The conspiracy theory has a variety of different manifestations. Each has different narratives, but they always cast "Big Pharma" as the villain of the piece. Other theories say that although the virus is harmful, the risks of
antiretroviral drugs outweigh the benefits. The drugs are said to be toxins that are spread by doctors who have been corrupted by the pharmaceutical industry. In a 2006 column for ''
Harper's Magazine'', journalist
Celia Farber claimed that the antiretroviral drug
nevirapine was part of a conspiracy by the "scientific-medical complex" to spread toxic drugs. Farber said that AIDS is not caused by HIV and that nevirapine had been unethically administered to pregnant women in clinical trials, leading to a fatality. The former president of
South Africa,
Thabo Mbeki, influenced by AIDS denier
Peter Duesberg, introduced policies that denied treatments to AIDS patients. According to estimates this led, among other things, to more than 300,000 people dying prematurely.
Cure for cancer A recurring conspiracy theory claims that the pharmaceutical industry has a cure for
cancer, but suppresses it so that they can continue to make billions on the "ineffective" treatments currently given to cancer patients. This was believed by 27% of the American public according to a 2005 survey. The argument is that pharmaceutical companies are slowing down research for a comprehensive cure for cancer by developing high-profit, single-purpose treatments rather than focusing on a supposed cure-all for all cancers. Following the crash of
Voepass Linhas Aéreas Flight 2283 in August 2024, social media posts appeared naming Leonardo Ferreira, a cancer researcher, as one of the passengers. The
Brazilian College of Radiology and Imaging Diagnosis published an obituary and conspiracy theories spread about how Big Pharma had engineered the supposed death of somebody close to finding a breakthrough cancer cure. Ferreira confirmed he was not dead; nobody of that name was on the aircraft's passenger list.
Vaccines The idea that vaccines were created by the pharmaceutical industry to make people sick, or to alter
human DNA, has been around for a long time but has been given new life during the COVID-19 pandemic. The conspiracy theory that
vaccines make people autistic can be traced back to a study published in
The Lancet in February 1998.
Andrew Wakefield claimed that there is a link between
MMR vaccine and autism. The study later
turned out to be fraudulent, and led to Wakefield being struck off the medical register. The Lancet also withdrew the article. Although a number of studies have disproved the link between autism and vaccines, the conspiracy theory has survived in various forms, and it has been spread by, among others,
Donald Trump. Other conspiracy theories suggest that vaccines are used to implant
microchips for
surveillance and
thought control. Among others, the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has been accused of wanting to microchip the world's population through global vaccination programs.
COVID-19 The
COVID-19 pandemic is surrounded by a wide range of conspiracy theories, including the postulation that COVID-19 does not exist at all or is just a mild
flu. During the pandemic, there was a surge of conspiracies about
the origins of the disease, such as claiming that the virus was created in a laboratory. However, strong evidence suggests that the disease-causing virus,
SARS-CoV-2, is a naturally evolved strain belonging to the
coronavirus subfamily. The 2020 video
Plandemic: The Hidden Agenda Behind Covid-19, promotes the conspiracist claim that vaccines are "a money-making enterprise that causes medical harm". In the video, former research scientist
Judy Mikovits spread the notion that "Big Pharma",
Bill Gates and the
World Health Organization led a conspiracy, in which they acted together as a "circular cabal" with the aim of killing Americans. The video was released on May 4, 2020, and garnered millions of views, making it one of the most widespread pieces of COVID-19 misinformation.
Natural cures In the book ''
Natural Cures "They" Don't Want You to Know About'', author
Kevin Trudeau claims that there are all-natural cures for serious illnesses including
cancer,
herpes,
arthritis,
AIDS,
acid reflux disease,
diabetes,
multiple sclerosis,
lupus,
chronic fatigue syndrome,
attention deficit disorder,
muscular dystrophy, and that these are all being deliberately hidden and suppressed from the public by the
Food and Drug Administration, the
Federal Trade Commission, and major food and drug companies. The book has been the focus of much controversy since its publication in 2005, with widespread allegations of fraud. ==Reception==