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Just Saying No to Gifts From Drug Makers

August 18, 2002
By JEFFREY L. SEGLIN






For Dr. Rusty West, a physician at the Nocona Medical
Clinic in Nocona, Tex., the free golf balls, dinners and
sports tickets he had received over the years from drug
companies were a "small price to pay" for access to him and
the other doctors in his practice. But the trade group
representing the pharmaceutical industry is now
discouraging such gifts through a voluntary code of ethics
that took effect in July.

Though many other doctors seem to feel the same way as Dr.
West, such guidelines from the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America should come as no surprise.
Offering gifts unrelated to a physician's practice - a
common way to gain access to a physician - was explicitly
discouraged in 1991 by ethics guidelines of the American
Medical Association, to which roughly 30 percent of
physicians belong. The Texas Medical Association, to which
Dr. West belongs, also denounces such gifts. (Dr. West says
that he has not been offered any perks lately, but that he
had no ethical qualms about accepting them before.)

"It's pretty hard to see how a round of golf entails a
benefit to patients," said Dr. Alan R. Nelson, a former
president of the A.M.A., who this year headed a group
charged with educating its members about the ethics of
accepting drug-company gifts.

The pharmaceutical group's code is viewed by some people in
the industry as a leveler, helping to ensure that companies
compete for a physician's attention based solely on the
merits of their products. The guidelines, among other
things, prohibit any gifts, even of modest value, that are
not for the primary benefit of patients: anatomical models
for examination rooms are O.K.; World Series tickets for a
doctor's family are not.

Few pharmaceutical companies admit to engaging in the
behavior that the guidelines reject.

"Quite frankly, complying with the PhRMA code is not going
to require any changes on our part," said Bradley T.
Sheares, president of the US Human Health division of Merck
& Company.

But Scott Willoughby, assistant general counsel for the
pharmaceutical group, said the industry was facing a
growing perception problem. "Our C.E.O.'s kept getting beat
up in the paper over our marketing practices and wanted us
to find a way to put a code together to keep bad press from
happening," he said. "If people thought we were doing a bad
thing, we wanted to change that perception."

Perhaps not enough, however. It is up to each
pharmaceutical company to establish mechanisms to punish
representatives who break the rules.

Some consumer groups find the self-imposed call for better
behavior disingenuous. "Here is an industry that has
created, funded and built its livelihood around these
conflicts," said Ronald F. Pollack, executive director of
Families USA in Washington. "To expect effective policing
of these practices when they're the creator of these
problems is a stretch of credibility."

Some government officials feel that way, too. In June,
Vermont became the first state in the country to enact a
law requiring all pharmaceutical companies to report gifts
for physicians if the gifts are worth more than $25.

"We think most physicians will not take anything over $25
if they know their names are going to be on the Web
associated with these pharmaceutical companies," said Gov.
Howard Dean of Vermont, who once was a practicing physician
himself.

Doctors, meanwhile, seem to be wrestling with their own
ethics code. Earlier this year, the Polyclinic, which runs
three health care clinics in Seattle, started charging the
pharmaceutical representatives $30 to drop off samples.
Howard Springer, the practice's associate administrator,
said that this did not violate the A.M.A.'s policy
prohibiting physicians from accepting cash payments,
because "we're not guaranteeing them access to the
physicians."

But Dr. Leonard J. Morse, chairman of the A.M.A.'s Council
on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, disagreed. "It's
inappropriate to the A.M.A. code," he said. "Such payments
should not be accepted." It's a moot point for now.
Polyclinic, which once had 15 to 20 visits a day from
pharmaceutical representatives, now has none after imposing
the fee, Mr. Springer said.

For drug companies, the challenge goes beyond merely
promulgating a new code of behavior. The public will be
watching for attempts to skirt the spirit of the
guidelines. Doctors should refresh their memories about
their own code and refuse the gifts they should have been
refusing all along.

If they fail to comply, state governments may have to step
in. Laws like Vermont's will go a long way toward policing
the ethical behavior of the companies and the physicians if
they cannot police themselves.


http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/18/business/yourmoney/18ETHI.html?ex=1030679484&ei=1&en=7e05c5a40c774da2



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