Do Medical Schools Affect The Way Future Doctors Interact With Drug Companies?
Main Category: Pharma Industry / Biotech IndustryAlso Included In: Medical Students / Training
Article Date: 04 Dec 2007 - 1:00 PDT
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Although more and more drug advertisements are appearing on television, the bulk of the approximately $21 billion dollars that pharmaceutical companies spend annually to market their products is targeted to physicians, doctors in training (residents) and medical students.
A literature review by researchers from the Indiana University School of Medicine and the Regenstrief Institute, Inc. published in the December issue of the journal Pediatrics focuses on the interaction between drug companies, medical students and residents and concludes that well-designed seminars, role playing and focused curricula can affect medical student and resident attitudes and behavior toward drug companies.
The review, led by Aaron E. Carroll, M.D., M.S., assistant professor of pediatrics with the Children's Health Services Research at the IU School of Medicine and a Regenstrief Institute affiliated scientist, scrutinized the recent literature in the field. Dr. Carroll and colleagues found 12 studies since 1991 focusing on the efforts of academic medical centers to modify the relationship between pharmaceutical companies and medical students and residents.
"Not surprisingly, we found that the greatest impact medical schools had on the interaction of medical students and residents with drug companies was if the school banned all contact with company representatives. But even requiring medical students or residents to participate in one hour of training had an impact on the relationship," said Dr. Carroll, who is also with Riley Hospital for Children, a Clarian Health Partner.
The study authors reported evidence that policy decisions to restrict contact between trainees and the pharmaceutical industry were associated with greater skepticism toward information given by drug company product representatives and altered behavior in future contact with drug company representatives.
"Doing nothing is no longer an acceptable option. Medical schools need to bring up the complex financial, medical and ethical issues involved in the interactions between doctors and drug companies. Fortunately doing almost anything seems to have at least a minimal impact," said Dr. Carroll.
Co-authors of the study are Rachel Vreeman, M.D. and Jennifer Buddenbaum, MHA, of the IU School of Medicine's Department of Pediatrics and Thomas Inui, M.D., president and CEO of Regenstrief Institute and Sam Regenstrief Professor of Health Services Research; Professor of Medicine and associate dean for health care research, IU School of Medicine.
IU School of Medicine
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MLA
15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/90545.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/90545.php.
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Smart Doctors
posted by kirk on 5 Dec 2007 at 6:22 amIf med schools think a free lunch or a pen from a pharmaceutical rep will make their residents prescribe more of that product than they shouldn't be in medical school!! The job of a drug rep is to give information about disease states and their product.
It is the doctor's job to process the information and ask questions about side effects. If these residents depend on their liberal doctors to explain to them the positives and negatives of EVERY drug in EVERY class, they will get the crap sued out of them when they get into their own practice because they will use a third line product to treat aggressive disease and when that patient dies and they will get sued for not using the newest, best, most state of the art drugs on the market.
They can blame their medical school for not allowing them to learn from the best when they were in school. The best are the pharmaceutical reps!! They know their product inside and out and unlike many of these docs, all they do is study the specific disease state their product covers.
So to sum it up, if a free lunch or a pen makes a doctor write a drug, they shouldn't be in the medical industry. They should write the drug that is best for their patient. But limiting the information they can recieve from a drug company because the school thinks it will make their students biased is a total joke.. I hope my doctor see drug reps!!!!!
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