Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
There was more discussion by the board members, mostly questions about
how the doctrine would be put into effect. But it was the TV-radio
network czar Owen Norton who had the final word.
Looking at Celia from the opposite end of the boardroom table, Norton,
who a few days earlier had celebrated his eighty-second birthday,
observed dryly, "You may have noticed, Mrs. Jordan, that we are finally
getting around to respecting your womanly judgment. I can only say, for
myself and others like me, I am sorry we took so long."
"Sir," Celia said, and meant it, "you have just made my day."
The vote that followed, establishing the doctrine as official company
policy, was unanimous.
The impact of the Felding-Roth Doctrine was substantial, though, with the
general public, not as great as Celia had hoped.
Doctors, with a few exceptions, liked it. One obstetrician wrote:
Kindly send me some extra copies, one of which I shall have
framed to hang on my office wall. I intend to point to it when
pregnant patients suggest I am serving them less than ade
quately if I decline to write a prescription for some palliative
which, in my opinion, they would be better off without.
You have, by your highly ethical stand, strengthened the
hands of some of us who do not believe there is a drug for
every occasion. More power to you!
The extra copies were sent-to that doctor and many others who requested
them.
Physicians who objected did so on the grounds that they, and not
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a pharmaceutical company, should advise patients about which drugs to take,
or not, and when. But judging by the volume of mail, they were a small
minority.
The F61ding-Roth Doctrine was featured widely in the company's advertising,
though this was confined to medical and scientific magazines. Celia at
first favored advertising in newspapers and general publications, but was
persuaded this would create antagonism from organized medicine which, along
with FDA, frowned on direct approaches to consumers about prescription
drugs.
Perhaps because of this absence, newspapers gave only minor attention to
the Felding-Rotb Doctrine. The New York Times ran a short two-paragraph
story amid its financial news, the Washington Post buried a similar report
in a rear section of the paper. Elsewhere, in other newspapers, brief items
appeared if there happened to be room. Television, despite public relations
attempts to persuade producers otherwise, paid no attention at all.
"If we market a drug that turns out to have harmful side effects we didn't
expect," Bill Ingram complained to Celia, "those TV news types take our
skins off. But when we do something positive like this, all we get is
yawns."
"That's because TV journalism is simplistic," she responded. "Its people
are trained to look for strong, quick impact, so they avoid the thoughtful,
the cerebral, which take too much air time. Don't worry, though. At times
that policy can help us."
Ingram said doubtfully, "Be sure to tell me when it does."
Reaction to the Felding-Roth Doctrine from other drug firms was mixed.
Those who marketed products for use by women during pregnancy were openly
hostile. "A cheap shot, shoddy publicity, nothing more," was how a
spokesman for one such company described the doctrine publicly.
From others came suggestions that Felding-Roth had attempted to be "holier
than thou," and might have harmed the industry, though in what way was not
made clear. However, one or two competitors were openly admiring.
"Frankly," Celia was told by a respected industry leader, "I wish we'd
thought of it first."
"None of which proves anything," she confided to Andrew, "except you can't
please everyone."
"Be patient," he urged. "You've done something good, and you've started
ripples which are spreading. In time, you'll be surprised how far they go."
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Other rings of ripples were resulting from Montayne. One had its origin on
Washington's Capitol Hill.
Aides to a congressional veteran, Senator Dennis Donahue, had spent a year,
on and off, reviewing the Montayne matter and now declared it an ideal
subject for their leader to focus on at a Senate investigative hearing.
"Ideal," in this case, meant with wide public interest, generous exposure
and, almost certainly, television coverage. As the senator was apt to
remind those closest to him politically, "Let's never forget TV is where
the masses and the votes are."
Accordingly, it was announced that the Senate Subcommittee on Ethical
Merchandising, of which Donahue was chairman, would begin hearings in
Washington, D.C., early in December. Witnesses, the senator stated during
an October news conference, were already being subpoenaed. Others with
firsthand knowledge of the subject were invited to communicate with the
committee's staff.
When Celia heard the initial report, she telephoned Childers Quentin, the
Washington lawyer.
"That really is bad news," he affirmed. "I'm afraid that your company, and
probably you as its chief spokesman, Mrs. Jordan, are in for a rough time.
If you'll consider some advice, I urge you to begin preparing for the
hearings now, with help from legal counsel. I know how these things work,
and I assure you the senator's staff will dig up and place on view every
unsavory fact and rumor they can find."
If the word demagogue, or dimag6gos, had not been coined by the Ancient
Greeks around the time of Cleon, it would have been invented, out of
necessity, to define United States Senator Dennis Donahue. No more striking
example of the breed existed.
He was born to wealth and privilege but posed, and regularly described
himself, as "a son of the common people, truly one of
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them, and 'of the earth, earthy.' " No description could have been more
inaccurate but, like anything repeated often enough, it became accepted
and believed by many.
Another way the senator liked to be portrayed was as "a spokesman for the
poor and suffering; a foe of their oppressors." Whether, inside his soul,
he really cared about the poor and suffering, only Donahue himself knew.
Either way, he made good use of them.
I Anywhere in the nation, where there happened to be a newsworthy David
vs. Goliath struggle, Donahue hastened to the scene, stridently siding
with the Davids, even on occasions when-to thoughtful people-Goliath was
clearly in the right. "There are always more Davids, and they're useful
at election time," an aide once explained in a moment of unguarded
frankness.
Perhaps for the same reason, in any labor dispute Donahue unfailingly
supported organized labor, never favoring business even if labor excesses
were involved.
The labor and unemployment scenes were fertile fields for an ambitious
politician, he had discovered early. Which was why, at times of higher
than normal unemployment, the senator sometimes joined lines of
job-seekers outside employment offices, talking with them. Ostensibly
this was to "see for himself, and find out how the unemployed felt"-an
admirable aim to which no reasonable person could object. Interestingly,
though, the media always learned of the senator's intentions, so that TV
crews and press photographers awaited him. Thus his familiar face,
wearing its most soulful expression as he discoursed with the unemployed,
was on network news that night and in next day's newspapers.
As to other "common man" matters, the senator had discovered a recent,
fruitful one in his objections to first-class, tax-deductible air travel
by businessmen. If people wanted that kind of special privilege, he
argued, they should pay for it themselves, and not be subsidized by other
taxpayers. He introduced a Senate bill to make first-class air travel
non-deductible for tax purposes, though knowing full well the bill would
die somewhere in the legislative process.
Meanwhile, the amount of news coverage was remarkable. Keeping the idea
afloat, Senator Donahue made a point of traveling tourist class himself,
by air, informing the press before each journey. However, no first-class
passenger ever had as much- attention lavished on him as Donahue, back
in his tourist seat. One thing he failed to mention publicly was that the
bulk of his air travel was in
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the luxury of private aircraft--either chartered through a family trust
fund or made available by friends.
In appearance, Donahue was stocky, and had a cherubic face which made him
look younger than the forty-nine he was. He was overweight without being
fat, and referred to himself as "comfortably upholstered." Most of the
time, especially when on public view, he exuded friendliness, expressed
through an easy grin. His dress and hairstyle had a studied untidiness,
conforming with the "common man" image.
While objective observers saw Donahue for the opportunist he was, he was
genuinely liked by many people, not only members of his own party, but
political opponents. One reason was that he had a sense of humor and
could take a joke at his own expense. Another was that he was good
company, always interesting to be with.
The last made him attractive to some women, a situation Donahue had a
reputation for taking advantage of, even though he had a secure marriage
and was seen frequently in the company of his wife and teenage children.
This was the Senator Donahue who, shortly after 10 A.M. on the first
Tuesday of December, gaveled to order the Senate Subcommittee on Ethical
Merchandising, and announced that proceedings would begin with a short
statement of his own.
The committee was meeting in Room SR-253 of the Old Senate Office
Building, an impressive setting. The chairman and fellow senators sat
behind an elevated U-shaped desk, facing witnesses and the public. Three
large windows overlooked the Senate park and fountain. There was a marble
fireplace. Beige curtains had printed on them the Great Seal of the
United States.
"All of us here," Dennis Donahue began, reading from a prepared paper,
"are aware of the ghastly, worldwide tragedy involving children whose
brainpower and other normal functions have allegedly been destroyed by
a drug which, until recently, was prescribed and sold in this country.
The name of that drug is Montayne."
The senator was a strong, commanding speaker, and the hundred or so
people in the room were attentively silent. TV cameras were focused on
him. Besides Donahue, eight other senators were present-five from
Donahue's own majority party, and three from the minority. To the
chairman's left was Stanley Urbach, the committee's chief counsel, a
former district attorney from Boston. Behind
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the senators were fifteen members of the committee staff, some seated,
others standing.
"What these hearings will investigate," Donahue continued, "is the
responsibility for this series of events, and whether . . ."
Celia, who was sclieduled to be the first witness, listened as the opening