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Unethical Behavior of Pharmacists
Stephen Barrett, M.D.
Most pharmacists who work in retail pharmacies have a serious
potential conflict of interest. On the one hand, they are professionals,
expected to be knowledgeable about drugs and to dispense them
in a responsible and ethical manner. On the other hand, their
income depends on the sale of products. Before the FDA's OTC (Over-the-Counter)
Drug Review drove most of the ineffective ingredients out of OTC
drug products, few pharmacists protested or attempted to protect
their customers from wasting money on products that did not work.
Dubious Products
Today nearly all pharmacies carry irrationally formulated dietary
supplements, and many stock dubious herbal and homeopathic products
in addition to standard drugs. Chain drugstores are more likely
to do so than individually owned stores. Pharmacy trade publications,
such as Natural Pharmacist, suggest that "natural
products" offer opportunities to make up for prescription
drug revenues lost as a result of managed care and other cost-containment
programs. One pharmacy supplier aligned with this trend is The JAG Group
of San Clemente, California, whose comprehensive program features:
- Profit margins greater than those for prescription drugs.
- Product lines that typically produce a 100% markup or more.
- A 3-day seminar covering "the importance of wellness"
and how to "use natural products to prevent and/or improve
chronic disease states."
- WellStore Software designed as a sales and marketing tool
to: (a) capture customer information, including email address,
(b) categorize products to market directly to customer needs,
(c) provide thank you notes to encourage loyalty, (d) provide
product information to print for customers, and (e) track patient
health histories to create fee-for-service revenue.
- Pharmacist PlusTMSoftware with causes, signs and symptoms
of 223 common ailments and specific dietary, homeopathic and
herbal recommendations. [I believe that
providing such information to customers would be outside the
scope of pharmacy practice and would constitute the illegal practice
of medicine and would violate state laws against theft by deception.
Furthermore, homeopathic products
have no proven effectiveness.]
- Drug Depletion Software telling "what supplements patients
need to replace vital nutrients that are depleted by many of
the prescription drugs they are taking." [I
do not believe there are many situations in which this is important.]
- Nutritional Analysis Software (an electronic nutritionist)
to allow the pharmacist to charge a fee for providing consultations
to patients -- including assessment of "nutritional needs
that best fit your patient's gender, age, lifestyle, analysis
of food intake and identification of nutritional deficiencies"
and "recommendations for optimum nutrient levels to maintain
good health." [I do not believe any
software can do this.]
- A TV commercial, radio spots, newspaper and yellow page ads,
doctor letters, and a column that can be published under the
pharmacist's own name.
- A personalized Internet web page, which adds the pharmacist
to a list of "complementary and natural healthcare practitioners
worldwide" that so that "when someone searches for
a natural healthcare practitioner, they will find you."
[I do not believe that pharmacists are
qualified or legally permitted to be "natural healthcare
practitioners."]
- An in-store display unit designed to let customers see a
variety of products, books and services in one place.
- Answers to questions needed "when a customer is standing
in front of you" or when "you want to know about a
new fad or product your customer just asked you about."
- "The best experts in the fields of pharmacy, natural
products and complementary medicine available" by picking
up the phone or accessing the internet.
In a recent interview, a JAG's president said that nearly 500
pharmacies were enrolled in her company's program [1].
Delusion-Based Practices
HealthTrust Alliance,
of Lawrenceville, Georgia, offers an elaborate system for marketing
dietary supplement, herbal, aromatherapy, and homeopathic products
to pharmacy customers. The system includes:
- The Life-Span Drug Depletion Program, through which pharmacists
inform customers and their physicians that their prescription
drugs place the customer at risk for nutrient deficiencies. The
program includes sending form letters to patients which state
that, "Based on our latest computer search of prescriptions,
we have discovered that you are taking certain prescription medications
that may be causing a nutritional deficiency. We are writing
to inform you that these prescriptions are depleting your body
of vital nutrients." Telemarketing is also recommended.
The program includes forms to be given to customers who bring
prescriptions for any of a large number of drugs, advising them
that various supplements are needed. The Life Span Care software
system "tracks patient outcomes by integrating the patient's
prescription therapy with all supplemental products, herbs, homeopathy,
aromatherapy, flower essences, and behavioral lifestyle changes."
[2] The 8-person Life-Span medical advisory board includes Jay M. Holder,
D.C. (who for years falsely claimed to have a medical degree)
and Daniel
G. Clark, M.D., whose Florida license was revoked in 1983
for unprofessional practice.
Life-Span seminars suggest many strategies for persuading
customers that their current nutrient needs are not being met,
even if they are already taking multivitamins containing some
of the recommended nutrients. For example:
- You don't get what you need in your food anymore.
- The RDAs really stand for "Really Dumb Allowances,"
were set 30-40 years ago, and are too low.
- The leading multivitamin brands are incomplete and don't
contain therapeutic amounts of some of the ingredients you need.
(The sales aids include charts comparing Life-Span products and
the three leading multivitamins.)
- Supplements should be taken several times a day because after
a few hours, "water-soluble vitamins are excreted out of
your body."
- Trust me. Our products are superior. As a professional pharmacists
I would not sell them if they were not.
- The vitamins we carry are the ones I take myself and give
to my family.
The Drug Depletion Reference Manual advises that every customer
should be taking a multivitamin, flax seed oil, an acidophilus
product, and calcium (mostly for people over 55). It also contains
"quick reference charts" showing which "nutritional
support" products, herbals, homeopathic remedies, aromatherapy
products and "flower essences" to recommend for over
200 drug products. According to the manual:
Drug depletion is a major revenue source for any pharmacy.
It is estimated that approximately 70% of the prescriptions filled
deplete the body of some nutrient that needs to be replaced in
order to prevent a nutritional deficiency. . . . Pharmacies who
implement drug depletion correctly could double their store profitability
in six months. [3]
- Pharmacy-Based Lab Testing, through which pharmacists arrange
for hair analysis (to test for toxicity), saliva tests (for hormones),
stool examinations (for parasites), and various other nonstandard
tests that they use as a basis for prescribing products. Company
literature estimates that each test will generate $200 to $300
per month in products sales, (half of which represents profit).
It also states:
Many pharmacists will average 3 or 4 tests per day. Once your
confidence is built, you will order laboratory testing on approximately
30% of your patients. After completing a year of laboratory test
training, you will be able to target laboratory tests that will
result in approximately a 90% success rate in identifying nutritional
deficiency or toxicity you are looking for with your patient.
- Individual consultations, during which pharmacists charge
fees for advising patients how to use the company's products.
The suggested rate is $100 per hour. HealthTrust literature claims
that Life-Span-trained pharmacists can help patients with yeast
infections, numbness and tingling of the fingers, mitral valve
prolapse, and back pain, and 32 other conditions or symptoms.
The products -- more than 150 of which are marketed under the
brand name of "Natural Creations" -- include Verma
Comp (for strengthening the body's action against intestinal
parasites); Tri Folio Comp (for "fortification"
of the lymphatic system and spleen); Cardio Circulation
(for chest constriction, difficult breathing, ankle swelling);
and Carcinosim Miasm (a homeopathic product to provide "system
support" to individuals with an inherited "tendency
toward cancer"). In October 1999, at a conference on Internet
Pharmacies, HealthTrust's chief executive officer reported that
more than 300 Life-Span pharmacists were "already selling
out-of-pocket consultative services from $50 to $150 per patient."
[Note: On March 13, 2001, he told me that the company had switched
from "Natural Creations Products" to another product
line about a year ago.] On January 11, 2002, I found an online
directory that listed about 360 Life-Span pharmacies nationwide.
- Weekly teleconferences and other educational activities for
learning how to implement the various programs.
Federal drug laws prohibit the marketing of products for the
prevention or treatment of disease that have not been proven effective
for their intended use. State laws do not permit pharmacists to
engage in "diagnosis" or "prescribing" that
constitute the practice of medicine. I believe that (a) many of
the products are being marketed illegally; (b) most of the conditions
for which participating pharmacists are encouraged to treat are
far outside the legitimate scope of pharmacy; (c) pharmacists
who offer the recommended testing and consultation procedures
are practicing medicine without a license and could jeopardize
their own license to practice pharmacy; and (d) their customers
are at great risk for misdiagnosis, mistreatment, and financial
exploitation. If you have been misdiagnosed
or mistreated by a pharmacist using this system, please telephone
me at (610) 437-1795.
Dubious Compounding
Compounding is the creation of a drug product by mixing ingredients.
Today, only about 1% of new prescriptions are compounded, but
compounding appears to be undergoing a resurgence. Compounding
has legitimate uses and is most often done honestly at physician
request. However, the primary organizations that promote it are
aligned with a chelation therapy organization, and a newsletter
for compounders has been promoting treatment concepts and ingredients
that lack scientific substantiation [4].
Investigative Reports
If asked directly whether an ineffective product is worthwhile,
most pharmacists will answer to the best of their ability. However,
many are poorly informed.
- In 1985, reporters from Consumer Reports magazine
visited 30 drugstores in Pennsylvania, Missouri, and California.
The reporters complained of feeling tired or nervous, and asked
whether a vitamin product might help. Seventeen were sold a vitamin
product and one was sold an amino acid preparation. Only 9 of
the 30 pharmacists suggested that a doctor be consulted [5].
- Not long afterward, two dietitians examined the labels of
vitamin products at five pharmacies, three groceries, and three
health-food stores in New Haven. Products were considered appropriate
if they contained between 50% and 200% the U.S. RDA and no more
than 100% of others for which Estimated Safe and Adequate Daily
Dietary Intakes exist. Only 16 out of 105 (15%) of the multivitamin/mineral
products met these criteria [6].
- In 1987, two pharmacy school professors sent a questionnaire
to 1000 pharmacists in the Detroit metropolitan area and received
197 responses. Among the 116 who identified their five most-common
reasons for recommending vitamins or minerals, 66 (56%) listed
fatigue and 57 (49%) listed stress [7]. (Neither reason is valid.)
In response to a question about homeopathy, 27.4% said it was
"useful," 18.3% judged it "useless," and
54.3% "didn't know." [8]
- A more recent survey found that 47% of pharmacy students
at two Philadelphia schools were taking supplements. The study
demonstrated that many of them mistakenly believed that supplements
could improve energy and relieve stress and that year of school
had only a modest influence on these beliefs [9].
What Happened to Ethics?
Merlin Nelson, M.D., Pharm.D., coauthor of the above-mentioned
survey, has asked pharmacists why they promote and sell food supplements
to healthy individuals who don't need them. He concluded:
- The most common reason is greed. Advertising creates a demand
that the pharmacist can supply and make a profit. "If I
don't sell them, they'll just go to my competition down the street,"
is a common response. Pharmacists are apparently more interested
in a sale than in the patient's welfare. . . .
Rather than just recommending a multivitamin to patients concerned
about obtaining enough vitamins in their diet, pharmacists should
offer sound nutritional advice or provide referrals to experts
in nutrition such as registered dietitians. [10]
Pharmacists are also the only recognized health professionals
who sell tobacco products, which cause more death and years of
lost life than any other consumer product. Although some pharmacists
have stopped, the majority do not consider tobacco sales unethical.
The American Pharmaceutical Association's code of ethics does
not state that pharmacists have a duty to prevent dubious products
from lining their shelves. Five states have laws declaring it
illegal for pharmacists to sell ineffective products, but these
laws have never been applied to the sale of OTC products. In 1995,
the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy passed a resolution
critical of homeopathy. Though commendable, this resolution has
had no visible impact on pharmacy practice.
In March 1998, at a symposium sponsored by the Good Housekeeping
Institute, former FDA Commissioner David A. Kessler, M.D, J.D.,
sharply criticized the willingness of a neighborhood chain drugstore
to sell supplements whose labels made improper claims. Next to
the pharmacy counter, he had counted 26 displays with such claims
as: "targeted mind improvement," "advanced memory
and concentration formula," memory support complex,"
helps increase serotonin level," "immune enhancer,"
"leg health," "cartilage rejuvenation and repair,"
and "As featured in the book, 'The Arthritis Cure.'"
He told the symposium audience:
I wonder whether many pharmacists really have given up their
roles as health professionals, as pharmacists. Maybe they're
no longer in control of the store. Maybe they're just behind
the counter, and anything in front of that counter goes. But
it's time for that profession to take responsibility for what
it's selling. [11]
I believe that pharmacists have as much of an ethical duty
to discourage use of inappropriate products as physicians do to
advise against unnecessary surgery or medical care. Very few pharmacists
do so. Pharmacy journal editors ignore this problem. Hospital-based
pharmacists generally exhibit a higher standard of practice, but
very few of them are speaking out about the problems described
in this article.
If anything, pharmacy organizations appear to be moving in
the opposite direction. In 1999, for example,
the Association of Natural Medicine
Pharmacists (ANMP) and the Texas
Pharmacy Association announced a certificate program to help
pharmacists establish "natural medicine sections" in
their stores. The program includes 8 hours of home study followed
by a 16-hour seminar and some case studies. The seminar has four
modules. Module 1 focuses on herbal therapeutics and regulatory
issues. Module 2 provides "an overview of vitamins, antioxidants,
and essential fatty acids, with a focus on drug-nutrient depletion."
Module 3 provides "an overview and description of popular
alternative therapies with a focus on the general principles of
homeopathy." Module 4 focuses on marketing [12]. The course
description and information on the Web site makes it clear that
much of the information will be invalid. ANMP's Web site describes
it as "a professional association serving pharmacists and
those interested in the field of natural medicines."
What You Can Do
If a pharmacy you know refuses to sell tobacco products, herbs,
and homeopathic remedies, try to acknowledge this in the letters
column in your local paper. Local papers seldom publish antiquackery
messages that attack specific products or practitioners. However,
they might be willing to print a letter praising ethical behavior.
William J. Bennetta, president of The
Textbook League, suggests writing something like:
Unscrupulous and irresponsible pharmacies throughout the country
are peddling herbal junk, homeopathic water, and other quackish
junk to unsuspecting rubes, but the XYZ Pharmacy on Maple Street
in Ourtown has declined to engage in such ripoffs. Three cheers
for XYZ!
References
- Garneau J. Interview in Havlick DH. Tomorrow's pharmacy today
according to JAG. Natural Pharmacy 3(6):1,20-21, 1999.
- HealthTrust Alliance advertisement, Natural Pharmacy 3(11):2,
1999.
- Woodruff RD. Drug depletion. In Drug Depletion Reference
Manual. Lawrenceville, GA: HealthTrust Alliance, 1998.
- Bouts BA. The misuse of compounding
by pharmacists. Quackwatch.
- The vitamin pushers. Consumer Reports 51:170-175, 1986.
- Bell LS, Fairchild M. Evaluation of commercial multivitamin
supplements. Journal of the American Dietetic Association 87:341-343,
1987.
- Nelson MV and others. A
survey of pharmacists' recommendations for food supplements in
the U.S.A. and the U.K. Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and
Therapeutics 15:131-139, 1990.
- Nelson MV, Bailie GR. Pharmacists'
perceptions of alternative health approaches: A comparison between
U.S. and British pharmacists. Journal of Clinical Pharmacy
and Therapeutics 15:141-146, 1990.
- Ranelli PL, Dickerson RN, White KG. Use
of vitamin and mineral supplements by pharmacy students.
American Journal of Hospital Pharmacy 50:674-678, 1993.
- Nelson MV. Promotion and selling of unnecessary food supplements:
Quackery or ethical pharmacy practice? American Pharmacy NS28(10):34-36,
1988.
- Kessler DA. Why
the FDA does not approve supplements. Speech at Good Housekeeping
Institute Consumer Safety Symposium: Dietary Supplements &
Herbal Remedies. New York, March 3, 1998.
- Grauds C. Certified knowledge: Phytomedicinals and alternatuve
medicine certificate program. Natural Pharmacy 3(12):6-7, 1999.
Misuse of Compounding By
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This article was revised on March 13,
2001.