However, recent news about the use of ghostwriters to promote Paxil will probably not make that decision any easier.
According to the Associated Press (August 19, 2009), documents released in court show that GlaxoSmithKline used a ghostwriting program in the promotion of its drug, Paxil. Specifically, the documents reportedly show that doctors were allowed to take credit for articles submitted to medical journals when those articles were actually written by consultants for the drug maker.
Furthermore, the AP reports, an internal company memo from April, 2000, "instructs salespeople to offer to help physicians write and publish articles about their positive experiences prescribing Paxil."
A spokesperson for GlaxoSmithKline responded to the report by saying that the ghostwriting program was not heavily used and was discontinued. The AP reports that articles from the ghostwriting program appeared in five journals between 2000 and 2002. One of the journals included in the program was the American Journal of Psychiatry.
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"Firms of medical writers are contracted to pharmaceutical companies to place in academic journals articles attributed to, but not actually authored by, university researchers," Healy writes. Healy is a professor in Psychological Medicine at Cardiff University School of Medicine, Wales. In his article he notes that he has testified in the US in trials involving antidepressants.
Paxil, an antidepressant in a class of drugs called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), has been under scrutiny for a variety of reported issues. Those include a reported link between the use of Paxil during the first trimester of pregnancy and birth defects and an increased risk of suicidal behavior in young adults who take the antidepressant.