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JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute 2006 98(23):1678-1679; doi:10.1093/jnci/djj508
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© Oxford University Press 2006.

NEWS

Conflict-of-Interest Spurs New Rules, Not Consensus

John Dudley Miller

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Drug manufacturers spent $7.8 billion in 2004 influencing physicians. That works out to roughly $10,000 for every practicing doctor in the country, according to IMS Health, the company that monitors the industry's finances.

They gave gifts, lucrative consulting contracts, and meals; they subsidized doctors' professional conferences and advertised in their journals. They gave drug samples to physicians that were worth another $16 billion.

Now several major research universities and government institutions are setting new rules that limit researchers' contact with pharmaceutical representatives. The policies range from extremely strict, like Stanford University's new "no pens or pizza" policy that limits all gifts no matter the size, to less stringent arrangements that allow doctors to accept drug samples, consult for companies, or own limited amounts of stock in companies that fund their research.

A conference on conflict of interest at the Cleveland Clinic in September outlined many of the still-unresolved issues. Although . . . [Full Text of this Article]

The Pharma Problem

No Gifts, No Visits

The Bigger Game

Disclosure Discussion


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