Yahoo Québec Recherche sur tout le Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bad_PharmaBad Pharma - Wikipedia

    Bad Pharma: How Drug Companies Mislead Doctors and Harm Patients is a book by the British physician and academic Ben Goldacre about the pharmaceutical industry, its relationship with the medical profession, and the extent to which it controls academic research into its own products.

  2. 5 févr. 2013 · In the follow-up to his popular Bad Science (2010), British medical doctor Goldacre reveals how pharmaceutical companies mislead doctors and hurt patients. They “sponsor” trials, which tend to yield favorable results, while negative results often remain unreported.

  3. 25 sept. 2012 · With Goldacre’s characteristic flair and a forensic attention to detail, Bad Pharma reveals a shockingly broken system and calls for something to be done. This is the pharmaceutical industry as it has never been seen before.

  4. 1 avr. 2014 · Bad Pharma: How Drug Companies Mislead Doctors and Harm Patients. Paperback – April 1 2014. Bad Science hilariously exposed the tricks that quacks and journalists use to distort science, becoming an international bestseller. Now Ben Goldacre puts the $600bn global pharmaceutical industry under the microscope.

  5. 17 oct. 2012 · Ben Goldacre's book, Bad Pharma: how drug companies mislead doctors and harm patients, is the latest of several books and articles in recent years to level criticisms at the way the pharma industry and regulatory authorities operate; criticisms that need to be taken seriously, revealing faults that need to be corrected.

  6. Ben Goldacre is Britain’s finest writer on the science behind medicine, and ‘Bad Pharma’ is a clear and witty attack, showing exactly how the science has been distorted, how our systems have been broken, and how easy it would be to fix them.

  7. 5 févr. 2013 · Bad Pharma puts real flesh on those bones, revealing the rigged evidence used by drug companies. Bad information means bad treatment decisions, which means patients suffer and die: there is no climactic moment of villainy, but drugs are used which are overpriced, less effective, and have more side effects.