December 2003
Drug companies court M.D.s with gifts and events
As entanglement between
doctors and the drug industry grows, a two‑part article by journalist Ray
Moynihan in a recent issue of BMJ (formerly, British Medical
Journal) explored the brewing conflicts at one of the world's leading
medical institutions over how to redefine relations with big pharmaceutical
companies.
Across the United
States, drug companies sponsor close to 300,000 events for doctors every
year as part of their promotional efforts.
Against this
background, the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) is considering
plans to end free lunches sponsored by drug companies and remove drug
representatives. Elsewhere, medical reform groups and student associations
are also calling for disentanglement from drug companies and independent
education and sources of information.
"Relationships with
industry are critical, but they need redefining," says Professor Haile Debas,
Dean of Medicine at UCSF. "We have to make sure our relationships are more
appropriate."
"In some ways we are
all addicts to big pharma's money," argues Chief Executive Officer of UCSF
Medical Center, Mark Laret, "but we are going to have to wean ourselves off
a dependency that is generally inappropriate. This relationship is one of
those things we need to clean up. The sooner the better."
Many individual
doctors, and their professional associations, are facing difficult choices
about whether they remain part of the industry's extended promotional
machinery or seek real distance in their relationships, to give prescribing,
teaching, and advice that is truly independent, wrote Moynihan. Growing
moves toward genuine separation may well make previously acceptable
conflicts of interest untenable, he concluded.
SOURCE:
"Who pays for the pizza? Redefining the relationships between doctors and
drug companies" by Ray Moynihan, BMJ 2003;326:1189‑1192, May 31,
2003.
NOTE: This article
appeared in the World Chiropractic Alliance Health Watch electronic
newsletter. To receive this free newsletter each week, sign up at
wcanews.com.