| October
16, 2007
Drug industry cash found to flow to med schools
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Drug companies and medical device makers
cultivate extensive financial relationships with U.S. medical
schools, creating worrisome potential conflicts of interest for
these institutions, researchers said on Tuesday.
Sixty-seven percent of medical school and teaching hospital departments
and 60 percent of department heads personally received money or
enjoyed some other kind of financial relationship with industry,
according to a study published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
"There's just no part of medicine in which drug companies
are not involved. And the rule for the American people and policymakers
is to decide how much is too much," Eric Campbell of Harvard
Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who
led the study, said in a telephone interview.
The researchers said the findings raised questions about whether
companies are aiming to buy influence in medical schools and teaching
hospitals while potentially harming the independence and integrity
of research and education programs.
Campbell and colleagues surveyed 459 department heads at 125
U.S. medical schools and the 15 biggest independent teaching hospitals.
They found that department heads often served as paid consultants
to companies and were paid to give speeches to industry audiences.
Departments often received food and beverages, money for travel
and meetings, and research equipment and supplies, they found.
The survey showed that more than half the department heads with
financial ties to industry, however, felt such relationships had
a positive effect on their departments' educational programs.
Campbell said industry cash flows to individual doctors and scientists,
medical schools, medical practices, people who serve on Food and
Drug Administration panels and institutional review boards that
look at medical studies.
Dr. Susan Goold, a bioethicist at the University of Michigan
Medical School who worked on the study, said the industry money
was common even though many of the department heads surveyed felt
that such financial relationships could compromise the independence
of research or education.
Alan Goldhammer, deputy vice president for regulatory affairs
for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America,
said he did not know how much money in total the industry was
giving medical schools and teaching hospitals.
These financial ties neither warp the integrity of the institutions
nor make them beholden to companies, he said.
Asked why industry was giving money to these institutions, Goldhammer
said, "Because that's where a lot of our clinical trials
are conducted. We fund medical school faculty in return for them
running clinical trials for new medicines."
Industry often relies on academic researchers to conduct studies
that may be used to help secure government approval for drugs
that may generate billions of dollars in sales.
"It's been our position all along that any conflict of interest
is likely to be perceptual in nature and best dealt with by open
disclosure of the agreement," Goldhammer added.
Campbell did not support an outright ban on industry cash, saying
this could hurt the development of new drugs.
But, he said: "At the same time, there are some things we
could stop. We could stop medical schools taking money to buy
food and sodas for their doctors. There's no requirement that
says, 'To do good research, I must eat a bagel and a soda from
this company.' This is silly. Get rid of that stuff."
Source: www.reuters.com
Comments:
The pharmaceutical industry is one of the largest and most
profitable industries in the world, and in the United States.
Because of its vast resources, the pharmaceutical industry
has assumed an increasing influence in medicine. There is
no part of medicine in which drug companies are not involved,
right from medical school programs, faculty, research, clinical
trials, to medical journals, trainings for physicians, sponsoring
cruises for them, you name it.
According to this study published in the Journal of the
American Medical
Association,Sixty-seven percent of medical school and teaching
hospital departments and 60 percent of department heads
personally received money or enjoyed some other kind of
financial relationship with pharmaceutical industry. The
researchers said the findings raised questions about whether
companies are aiming to buy influence in medical schools
and teaching hospitals while potentially harming the independence
and integrity of research and education programs.
The pharmaceutical industry has always acted to maximize
its profits in ways that frequently conflict with medicine's
need for truth and full disclosure. Indeed, the pharmaceutical
industry has arguably worked to compromise physicians' judgments,
as well as academic standards. As a result of which, despite
government regulations, there have been so many unnecessary
adverse side effects from drugs and many deaths as we have
seen in recent years.
Over a decade ago, Dr. Rath started unveiling the truth
about the pharma industry business with disease that woke
up the general public. You can read more about Dr. Rath's
fight for truth and health here www4.dr-rath-foundation.org
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