about leaders,
forgive me for saying the word, but mediocre leaders,
is they don't see themselves as part of a game.
They, they don't see the momentum. It's like a fish in the water. they don't see the momentum. It's a
coefficient of water. They don't see the water. Great leaders
stand up and reverse the direction of how things are going.
And I actually put a lot of responsibility. Some people say too
much, but whatever, I think leaders carry the responsibility,
I put a lot of responsibility on Anthony Fauci and Francis Collins for not actually speaking
a lot more about health, not in bigger, inspiring people in the power and the trustworthiness
of science.
That's on the shoulders of Anthony Fauci.
I'm going to abstain from that because I'm not expert enough.
But neither am I, but I'm opinionated.
I am too, but not on camera.
Yes.
No, but seriously, the problem is pretty simple.
That we're investing 96% of our clinical,
funding of clinical research and drugs and devices.
And 80% of our health is determined by how we live our lives.
Yes.
And this is ridiculous.
The United States is going further and further
behind the other wealthy countries in terms of our
health. We ranked 38th in healthy life expectancy in 2000. And now we're spending a trillion
and a half dollars extra. And we ranked 68th. We've gone down.
You have this excellent. There's a few charts that I'll overlay that tell the story in really powerful way. So one is the healthcare spending is
percentage of GDP that on the X-axis is years and the Y-axis is percentage. And the United
States as compared to other countries on average has been much larger and growing. We are now spending 7% more of our GDP, 17.7% versus 10.7% on health care.
7% and I think GDP is the fairest way to compare health care spending.
Per person in dollars, we're spending even the difference is even greater.
But other costs vary with GDP.
So let's stick with the conservative way to do it.
17.7 or, you know, 18% of GDP, 18% of GDP spent on healthcare,
7% higher than the comparable country average.
17.7% versus 10.7%.
7% higher. Right. And 7% of 23 trillion dollar GDP is more
than 1.5 trillion dollars a year in excess. And then you have another chart that shows healthcare
system performance compared to spending. And there's a point cloud of different countries.
The X-axis being healthcare spending is a percentage of GDP,
which we just talked about, that US is, you know,
7% higher than everyone of the average.
And then on the Y-axis is performance.
So X-axis spending, Y-axis performance, and there's a point cloud. We'll overlay this if
you're watching on YouTube. There are a bunch of countries that have high performance for what
they're spending. And then US is all alone on the right bottom side of the chart where it's low performance and high spending.
Correct.
So this is a system that is abiding by spending
that is directed by the most profitable ways
to deliver healthcare.
So you put that in the hands of big pharma,
is you maximize for profit,
you're going to decrease performance
and increase spending.
Yes, but I want to qualify that and say it's not all big pharma's fault.
They're not responsible for all the problems in our healthcare system.
They're not responsible for the administrative costs, for example, but they are the largest component of the rising, our rising healthcare costs.
And it has to do with this knowledge issue,
controlling the knowledge that doctors have
makes it so that doctors can live with this situation,
believing that it's optimal when it's a wreck.
Yeah.
Let me ask you the big. So as a physician,
the,
so everything you've seen,
we've talked about 80% of the impact on health is lifestyle.
How do we live longer?
What advice would you give to general people?
What, what space of ideas
result in living longer and higher quality lives.
Right.
This is a very simple question to answer.
Exercise for at least a half hour, at least five times a week.
Number one, number two, don't smoke.
Number three, maintain a reasonably healthy body weight.
Some people argue that being lower than a BMI of 25 is healthy.
I think that may be true, but I think getting above 30 is unhealthy.
And that ought to be...
Now, that's largely impacted by socioeconomic status.
And we don't want to blame the victims here.
So we got to understand that when we talk about all of these things, not cigarettes, but
exercise and a good diet and maintaining a healthy body weight, we have to include in
doing those things the impediments to people of lower socioeconomic
status being able to make those changes.
We've got to understand that personal responsibility accounts for some of this, but also social
circumstances accounts for some of it.
And back to your fish bowl analogy, if you're swimming in a fish bowl, if you live in a fish tank,
that's not being properly maintained, the approach wouldn't be to treat individual sick fish.
It would be to fix your fish tank to get the bacteria out of it and whatever bad stuff is in there
and make your fish tank healthier.
Well, we invest far less than the other wealthy countries do.
We're flipped.
We have the mirror image in the spending on social determinants of health and medical determinants
of health.
We have exactly the wrong order.
And not only does that choke off social determinants of health, which are very important,
but actually just the ratio,
even if you were spending,
if we raise the social spending
and raise our medical spending in proportion,
it's the ratio of social spending
to medical spending that's the problem.
So, and why do we do that?
Well, the answer is perfectly obvious
that the way to transfer money from working Americans
to investors is through the biomedical model,
not through the social health model.
And that's the problem for,
and I'd like to discuss this because the market
isn't gonna get us to a reasonable allocation.
All the other wealthy countries that are so much healthier than we are and spending so
much less than we are have some form of government intervention in the quality of the health
data that's available in the budgeting of health and social factors.
And we don't.
We're kind of the Wild West and we let the market determine those allocations
and it's an awful failure. It's a horrendous failure. So one argument against government
or sorry, an alternative to the government intervention is the market can work better if the citizenry has better information.
So one argument is that, you know,
communicators, like podcasts and so on,
but you know, all their channels of communication
will be the way to fight big farmer.
Your book is the way to, so by providing information,
the alternative to the
government intervention on every aspect of this, including communication with the doctors,
is to provide them other information and not allow the market to provide that information
by basically making it exciting to buy books, to get, make better and better communicators on Twitter through books, through op-eds, through
podcasts, through so on. So basically, because there's a lot of incentive to communicate against
the messages of Big Pharma. There is incentive, because people want to understand what's good
for their lives, and they're willing to listen to charismatic people that are able to clearly explain
What what is good for them and they do and more than 80% of people think that drugs cost too much and the drug industry is too
interested in profits
And but they still get influenced they can't you can't get the vote through Congress. Yeah, you know
Democrats and Republicans alike are taking money from Congress, and somehow it just
doesn't work out that these even small changes.
I mean, that the paired down part of Medicare, the, the plan for increasing Medicare and
negotiation drug costs in build back better.
It's literally going to reduce the number of new drugs that are beneficial,
uniquely beneficial, by about one new drug or two new drugs over 30 years.
It will have virtually an indecisurable impact.
And yet, Pharma is talking about the impact on innovation.
And if you vote for this,
if you let your congressman vote for this,
you're gonna severely slow down drug innovation.
And that's gonna affect the quality of your life.
down drug innovation and that's going to affect the quality of your life. Let me ask you about over medication that we've been talking about from different angles,
but one difficult question for me, I'll just pick one of the difficult topics, depression. So depression is a serious, painful condition, at least to a lot of people suffering in the
world.
And yet it is likely they were over prescribing antidepressants.
So as a doctor, as a patient, as a healthcare system, as a society, what do we do with that fact?
That people suffer, there's a lot of people suffering from depression, and there's also
people suffering from overprescribing of antidepressants.
Right.
So a paper in the New England Journal by Eric Turner showed that the data, if you put all
the data together from antidepressants, you find out that antidepressants are not effective
for people who are depressed but don't have a major depression.
Major depression is a serious problem.
People can't function normally. They have a hard time getting out
doing performing their normal social roles. But what's happened is that the
publicity, I mean, pro-zac nation was a good example of making the argument that
why should people settle for normal happiness when they can have better than normal happiness?
And if you're not having normal happiness, you should take a drug.
Well, that concept that serotonin metabolism is the root cause of depression is really
a destructive one.
We have drugs that change serotonin metabolism,
but we don't know if that's why antidepressants work
on major depression, and they don't certainly
don't work on everybody with major depression.
I forget what the number needed to treat is.
I think it's around one out of four people
have significant improvement.
But the people without major depression don't get better.
And the vast majority of these drugs are used for people without major depression.
So what's happened is that the feelings of life satisfaction of happiness and not sadness
have been medicalized. The normal range of feelings have been medicalized.
And that's not to say that they shouldn't be attended to.
But the evidence shows that attending to them by giving somebody a medicine doesn't help
except that they feel like somebody cares about them and believes that they're suffering.
But there are problems in living that give rise to much of this symptomatology of less than major depression and let's
call it what it is and figure out a way to help people in visual therapy, group therapy,
maybe lifestyle modification would work, we got to try that.
But let's call it what it is instead of saying, oh, you're in this vast basket of people who are depressed, so
we'll give you an antidepressant, even though the evidence shows that people who are suffering
from your level of depression don't get better.
And that's a consequence of not focusing on preventative medicine, the lifestyle changes,
all that kind of stuff.
Well, yes, but it's really a consequence of the drug companies creating the impression
that if you're sad, take a pill.
If you're a non-major depression, how do you overcome depression?
Well, you have to talk about what the problem is.
So talk therapy, lifestyle changes.
Well, no, I'm not jumping to that.
I'm saying that you ought to A, the way you feel must be respected.
Yeah, acknowledge that you're suffering.
Acknowledge that you're suffering and deal with healthcare providers who acknowledge that
you're suffering.
So let's take that first step.
And then-
Big first step.
Also.
Big first step.
Yeah.
Family docs are pretty good at that.
That's kind of the arena that caused me to go into family medicine, the subjective experience
of the patient.
Okay.
So you're a person who is not getting the enjoyment out of their life that they feel they ought to be patient. Okay, so you're a person who is not getting the enjoyment out of their
life that they feel they ought to be getting. Now, let's figure out why. And whether that
means some time with a social worker, some time with a psychiatrist, some time with a
psychiatric nurse, I'm not sure how you'd best do that most effectively and efficiently,
but that's what you need to do. And it may be that there's a marital problem and there's something going on.
And one of the spouses can't find satisfaction in the life they have to live within their
relationship.
Maybe there's a past history of trauma or abuse that somebody is projecting under their
current situation. Maybe there's socioeconomic circumstances where they can't find a job that gives them
self-respect and enough money to live.
All, you know, an infinite range of things.
But let's figure out, make a diagnosis first.
The diagnosis isn't that the person feels sadder than they feel, than they want to feel, the diagnosis is why
does the person feel sadder than they want to feel?
You mentioned, this is what made you want to get
into family medicine as a doctor.
What do you think about the saying,
save one life, save the world?
This was always moving to me about doctors,
because you have this human in front of you.
And your time is worth money.
Your what you prescribe and your efforts
after the visit or worth money.
And it seems like the task of the doctors to not think about any of that.
Or not the task,
but it seems like a great doctor,
despite all that just forgets it all and just cares about the one human.
And somehow that feels like
the love and effort you put into helping one person is the thing that will save the world.
It's not like some economic argument or some political argument or financial argument.
It's a very human drive that ultimately is behind all of this that
will do good for the world.
Yes.
I think that's true.
And at the same time, I think it's equally true that all physicians need to have a sense
of responsibility about how the common resources are allocated to serve all the whole populations interest
best.
That's attention that you have as a physician.
Let's take the extreme example.
Let's say you had a patient in front of you who, if you gave a $10 billion pill to,
you would save their life.
I would just be tortured by that as a physician
because I know that $10 billion spent properly
in an epidemiologically guided way
is gonna save a whole lot more lives than one life.
So it's also your responsibility as a physician
to walk away from that patient. I wouldn't say that. I think it's your your responsibility as a physician to walk away from that patient.
I wouldn't say that. I think it's your responsibility to be tortured by the church.
That's exactly right.
The human condition.
That's a tough job, but yeah, to maintain your humanity through it all. Yeah, but you've been asking at different points
in this conversation, why are doctors so complacent
about the tremendous amount of money we're spending?
Why do they accept knowledge from different sources
that may not pan out when they really know the truth?
And the answer is that they're trying to do their best for their
patients. And it's the same kind of torture to figure out what the hell is going on with
the data. And that's a sort of future project. And maybe people will read my book and maybe
they'll get a little more excited about it, become more legitimate and practice.
I would feel like my life was worthwhile if that happened.
But at the same time, they've got to do something with the patient in front of them.
They've got to make a decision.
And they probably, there are not many weirdos like me who invest their life in figuring
out what's behind the data,
they're trying to get through the day
and do the right thing for their patient.
So they're tortured by that decision too.
And so if you're not careful,
Big Pharma can manipulate that drive
to try to help the patient,
that humanity of dealing with the uncertainty of it all,
like what is the best thing to do? Big pharma can step in and use money to manipulate that humanity.
Yeah, I would state it quite differently. It's sort of an out rather than an opt-in. Big pharma
will do that, and you need to opt out of it. What advice would you give to a young person today in high school or college, stepping into
this complicated world full of advertisements of big powerful institutions, of big rich
companies, how to have a positive impact in the world, how to live a life they can be proud of.
I would say should that person who has only good motives go into medicine? They have an inclination
to go into medicine and they've asked me what I think about that given what I know about the
undermining of American health care at this point. And my answer is, if you
got the calling, you should do it. You should do it because nobody's going to do it better
than you. And if you don't have the calling and you're in it for the money, you're not
going to be proud of yourself.
How do you prevent yourself from doing, from letting the system change you over years and years,
like letting the game, pharmaceutical influence affect you?
It's a very hard question because the sociologic norms are to be affected.
the sociologic norms are to be affected and to trust the sources of information that are largely controlled by the drug industry.
And that's why I wrote Sickening is to try and help those people in the medical profession
to understand that what's going on right now looks normal,
but it's not.
The health of Americans is going downhill.
Our society is getting ruined by the money that's getting pulled out of other social
beneficial uses to pay for health care that is not helping us.
So fundamentally, the thing that is normal,
not question the normal, don't,
if you conform hesitantly.
Well, you have to conform.
You can't become a doctor without conforming. I just made it through.
But there aren't many, and it's hard work. But you have to conform. And even with my
colleagues in my own practice, I couldn't convince them that some of the beliefs they
had about how best to practice weren't accurate.
There's one scene.
A younger physician had prescribed hormone replacement therapy.
This is back in 2000, 2001.
Had prescribed hormone replacement therapy for one of my patients who happened to be a really
good personal friend. And I saw that patient covering for my colleague at one point.
And I saw that her hormone replacement therapy had been renewed.
And I said, are you having hot flashes or any problem?
No, no, no, no.
But a doctor so and so said it's better for my health.
And I said, no, it's not.
The research is showing that it's not. It's harmful for your health. And I said, no, it's not the research is showing that it's not, it's harmful for your health.
And I think you should stop it.
So my colleague approached me when she saw the chart
and said, wait a minute, that's my patient.
Maybe your friend, but it's my patient.
And I went to a conference from my alma mater medical school.
And they said that healthy people should be given
hormone replacement.
And I said, there's got to be drug companies involved
in this.
And she said, no, no, no, it was at my university.
It was, it was not a drug company thing.
We didn't go to a Caribbean island.
I said, do you have the syllabus?
She said, yeah.
And she went and got the syllabus and sure enough,
it was sponsored by drug company.
There everywhere.
They're everywhere, and it's back to Koon that groups of experts share unspoken assumptions
and in order to be included in that group of experts, you have to share those unspoken assumptions.
And what I'm hoping to do with my book, Sickening, and
being here having this wonderful conversation with you is to create an alternative to this
normal that people can pursue and practice better medicine and also prevent burnout. I mean,
about half the doctors complain that
they're burned out and they've had it. And I think that this is a subject of I don't have
data on this, this is just my opinion. But I think that a lot of that burnout is so-called
moral injury from practicing in a way that the docs know isn't working.
in a way that the docs know isn't working.
It's not actually providing an alternative to the normalist expanding, the normalist shifting,
the normal just like with Koon, I mean, you're basically
looking for her to shift the way medicine is done
through to the original, I mean, to the intent
that it represents the ideal of medicine of healthcare.
Yeah, in Kunian terms, to have a revolution.
And that revolution would be to practice medicine in a way that will be epidemiologically
most effective, not most profitable for the people who are providing you with what's
called knowledge. You helped a lot of people as a doctor, as an educator, live better lives, live longer,
but you yourself are immortal being.
Do you think about your own mortality?
Do you think about your death?
Are you afraid of death?
I'm not.
I've faced it. I've faced it.
I've been close.
You yourself?
Yeah.
Yeah.
How do you think about it?
What was the deal gained from having come close to death?
The fact that the whole thing ends.
It's liberating.
It's very liberating.
I mean, I'm serious.
I was close and not too long ago.
And it was a sense of, you know, this may be the way it ends. And I've done my best. It's not
been perfect. And if it ends here, it ends here. The people around me are trying to do my best. It's not been perfect.
And if it ends here, it ends here.
The people around me are trying to do their best.
And in fact, I got pulled out of it.
But it didn't look like I was going to get pulled out of it.
Are you ultimately grateful for the ride, even though it ends?
Well, it's a little...
I think so.
If I know, you can't take the ride, if you know what the...
It's going to end well.
It's not the real ride, it's just a ride.
But I haven't gone through the whole thing.
I definitely freed me of a sense of anxiety about death and it
Said to me do you best every day?
Because it's gonna end sometime
I apologize for the ridiculously big question, but what do you think is the the meaning of life of our human existence?
of life, of our human existence.
I think it's to care about something and do your best with it.
Whether it's being a doctor and trying to make sure that the greatest number of people get the best health care,
or it's a gardener who wants to have the most beautiful plants or it's a grandparent who wants to have a good relationship with their grandchildren.
But whatever it is that gives you a sense of meaning, as long as it doesn't hurt other people,
to really commit yourself to it. That commitment, that being in that commitment for me is the meaning of life.
Put your whole heart and soul into the thing.
What is it? The Bukhowsky poem, Go All the Way.
John, you're an incredible human being, incredible educator.
Like I said, I recommend people listen to your lectures.
It's so refreshing to see that clarity of thought
and brilliance.
And obviously your criticism will be a big pharma or your illumination of the mechanisms
of big pharma is really important at this time.
So I really hope people read your book, a seconding that's out today or depending on when
this comes out.
Thank you so much for spending your
extremely valuable time with me today. It was amazing. Well, Lex, I want to
back to you thanks for engaging in this conversation, for creating the space to
have it and creating a listenership that is interested in understanding serious
ideas and I really appreciate the conversation.
And I should mention that offline you told me you listened to the Gilbert's
trying episode. So for anyone who don't know Gilbert's trying another epic human being that should
check out. If you don't know anything about mathematics or linear algebra, go look him up. He's
one of the great mathematics educators of all time. So, of all the people you mentioned to me, I appreciate that you mentioned him,
because he is a rock star of mathematics.
John, thank you so much for talking to us. This was awesome.
Great, thank you.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with John Abramson.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you some words from Marcus Aurelius.
Waste no time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one. Thank you for
listening and hope to see you next time. Thank you.