Medical school bosses on boards of pharma companies

The author has posted comments on this articleRema Nagarajan, TNN | Apr 3, 2014, 10.06PM IST NEW DELHI: If you thought physicians' conflict of interest was all about freebies, speaking charges or paid holidays doled out by pharma, then check out the latest issue of the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA). A research letter published in the JAMA has revealed how top leaders in the medical world including medical schools deans, hospitals directors, clinical department chairs and university presidents are on the boards of pharmaceutical companies for which they were paid, on an average, over $300,000 in 2012.

Financial relationships between the pharmaceutical industry and physicians have come under increased scrutiny. Less attention has been paid to relationships between industry and the leadership of academic medical centers (AMCs), who wield considerable influence over research, clinical, and educational missions, said the letter. It revealed that out of 50 companies examined, three lacked publicly available data on governance, but 19 out of the remaining 47 or 40% companies had at least one board member who also held a leadership position at an AMC. According to the letter 18 industry board members held 21 clinical or administrative leadership positions, including 2 university presidents, 6 deans, 6 hospital or health system executive officers, and 7 clinical department chairs or center directors. Forty-one board members held leadership AMC positions in 2012 receiving a mean financial compensation for board membership of $312,564.

"Given the magnitude of competing priorities between academic institutions and pharmaceutical companies, dual leadership roles cannot simply be managed by internal disclosure. These relationships present potentially far-reaching consequences beyond those created when individual physicians consult with industry or receive gifts," stated the letter written by lead author Timothy Anderson of the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center along with three others including two from Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion in Pittsburg.

Physicians and medical ethics experts have expressed concern about such lucrative ties with pharma which ought not to be done by university leaders who oversee independent research and the instruction of medical practitioners. Paul Levy, the former president and CEO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre in Boston, affiliated to Harvard University said in his blog on the issue: "You cannot serve two masters, even if you are highly intelligent. In fact, if you are highly intelligent, you will rationalise the problems away by saying that you cannot be personally corrupted." He added that unlike faculty or staff, top leaders of academic medical institutions were involved in business decisions and corporate partnerships.

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Medical school bosses on boards of pharma companies

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Supreme Court rules to keep Libertarian candidate off of ballot

The Daily Briefing Buckeye Forum Podcast

The Dispatchpublic affairs team talks politics and tackles state and federal government issues in the Buckeye Forum podcast.

The Ohio Supreme Court has upheld a ruling by Secretary of State Jon Husted keeping the Libertarian candidate for attorney general off the ballot.

The court this morning released its unanimous opinion in which it denied the appeal of Steven Linnabary seeking to overturn Husteds decision.

Linnabarys election petitions and those filed by the Libertarian partys gubernatorial slate were disqualified by Husted because circulators who obtained signatures failed to disclose on the forms by whom they were paid.

The justices ruled that Husteds interpretation of state law was reasonable in rejecting Linnabarys argument that one of his circulators was an independent contractor, rather than an employee, and not required to list an employer.

The court also found no substance to other issues raised by Linnabary, including claims his First Amendment rights were violated.

"We are disappointed. This is the first time that qualified candidates were cut off at the threshold because their circulators did not disclose their employment. This deprives Ohio voters of choice and this is neither right nor fair," said Mark G. Kafantaris, a Columbus lawyer representing Linnabary.

Charlie Earl, the Libertarian candidate for governor, and Linnabary, are appealing their loss of another ballot-access challenge in U.S. District Court in Columbus to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Judge Michael H. Watson previously ruled against the would-be candidates, ruling Ohios petition-circulation law places only a minimal burden on free speech.

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Supreme Court rules to keep Libertarian candidate off of ballot

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