Zyprexa: Difference between revisions

From WikiIndex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
m (Text replacement - "statistics_URL" to "statistics URL")
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Wiki
{{Wiki
| wiki_logo             = http://www.wikiindex.org/images/e/e6/NoLogo.png<!--or a/a7/NoLogoYet.png-->
|logo             = No
| wiki_URL               = http://zyprexa.pbwiki.com
|URL               = http://zyprexa.pbwiki.com
| wiki_recentchanges_URL = No
|recentchanges URL = No
| wiki_wikinode_URL     = No
|wikinode URL     = No
| wiki_status           = YourWikiStatus
|status           = Active
| wiki_language         = YourWikiLanguage
|language         = English
| wiki_editmode         = YourWikiEditMode
|editmode         = LoginToEdit
| wiki_engine           = PBWiki
|engine           = PBwiki
| wiki_maintopic         = YourWikiTopic
|maintopic         = Pharmaceuticals
}}
}}
==Description==
==Description==
{{add}}
For the past few years, there has been some controversy about the drug {{tag|Zyprexa}}. What we all know is that Zyprexa is an "atypical" neuroleptic (also known as an "anti-psychotic"), approved to treat schizophrenia and acute mania. At about $2.50/pill, it is a big money maker for Eli Lilly, somewhere on the order of $4 Billion a year. By themselves, these facts are not controversial.


<!--
However, it seems that some internal memos indicate that Eli Lilly knew that the {{tag|drugs|drug}} raised the risk of {{tag|diabetes}} in patients and didn't act appropriately. They may have even misreported clinical trial data about blood-sugar risks to doctors. There is currently a class action lawsuit underway to hold Lilly accountable. These memos indicate that Lilly initiated an internal marketing campaign to willfully downplay these deleterious effects.
add description of the wiki here and
remove this comment and the dummy
categories/tag below and add your own


if the wiki's main language isn't English, you
There may be other risks that the company knew about but was hiding.
can have one description in English and another
in the wiki's main language, if you speak it.


[[category:FirstAdditional]]
Incidentally, Lilly's second most profitable drugs treat diabetes.
[[category:SecondAdditional]]


tagging: {{tag|Wikis to add}}
Furthermore, Lilly has been training sales reps to instruct general practitioners to prescribe Zyprexa, off label, to elderly patients exhibiting general symptoms of dementia. These drugs are dangerous enough in the hands of specialists - general practitioners should not be trained by salespeople to prescribe such potent and dangerous psychopharmaceuticals. Lilly called this marketing initiative Viva Zyprexa, from which we have taken our satirical name for this campaign - Zyprexa Kills.
-->


{{Size
{{Size
| wiki_statistics_URL    = No
|statistics URL = http://zyprexa.pbwiki.com/AllPages
| wiki_size              = YourWikiSize
|pages = 23
}}
}}
[[Category:Medical]]

Latest revision as of 23:07, 25 January 2023

Small rectangular monochrome image, landscape orientation, thin black border with a white background, containing the words 'no logo' in black text. Zyprexa
[No Recent changes]
[No WikiNode]
[No About]
[No Mobile URL]
Founded by:
Status: Active
Language: English
Edit mode: LoginToEdit
Wiki engine: PBwiki
Wiki license: [[:Category:Wiki {{{license}}}|{{{license}}}]]
Main topic: Pharmaceuticals

Description[edit]

For the past few years, there has been some controversy about the drug Zyprexa. What we all know is that Zyprexa is an "atypical" neuroleptic (also known as an "anti-psychotic"), approved to treat schizophrenia and acute mania. At about $2.50/pill, it is a big money maker for Eli Lilly, somewhere on the order of $4 Billion a year. By themselves, these facts are not controversial.

However, it seems that some internal memos indicate that Eli Lilly knew that the drug raised the risk of diabetes in patients and didn't act appropriately. They may have even misreported clinical trial data about blood-sugar risks to doctors. There is currently a class action lawsuit underway to hold Lilly accountable. These memos indicate that Lilly initiated an internal marketing campaign to willfully downplay these deleterious effects.

There may be other risks that the company knew about but was hiding.

Incidentally, Lilly's second most profitable drugs treat diabetes.

Furthermore, Lilly has been training sales reps to instruct general practitioners to prescribe Zyprexa, off label, to elderly patients exhibiting general symptoms of dementia. These drugs are dangerous enough in the hands of specialists - general practitioners should not be trained by salespeople to prescribe such potent and dangerous psychopharmaceuticals. Lilly called this marketing initiative Viva Zyprexa, from which we have taken our satirical name for this campaign - Zyprexa Kills.

Wiki size: 23 article pages see stats