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April 28, 2008

Group Urges Ban on Medical Giveaways

By GARDINER HARRIS

Drug and medical device companies should be banned from offering free food, gifts, travel and ghost-writing services to doctors, staff members and students in all 129 of the nation’s medical colleges, an influential college association has concluded.

The proposed ban is the result of a two-year effort by the group, the Association of American Medical Colleges, to create a model policy governing interactions between the schools and industry. While schools can ignore the association’s advice, most follow its recommendations.

Rob Restuccia, executive director of the Prescription Project, a nonprofit group dedicated to eliminating conflicts of interest in medicine, said the report would transform medical education.

“Most medical schools do not have strong conflict-of-interest policies, and this report will change that,” Mr. Restuccia said.

The rules would apply only to medical schools, but they could have enormous influence across medicine, said Dr. David Rothman, president of the Institute on Medicine as a Profession at Columbia University.

“We’re hoping the example set by academic medical colleges will be contagious,” Dr. Rothman said.

Drug companies spend billions wooing doctors — more than they spend on research or consumer advertising. Medical schools, packed with prominent professors and impressionable trainees, are particularly attractive marketing targets.

So companies have for decades provided faculty and students free food and gifts, offered lucrative consulting arrangements to top-notch teachers and even ghost-wrote research papers for busy professors.

“Such forms of industry involvement tend to establish reciprocal relationships that can inject bias, distort decision-making and create the perception among colleagues, students, trainees and the public that practitioners are being ‘bought’ or ‘bribed’ by industry,” the report said.

A group of influential doctors decried these practices in a 2006 article in The Journal of the American Medical Association, and said that medical schools should ban them. In the article’s wake, the medical college association created a task force.

With Dr. Roy Vagelos, a former Merck chief executive, serving as the task force’s chairman and the chief executives of Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Amgen and Medtronic on the roster, some who advocate for greater restrictions on industry influence in medicine predicted that the report would be weak.

They were wrong.

In addition to the gift, food and travel bans, the report recommended that medical schools should “strongly discourage participation by their faculty in industry-sponsored speakers’ bureaus,” in which doctors are paid to promote drug and device benefits.

It recommended that schools set up centralized systems for accepting free drug samples or “alternative ways to manage pharmaceutical sample distribution that do not carry the risks to professionalism with which current practices are associated.” It suggested that schools audit independently accredited medical education seminars given by faculty “for the presence of inappropriate influence.” And it said the rules should apply to faculty even when off-duty or away from school.

Speakers’ bureaus and drug samples are pillars of the industry’s marketing operations, and many medical school professors have resisted efforts to restrict them. Only a handful of medical schools presently bar faculty members from serving on speakers’ bureaus, so if this recommendation is widely adopted, it could transform the relationship between medical school faculty and industry, and it could change substantially the way medical education is routinely delivered.

Indeed, the chief executives of Pfizer and Eli Lilly dissented from the report’s recommendation regarding speakers’ bureaus.

“We continue to believe that these types of programs, which are subject to clear regulations regarding their content, can be worthwhile educational activities,” wrote Jeffrey B. Kindler of Pfizer and Sidney Taurel of Lilly.

David Beier, an Amgen senior vice president, wrote a letter that endorsed the report’s recommendations but disagreed with some of its text “because we have a different view about the accuracy concerning representations about the motives of the participants in industry-academic interactions.”

Ken Johnson of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, said his group would review the report.

“Providing physicians — and medical students — with timely, accurate information about the medicines they prescribe clearly benefits patients and advances healthcare throughout the United States,” Mr. Johnson said.

Dr. Robert J. Alpern, dean of the Yale School of Medicine, said that the university presently had no limits on participation in company speakers’ bureaus, but that because of the medical college association’s report he was thinking of taking them on.

“I don’t have a problem with doctors making $3,000 or $5,000 a year on the side,” he said, “but it’s a totally different thing when it’s $80,000.” Even more distasteful, Dr. Alpern said, is that the slides used in many of these presentations are created by drug makers, not the speakers.

“That’s like ghost-talking,” Dr. Alpern said.

Dr. Arthur S. Levine, dean of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said that when he graduated from medical school in 1964, Eli Lilly gave him his first doctor’s bag, and Roche gave him an Omega watch for being valedictorian. He still has the watch.

But this year’s graduating class of doctors at Pittsburgh will not be allowed to accept any of these gifts, and the daily pizza lunches brought by drug companies are gone, he said.

Julie Gottlieb, assistant dean of policy coordination for Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said Hopkins had adopted some of the association’s recommendations and was considering others.

“This report is bound to influence our deliberations,” she said.

Dr. Vagelos, formerly of Merck, said that the report’s recommendations were certain to face resistance among faculty who liked the present system.

“The outcome of this for the industry is that those companies that are strong in science will always be welcome at medical colleges and others won’t,” Dr. Vagelos said.

Source: www.nytimes.com

Comments:
After several years of debate and criticism, the Association of American Medical Colleges decided to investigate the real effect of pharmaceutical presence in medical schools. Drug companies spend billions of dollars on marketing in medical schools, much more than they spend on research or even direct to consumer advertising. Understandably so, as medical schools offer access to prominent personalities in the field who in turn can affect the opinions for hundreds of graduating professionals. Medical students get used to such seminars, lunches and freebies and think it is appropriate. However with this recommendation it is clear that even medical college councils believe that such intervention is harmful. Interesting to note that the ‘task force’, which came to such a drastic conclusion, included executives from giants like Merck, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Amgen, Medtronic etc, and they still could not downplay the strong industry influence on medical education. While this is still a guideline and medical colleges do not have to follow it, they usually do. Some of the college professors --including Dr. Peter Libby, cardiovascular chief at Harvard's Brigham and Women's Hospital and Dr. Eric Winer, director of the Breast Oncology Center at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute- have already stopped taking any money or gifts from pharma companies and they said that they did so because they were tired of speaking about their opinions, only to have their positions questioned because of their relationships with companies. These researchers thought that it is not worth it to be under constant suspicion and always have an asterisk by their name. Such policies will increase the transparency in medical education. In another verdict, pharma companies are also told to disclose all the past expenses on such educational projects in medical schools.

It is now getting clearer that corporations control health and safety of population by influencing budding doctors as well and policy makers are acting to change it.

For more than a decade, Dr. Rath has been very vocal on the pharma cartel and their influence on several aspects of our life including politics, media, etc. You can read about his fight in the book "Why animals don't get heart attacks...but people do!" on www.drrathresearch.org, www4.dr-rath-foundation.org and join to make a difference on www.drrathhealthalliance.com

 

 
       
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