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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMother Jones: Paula Deen new pharma partner (diabetic drug) a cancer risk
To bring the reader up to date: Paula Deen has just announced with tears that she has had type 2 diabetes for 3 years and has partnered with a big pharma to make a lot of money off the misery of those who suffer from the disease.
Mother Jones tells us WHY this is particularly hypocritical and money-grubbing:
Paula Deen Hawks a Dubious Diabetic Drug
snip
"In fact, Deen's favored Big Pharma diabetes product might be as questionable as the meat she promotes. The FDA approved Victoza in January 2010, but it did so amid strong evidence of a link to thyroid cancer. In April 2009, the FDA's Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee voted 12-1 that rodent data linking the drug to thyroid cancer could apply to humans. The committee got hung at 6-6 (with one abstention) on whether the cancer risk was ground for FDA rejection. The drug eventually won approval anyway.
And then last June, reported MedPage Today, the FDA "issued a warning about the risks of thyroid cancer and pancreatitis associated with the diabetes drug liraglutide (Victoza)." The agency "directed drugmaker Novo Nordisk to send out a 'Dear healthcare professional' letter after determining that some primary care providers were not fully aware of the serious risks," MedPage reports. Because of the cancer concerns, FDA ordered that Novo Nordisk include a so-called "black box" warning (PDF) on the drug's label. Black boxes are the agency's strongest warning, used only when grave side effects are at issue. The drug "causes thyroid C-cell tumors at clinically relevant exposures in rodents," the warning states.
Nowadays, Novo Nordisk places an impressive list side effects along with the black box warning on its web page for Victoza, right under the slogan "Diabetes in a new light" and photo of a grinning Deen urging us to "live a life that's delicious" (see photo above). In addition to cancer, here are the other possible side effects: The most common side effects with Victoza® include headache, nausea, and diarrhea. Nausea is most common when first starting Victoza®, but decreases over time in most people. Immune system related reactions, including hives, were more common in people treated with Victoza® compared to people treated with other diabetes drugs in medical studies.
What do Victoza users gain for taking on risk of cancer and other troubles? Here's the kicker: Some medical authorities question whether drugs designed to bring down blood sugar for Type 2 diabetes patients provide any benefits at all. University of North Carolina professor of medicine Nortin Hadler is a particularly fierce critic. He penned a blunt 2008 paper in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology declaring them essentially useless, because, he claims, lowering patient's blood-sugar levels does not deliver any tangible benefits. And in his 2011 book Rethinking Aging: Growing Old and Living Well in an Overtreated Society, Hadler minced no words. The drugs should be "taken off the market until one can be shown to benefit some group of patients, any group of patients." He continued: "That's obviouswhy hasn't it happened? One answer is that there is such a cloud of smoke and so many mirrors that few see clearly to join me in this outcry. Another answer is greed. In a phone interview, Hadler told me that all the drugs designed to do what Victoza does have "significant side effects" and "have never been shown in years of study to provide any benefit."
http://motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2012/01/paula-deen-promotes-dubious-diabetes-drug
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Thanks to Anthony Bourdain for bringing the matter to twitter.
liberalmuse
(18,672 posts)I don't always eat right, but I'm not outright into getting a massive coronary. She is heinous. Common sense, bitches!
RebelOne
(30,947 posts)But I would never cook any of her recipes. Mainly because I am vegetarian and also stay from fatty and sugary foods.
The Straight Story
(48,121 posts)tawadi
(2,110 posts)riverwalker
(8,694 posts)"Y'all...Y'all". I won't even buy line of her pots and pans.
FarPoint
(12,437 posts)She is a Democrat first and diabetes needs real advocates. She will make a difference for diabetes as many will relate and self identify with her. Thats so very important ...she can help change lives.
vankuria
(904 posts)In her defense, Paula Deen may not be everyone's cup of tea and no one has to make her recipes or like her food. That said, I started watching her because my late mother enjoyed the show so much. Paula has a wonderful sense of humor and is fun to watch. Mom and I would watch together and that is a nice memory for me. We even went to see her when she played a show at Turning Stone Casino and my Mom couldn't have been happier. Her audience really loves her. While her recipes are fattening, they can be made with substitutions to make them healthier and I know because I've made them. As far as her type 2 diabetes, while it may be from her eating habits, it could also be hereditary like alot of folks. I don't know much about diabetes drugs, but I do know most powerful drugs can have potentially serious side effects. If she wants to be a spokesperson for this company good for her, I did hear that part of her earnings will go to a diabetes charity so it isn't all bad. I think everyone needs to quit being so judgemental.
FarPoint
(12,437 posts)She can have a positive affect on diabetic patients being compliant, not ashamed of having diabetes and maybe learn the diet plan from her in the future. Just thinking...did you ever see her episode with President Jimmy Carter from Plains Georgia?,,, delightful.
Thank you FarPoint and yes I did see the great show she did with President Jimmie Carter which got me to thinking that perhaps Paula is progressive in her politics!
cstanleytech
(26,319 posts)time and time again drugs like this to go to market?