PDA

View Full Version : AMA considers two important proposals













Zee
  
Would number 1 have prevented the statin and paxil fiascos,
for example? And the very idea of number 2 is laughable:
imagine some drug ho sitting in on your medical
consulation...

Medical group to debate firms' influence on doctors

By Lindsey Tanner Associated Press

CHICAGO - Drug companies' influence on medical research and
on doctors themselves will be under the microscope as the
nation's largest group of physicians gathers for its annual
meeting this week.

Proposals facing the American Medical Association include

1. ...a measure seeking to make all drug-study results
public, even unpublished research funded by
pharmaceutical companies that might reflect poorly on
their products.

The measure stems partly from concern over unpublished data
linking some antidepressants to suicidal behavior in
children. Government officials are investigating the
potential link.

2....Another measure would strengthen a policy the AMA
adopted last year on ``shadowing,'' the practice of drug-
company representatives sitting in on patients' visits
with their doctors.

Critics say the practice is an attempt to influence what
medicines are prescribed. Drug companies say the practice is
educational, but they sometimes pay hundreds of dollars a
day to the doctors for these visiting rights -- money the
new measure says doctors should refuse.

Sandy
  
zwalanga@yahoo.com (Zee) wrote in message news:<e5f4a9c2.0406150918.bc85a4e@posting.google.com>...
> Would number 1 have prevented the statin and paxil
> fiascos, for example? And the very idea of number 2 is
> laughable: imagine some drug ho sitting in on your medical
> consulation...
>
>
> Medical group to debate firms' influence on doctors
\

Ahhhhh, the ever elusive debate on the giagantic billion
dollar drug industry and it's powerful influence on what
goes on in the examination room. Humm, I recently went to my
electrophysiolgist-cardiologist for a visit and since I need
a new pacer assist device a bossy asshole of a
representative from a pacer company actually came into the
examining room as if he were either a nurse or a doctor
without asking my permission.

He then wanted to interrogate my pacer!

I told him NO, he didn't have the right to suck what was
left of my battery and B) I would call him if I was
interested in his companies device (I'm pretty loyal to my
own company at the moment).

Anyway, I just thought "What gall this bastard has!"

Oh, and I really like the time Medtronics took me and a
medical employee for a steak dinner and Broadway play just
so they could talk about their latest device. Hummmmm. They
like influencing those who are on the front lines who will
share their opinions with the patient or make suggestions.
It's such bribery.

Anonymous
  
"Sandy" <bluesandybaby@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:5678d904.0406151634.119d3dd0@posting.google.com...
> zwalanga@yahoo.com (Zee) wrote in message
news:<e5f4a9c2.0406150918.bc85a4e@posting.google.com>...
> > Would number 1 have prevented the statin and paxil
> > fiascos, for example? And the very idea of number 2 is
> > laughable: imagine some drug ho sitting in on your
> > medical consulation...
> >
> >
> > Medical group to debate firms' influence on doctors
> \
>
> Ahhhhh, the ever elusive debate on the giagantic billion
> dollar drug industry and it's powerful influence on what
> goes on in the examination room. Humm, I recently went to
> my electrophysiolgist-cardiologist for a visit and since I
> need a new pacer assist device a bossy asshole of a
> representative from a pacer company actually came into the
> examining room as if he were either a nurse or a doctor
> without asking my permission.
>
> He then wanted to interrogate my pacer!
>
> I told him NO, he didn't have the right to suck what was
> left of my battery and B) I would call him if I was
> interested in his companies device (I'm pretty loyal to my
> own company at the moment).
>
> Anyway, I just thought "What gall this bastard has!"
>
> Oh, and I really like the time Medtronics took me and a
> medical employee for a steak dinner and Broadway play just
> so they could talk about their latest device. Hummmmm.
> They like influencing those who are on the front lines who
> will share their opinions with the patient or make
> suggestions. It's such bribery.

Yes. There should be an ethics rule that you can't accept
anything worth over $5 from a drug company if you are in a
position to recommend their products.

Bill

Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Finnish French German Italian Japanese Korean Norwegian Polish Portuguese Spanish Swedish