Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #BottleofLies

Most recents (3)

1) With #BottleofLies just out in paperback, I wanted to revisit its key disclosures, the book's impact and explore: has our fraud-fueled drug-quality crisis changed for better or worse? @eccobooks @AltFda Thread 👇
2) #BottleofLies recounts wild fraud at India's largest Rx co. Ranbaxy, maker of low-cost meds 4 US patients including 1st version of generic Lipitor (which contained glass particles/pic below). Ranbaxy would be operating today had @D_S_Thakur not risked his life to expose truth.
3) Ranbaxy's fraud was encapsulated in a smoking-gun internal PPT shown to company directors: the company had registered over 200 products in more than 40 countries using fake data. For 1st time, I am making the full doc available here: katherineeban.com/new-page @PeterAttiaMD
Read 11 tweets
With the news from India that former Ranbaxy CEO Malvinder Singh and his brother Shivinder have been arrested for alleged fraud, I want to offer a few thoughts from my decade of reporting #BottleofLies. (1)
Malvinder Singh was complicit in Ranbaxy's ongoing fraud. He was at the Oct. 14, 2004 boardroom meeting when @D_S_Thakur's explosive PPT (1 page below) alleging global data falsification, was shown to board members. (2)
Ranbaxy's top officials embarked on a cover-up, ordering destruction of PPT + laptop. Company secretary was sent from room and meeting minutes were later forged. The buried PPT (known as Self Assessment Report or SAR) became Ranbaxy's Kryptonite. (3)
Read 10 tweets
Since #BottleOfLies came out on May 14, I've been flooded with questions by readers, listeners, patients: how can they know where their #genericdrugs are made or whether they’re safe. @BrianLehrer @SamSeder @nprfreshair @democracynow [Thread]
No easy way to answer that question. But…I’ve put together a short guide for the worried + curious: How to Investigate Your Own Drugs. @alt_fda @d_s_thakur @blakeleymusic Below info will be up on my website katherineeban.com soon [2]
Step 1: Find Out Who Manufactures Your Drug. That info is usually on the dispensing label. You can call the pharmacist to ask; that way, you can request a manufacturer change in advance, if need be. (More on that in a min.) @NCLEXprof @PlumHealthDPC [3]
Read 13 tweets

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