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Thread: Seducing the Medical Profession
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| Seducing the Medical Profession |

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2006-02-02 17:13:06 |
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February 2, 2006
Editorial
New York Times
Seducing the Medical Profession
New evidence keeps emerging that the medical profession has sold its
soul in exchange for what can only be described as bribes from the
manufacturers of drugs and medical devices. It is long past time for
leading medical institutions and professional societies to adopt
stronger ground rules to control the noxious influence of industry
money on what doctors prescribe for their patients.
Last week two new cases came to light that reveal the lengths to which
companies will go to buy influence with doctors, pharmacists and other
medical professionals. Reed Abelson reported in The Times on Jan. 24
about a whistle-blower's lawsuit alleging that Medtronic had paid tens
of millions of dollars in recent years to surgeons in a position to
use and recommend its medical devices. In one particularly egregious
example, a prominent Wisconsin surgeon received $400,000 for just
eight days of consulting.
In last Saturday's Times, Gardiner Harris and Robert Pear revealed
that a Danish company paid a pharmacist, doctors' assistants and a
drug store chain to switch diabetic patients to the company's
high-priced insulin products.
In the wake of past reports of industry's influence over prescribing
practices, medical and industry groups have issued guidelines defining
appropriate behavior. But as an article in The Journal of the American
Medical Association made clear last week, these guidelines are far too
weak.
The influential authors called for a complete ban on all gifts, free
meals and payments for attending meetings. They urged doctors to
reject free drug samples because they are a powerful incentive to use
medicines that are expensive but not more effective. And they called
for a ban on consulting arrangements that entail no specific
scientific duties.
These proposals are hardly onerous. Kaiser Permanente, a
California-based managed care group, has adopted nearly all of the
recommendations. Its doctors prescribe heavily marketed medicines far
less frequently than most other doctors.
The critical issue is that doctors must have the best interests of
their patients at heart in prescribing drugs or recommending medical
devices. Their judgment must not be clouded by financial self-interest
or the desire to please industrial benefactors.
--
Regards,
Catherine
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