Lisa Cosgrove PhD is a clinical psychologist and Professor at the University of Massachusetts, Boston, where she teaches courses on psychiatric diagnosis and psychopharmacology. She is a former Research Fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University (2010-2015). Her research addresses the ethical and medical-legal issues that arise in organized psychiatry because of academic-industry relationships. Lisa has published articles, and book chapters, and has co-edited casebooks on these topics and is co-author, with Robert Whitaker, of Psychiatry under the Influence: Institutional Corruption, Social Injury, and Prescriptions for Reform. She received a 2015 Distinguished Publication Award, given by the Association for Women in Psychology, for her paper (with Emily Wheeler), “Industry’s colonization of psychiatry.” She is also the PI for an RO3 NIH grant (through the Agency for Healthcare and Research Quality), “A cross-sectional study of clinical practice guidelines for depression: Is guideline quality associated with independence from industry?”

Joel Lexchin received his MD from the University of Toronto in 1977 and for the past 32 years has been an emergency physician at the University Health Network. He taught health policy in the School of Health Policy and Management at York University from 2001 to 2016 and is now a Professor Emeritus at York. He has been a consultant on pharmaceutical issues for the province of Ontario, various arms of the Canadian federal government, the World Health Organization, the government of New Zealand and the Australian National Prescribing Service. He is a frequent outspoken critic of the pharmaceutical industry and the way that Health Canada regulates drugs. His book, Private Profits Versus Public Policy: the Pharmaceutical Industry and the Canadian State, was published by University of Toronto Press in September 2016 and his book Doctors in Denial: Why Big Pharma and the Canadian Medical Profession Are Too Close For Comfort was published by Lorimer in 2017.