Big Pharma (book)
ISBN 978-1845291396 | |
Big Pharma: How the World's Biggest Drug Companies Control Illness is a 2006 book by British journalist Jacky Law. The book examines how major
Outlining the history of the pharmaceutical industry, Law identifies what she says is the failure of a regulatory framework that assumes pharmaceutical companies always produce worthwhile products that society will want.[1]
Law has written about healthcare for 25 years, seven of them as associate editor of Scrip Magazine, a monthly magazine for the drugs industry.[2]
Reception
Ike Iheanacho writes about the book that "The author is clearly no great fan of the industry. But, refreshingly, she avoids the sort of lazy polemic that casts major pharmaceutical companies as an evil empire that continually foists its products on unwilling and unsuspecting healthcare professionals and patients."[3]
See also
- Bad Pharma (2012) by Ben Goldacre
- Side Effects (2008) by Alison Bass
- Lists about the pharmaceutical industry
References
- ^ PMC 1403244.
- ^ "Big Pharma: How the World's Biggest Drug Companies Control Illness". National Health Federation. 2006. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012.
- PMC 1403244.