MEDICAL SCHOOLS
Study finds inadequate ethics policies at Florida medical schools
A survey finds problems with Florida medical schools' ethics policies regarding pharmaceutical companies.
BY JOHN DORSCHNER
jdorschner@MiamiHerald.com
The University of Florida medical school received an F and the University of Miami a B on a scorecard designed to measure ethical policies on professors' relationship with the pharmaceutical industry, the Pew Prescription Project announced Tuesday.
Nova Southeastern's College of Osteopathic Medicine got a D, Florida State a B and the University of South Florida a C on the AMSA PharmFree Scorecard.
The Gainesville school flunked because it refused to provide information, according to the 2009 American Medical Student Association PharmFree Scorecard. UF spokeswoman Melanie Fridl Ross said Tuesday, ``We aren't sure what happened with respect to the AMSA survey, but . . . shortly after being named interim dean of the College of Medicine last June, Dr. Michael L. Good appointed a task force to review and update the existing policies . . . on industry conflicts of interest and industry-academic relations . . .
``The committee has completed its work and the draft policy is going before the college's Executive Committee on Thursday for approval.''
UM Dean Pascal Goldschmidt said his medical school has tightened up its policy since the Scorecard staff did its research. ``There has been greed and abuse in the way pharmaceutical companies work, but we can't afford to throw everything away with the bath water.
''The relationship between medical schools and the companies is extraordinarily important. Research with drugs has stopped 500,000 cardiac deaths. So we need to find a way to have a healthy, beneficial relationship with the industry,'' Goldschmidt said.
A spokesman for Nova Southeastern said the dean of the college was traveling and unavailable for comment.
FREE SAMPLES
The Scorecard report -- available at www.amsascorecard.org -- includes categories measuring policies for gifts and meals from industry to doctors, paid promotional speaking for industry, acceptance of free drug samples, interaction with sales representatives and industry-funded education.
For UM's Miller School of Medicine, the Scorecard said there are ``strong, clearly organized policies on individual conflicts of interest. These policies could be made stronger with a complete ban on gifts, tighter restrictions on samples and a stronger fire wall between industry funding and on-site educational activities.''
The Scorecard said UM's limits on meals 'may not significantly curb on-site or off-site [restaurant] meals. Provisions to be occasional, informational and `modest by local standards' are not significant disincentives for meals.''
Goldschmidt said that since that Scorecard research was done, the policy was changed to ban all gifts and meals. The report praised UM for ''exemplary language'' in its ethics on consulting relationships. ``This policy requires a formal contract for all consulting relationships, including the nature of services to be rendered and the amount of compensation for those services, which must be reasonable. Importantly, all such arrangements must be approved by the department chair or the dean.''
The Scorecard said Nova has a ``workable gifts policy and thorough oversight and compliance framework, but fails to address most other domains, including site access, consulting/speaking relationships, on- and off-site education, and disclosure of financial relationships.''
CONSULTING FEES
Over the past year, there have been stories in the national press about doctors writing papers in favor of drugs after receiving unpublicized payments for speaking or consulting fees from the firms they're promoting.
The Scorecard, released Tuesday, gives an A or B to 45 of 149 medical schools.
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