| ▲ | defrost 2 hours ago | |||||||
Pharma reps "bribing" doctors prescribing habits is a thing, for sure, and varies in degree by country. This is a separate issue for media reporting on (say) new tanning treatments that are endorsed on screen during traditional "news hours" in undeclared infomercial segments that feature "independant" medical experts gushing over benefits of perineum UV treatments. Frequently both the company that paid for the faux news segment and the guest experts that also benefit fail to have fiscal interests disclosed. | ||||||||
| ▲ | buran77 an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Oh, I just meant it's not just "quack doctors" doing it. it's a fairly common practice. | ||||||||
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