Zantac Lawsuit


Researching drug company and regulatory malfeasance for over 16 years
Humanist, humorist

Thursday, May 06, 2010

The GMC and GSK's Alistair Benbow


Alistair Benbow - Subject of a complaint made to the GMC in 2007
Image: news.bbc.co.uk



Earlier this week I wrote about the strange case of Dr Sarah Myhill MB BS who has fallen victim of the General Medical Council [GMC]. [Back Story]

An anonymous email to the GMC suggested that they [the GMC] were colluding with GlaxoSmithKline. The email even contained a photograph of Glaxo's Alistair Benbow posing for a picture with Ben Goldacre [the main focus of the email]

Debate on various Internet forums and Facebook pages still continues and many visits to this blog continue to stream in from Ben Goldacre's web forum, 'BadScience'

I'd like to repost a series of correspondence between Charles Medawar and the GMC.

Medawar had wrote to the GMC:

1 February 2007



Dear Sirs,

I am writing to enquire about the possibilities and appropriate procedures for making a complaint about a registered medical practitioner, in circumstances which do not appear to be covered by the guidance given on the GMC website. I should be grateful for your advice about how to proceed, in the light of the following possibly complicating factors:

1. The complaint I seek to bring does not directly relate to standards of treatment or practice by the individual concerned. I am not a patient of the doctor in question, nor do I have reason to believe that he lacks qualities that would call into question his fitness to practice medicine in a clinical setting. My concern is about the conduct of medically qualified individuals in an institutional/organisational setting.

2. The subject of this prospective complaint is a well qualified physician who acted as the principal spokesperson for the manufacturers (his employers) of a widely prescribed antidepressant drug. I would wish to allege that, in that capacity, and on several occasions, he offered inappropriately reassuring advice about the safety profile (benefit-to-harm ratio) of that drug, in programmes broadcast on television (Panorama: BBC-TV), distributed worldwide. I would wish to allege [a] that his statements were (by omission and/or commission) inaccurate, misleading and possibly reckless; [b] that the statements he made did not reflect the evidence to which he had unique access, whether or not he availed himself of those data. (It is relevant to note here that some submissions to the UK drug regulatory authorities were made in his name); and [c] that substantial harm very probably resulted from his failure either to critically assess the evidence available to him, and/or to his presumption that there was no cause for concern.

In short, and in the light of the evidence that has since become publicly available, this man’s statements on television leave the impression that he conceived his primary duty of care to be to his employers, rather than to the many people (including health professionals) likely to have trusted his judgment as a doctor, and to have been influenced by the reassurances he gave. (Panorama has broadcast four programmes on this subject and this man was interviewed for the first two, but made appearances in all four). I believe that, in the UK, the audience for each of these programmes has been over 3.5 million viewers).

3. My status as a prospective complainant is untypical. The complaint I would wish to bring would and should be in my name - but in my professional capacity as a medicines policy analyst and reporter, with a particular interest in the marketing and effects of this (and related) medicinal products. Therefore it would also seem most appropriate to bring forward any complaint under the letterhead of the organisation (Social Audit Ltd) which employs me in this capacity.

By way of background information, I am enclosing a copy of the review posted to the Social Audit website of the Panorama programme broadcast on 29 January: www.socialaudit.org.uk now gets 750,000 visits/year. I understand this review is to also be posted to bmj.com

I would welcome your advice on how best to proceed. Thank you for your attention; I look forward to hearing from you.


For the GMC's response and further correspondence regarding this complaint click HERE

**Remember to read each page to the end and click on the relevant link.



Meantime, here is an edited performance of GlaxoSmithKline's Alistair Benbow that so incensed Charles Medawar to make a complaint to the GMC.

*The other person in this edited footage is MHRA Chairman, Alasdair Breckenridge.

Breckenridge is a former employee of GlaxoSmithKline.




Fid

ORDER THE PAPERBACK
'THE EVIDENCE, HOWEVER, IS CLEAR...THE SEROXAT SCANDAL' By Bob Fiddaman
SIGNED COPIES HERE OR UNSIGNED FROM CHIPMUNKA PUBLISHING

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