Putnam was saying that a single account (and a vague one at that) is less scientifically significant than carefully recorded large scale studies. Not to mention that a single case where treatment was supposed to prevent transmission entirely doesn't really make much sense even given the wildest claims for Tamiflu from the suppliers. I'd say it's possible given some of the fantastical statements made around it, but it's probably more a government misrepresentation (in assuring people they could deal with a pandemic) than a pharma argument.
Speaking of flu drugs, does anybody know what the scientific community think about a medicine called Relenza? Its marketed in Russia as an anti-influenza wonder cure, along with Tamiflu
Relenza is Zanamivir. It was covered in this same
review and is a broadly similar drug. It seems to have fewer side effects than Tamiflu (oseltamivir in the studies) but these seems to be less data on the most at-risk groups (children and hospitalisations). So arguably a better drug if you want to cut a few hours off your time in bed with the flu (0.6 days on average, from 6.6 to 6) if you are an otherwise healthy adult, but still ineffective in a pandemic situation.
I remember the 'buttercup' thing that was marketed as a cold symptom suppressant that didn't work and, as a result, was taken of shelves.
How is this different? Is it a bigger company doing it or something?
Not quite sure what the case was there, but the only information I can find is where a suppressant was taken off shelves because it was too easy to overdose young children by ignoring stated doses. Completely different situation.
This one is a case where a drug was being pushed as a solution to an entirely valid potential problem (a flu pandemic) where it had absolutely zero value, meaning (in the UK alone) a half billion pounds worth of the stuff was stockpiled in a completely futile effort to save lives. It was pushed as such based on selective and limited information released by the producers, with other trial data being withheld even years after a call for it all to be studied. Frankly it's become a posterchild for the open-trials movement.
I'd recommend reading the entire original
Guardian article I linked if you want the complete story. He gives a fairly comprehensive backgrounder. The
Cochrane collaboration have also issued a press release. The bottom line is that, given the complete trial information, known only to the producing companies, the decision as to whether or not to stockpile these drugs may well have gone the other way. Projecting onto future public health decisions this has obvious and significant implications.