Tuesday, April 24, 2007

“A profession is not just a way of making money; it’s a form of public trust. ...Medicine has for many decades now been betraying this public trust.”


Hooked
Ethics, the Medical Profession and the Pharmaceutical Industry.

By Howard Brody. 347 pages. Bowman & Littlefield, $27.95

Howard Brody, a medical ethicist, has brought his discipline’s tools to the relationship between the medical profession and the pharmaceutical industry. This problematic tangle of moral compromise (or triumphant health-promoting collaboration, depending on your point of view) has inspired several polemics by physicians in recent years, all of them straightforward indictments of the pharmaceutical industry and its for-profit webs.

Dr. Brody is also a physician, but he aims for the measured cadences of the ethicist instead, calmly laying out the relevant facts and then reasoning from basic principles to determine whether the medicine-pharmaceutical relationship, as it stands now, is an ethical one or not.

That Dr. Brody manages to deliver a hundred-odd pages of determinedly objective analysis before he, too, lets the righteous indignation roll should not really be called a failure of methodology: even as he carefully lays out the facts in this impressively comprehensive book, those facts begin to speak damningly for themselves.

NYT

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Brody has a blog here:
http://brodyhooked.blogspot.com/