It's no secret that a lot of companies value money more than the lives of middle and low-class people, but to actually see the prices they accept for this hits hard. You don't know who to trust anymore even when you're ill or dying.
> Practice Fusion solicited a nearly $1 million payment from the opioid company, promising that in exchange it would create alerts in its software that would cause physicians to write more prescriptions for extended release opioids than were medically needed.
wondering whether whoever actually coded up the change in software knew what he/she was doing. i truly hope not.
The most charitable option is that PF had some sort of tooling to allow folks other than engineers to create new CDS alerts, and that system already had all the info it needed to render these new alerts. If they had such a system, and if they were just using pain related diagnoses or something, it's possible no engineering effort was required (such a system would certainly already be able to consider the pt's diagnoses).
In my experience (working with similar systems at a different EHR), these things are complicated, and you pretty much never get away with zero engineering effort. That effort might have been limited to "Expose the patients last three reported pain levels to the CDS system", or it could have been much more involved.
> Practice Fusion has agreed to pay $145 million to resolve the DOJ’s criminal and civil investigations, including a $26 million criminal fine and a $118.6 million civil settlement that “also resolves allegations of kickbacks relating to thirteen other CDS arrangements where Practice Fusion agreed with pharmaceutical companies to implement CDS alerts intended to increase sales of their products.”
So, nothing was taken from the personal bank accounts of the people who made these decisions, and nobody went to jail. That is to say, nothing was done about this.
The takeaway here is that you can murder people for money and as long as you do it behind the paperwork of a large corporation, you can get away with it.
$140 Million dollar settlement on a $1M dollar kickback...finally a monetary penalty against a tech company that may actually deter future bad behavior rather than reward it.
Okay, it's a step in the right direction, but how did this actually affect the people who made the decision? As far as I can tell, none of them were personally fined, and none of them went to jail.
Keep in mind that if some nut with a gun murdered the same number of people, he'd be in jail for the rest of his life, which might end with a lethal injection, and people would be calling for gun regulation to keep guns from getting into the hands of nuts. But because this was done with a pen instead of a gun, we're incentivizing shareholders to not invest in execs like this and hoping shareholders can figure out how to identify sociopaths in advance in the future?
No one murdered anyone. Opioidal medications are entirely legal. Doctors did and do prescribe them all the time. Your accusations seem a bit excessive.
Exile from a global economy means exile from our globe. Sounds good to me, call spaceX. Kind of expensive though. The Chinese dealt with the their opioid epidemic by charging the family for the bullet used. In this case I'd be fine wih that as well.
The Chinese solution executed those who used drugs as well as those who sold. Emotionally it is a lot easier to blame the seller, but eliminating consumers is probably even more effective if you "have a certain moral flexibility."