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Pharma CEOs mull industry "trust deficit'

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We love it when pharma CEOs depart from their usual talking points about financial results and restructurings and pipelines, to wax philosophical on their place in the word. This week, we heard an entire trio musing on the state of the industry: Merck chief Richard Clark, GlaxoSmithKline's putative chief Andrew Witty (photo), and Pfizer's Jeff Kindler (photo). Some choice bits:

  • Pharma's equilibrium is "shattered," Witty told the Academy of Medical Sciences this week. To fix it, drug makers need to listen more--and talk more--particularly with drug buyers (about the true value of new meds) and with government. Pharma and regulators are "like two ships missing in the night," he said.
  • "There is a trust deficit we have to fix," Merck's Clark told The Star Ledger, when asked about lessons learned from the Vytorin controversy. "I think everyone has a lesson to be learned from this. Drug makers "may have to become more transparent" about their spending and their relationships with docs, he said.
  • "There's a lot of public concern about the pharmaceutical industry," Kindler told the Wall Street Journal. "But...everybody recognizes that you can't solve the healthcare reform problem without an innovative, healthy pharmaceutical industry. We have to be a part of the solution." He went on to talk about truth-telling: "It's important for the industry to communicate with integrity and to do everything it can do to insure the integrity of the data and the science."

Sounds like these guys are all picking up on the same vibe: communication, transparency, telling the truth. And that they recognize that the "shattered equilibrium" and "truth deficit" need to be fixed. What will they do to make that happen, that's the question.

- check out the Witty story in the Financial Times
- see the Clark interview in the Star-Ledger
- read Pharmalot's take on Clark's remarks
- read the WSJ's Q&A with Kindler

Related Article:
Say goodbye to Big Pharma's gilded age

More stories about GlaxoSmithKline   Merck   Richard Clark   public trust   Jeffrey Kindler   Big Pharma   Andrew Witty   Vytorin  

Comments

Misleading to use "truth deficit" in the headline when the quote was "trust deficit".

Editor's note: The misquote has been corrected.

It's high time the industry tells it's side of the story and starts to fight back against the negative and in some cases biased and self serving position of the media. The reason many individuals with chronic ailments and devastating diseases are still able to function is because of the life saving medicines the innovative pharmaceutical companies have discovered and made available to patients with these problems.

Life expectancy has increased and many diseases that crippled or killed human beings are now effectively managed. Try to explain to young children that their mother or father who has cancer has no hope and is going to die very shortly. Try to tell a elderly person that their arthritis will put them in a wheel chair for the rest of their lives with no hope of recovery. By the way we pay for their care.

Pharma companies are not tabacco producers or fast food artery clogging distributors. It is an industry that has enhanced peoples lives. The industry is also a employer of high tech well paying jobs that require very high scientific acumen. These people are America's youth who are the future and now face grim employment prospects to put their talents to work. Thanks to the politicians and the media who both have a political motive rather than common sense have taken aim at the industry and have driven it to despair and off shore. Well so much for made in America.

The Pharmaceutical industry is part of the solution and not part of the problem and yes they are a business that millions of people have benefitted from through their 401k's and stock holdings. Or, oh yes profit is a dirty word. Well in that case we can always invest in China and the emerging markets that are now the next exporters of pharmaceuticals to America.

You are right on the money. No pun intended. Its time that PhRMA decides to launch a strong counter attack in the media instead of paying off congress people. We are one of the best industries that the US has to offer the world and instead we're busy fending off our own government and other naysayers. If one examines the big generic companies; they come from Canada, China, India, Israel, etc. These companies are not innovators. Who is actually saving money anyway? It's the insurance companies. Not the patients or the providers. The US government and our citizens really need to wake up. It would be a different story if we were receiving innovation from abroad. The countries which do provide these new compounds come from Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, Germany and other Western European nations normally. I believe that the all our nations need to come up with a partnership strategy that will serve all the patients, providers and innovative companies before these socialist thinking governments do it for us.

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