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Top US psychiatrist calls for ethics cleanup

Tue Mar 23, 2010 4:00 PM EDT
health, us, money, mental-health, drug, med, national-institute, psychiatrists
Carla K. Johnson, Associated Press

FILE - In this Sept. 13, 2006 file photo, National Institute of Mental Health Director Dr. Thomas Insel, left, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. American psychiatrists need to break away from a "culture of influence" created by their financial dealings with the drug industry, Insel said in Journal of the American Medical Association. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook, File)

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CHICAGO — American psychiatrists need to break away from a "culture of influence" created by their financial dealings with the drug industry, the head of the National Institute of Mental Health said in a leading medical journal.

Dr. Thomas Insel stops short of calling researchers corrupt or asking them to stop taking money from drug companies. But he highlights a "bias in prescribing practices" that favors brand names drugs over cheaper generics and non-drug treatments. And he says the situation must change with new standards for transparency and full disclosure of psychiatry's collaborations with industry.

"We can show the rest of medicine how to clean up our act," Insel told The Associated Press. His commentary appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

His efforts got a boost Tuesday with the signing of the health care overhaul legislation which requires drugmakers and others to file annual reports to the government on their financial ties to doctors. The law requires reporting of gifts, entertainment, food, research money and other fees and grants. Consumer advocates applaud the "sunshine" provision because it also requires a database the public can search for their own doctors' ties to industry.

"Transparency is the first step toward giving patients and the public the tools they need to evaluate those relationships," said Allan Coukell, director of the Pew Prescription Project, a consumer health project of the nonprofit Pew Charitable Trusts.

Current National Institutes of Health rules on financial disclosure are confusing, Insel said. They allow researchers seeking federal funds to make their own judgments about what constitutes a significant financial interest, which they must report to their academic or research institutions. The rules also exempt disclosures of anything below $10,000 annually or 5 percent equity interest in a company. Insel is helping oversee a revision of the NIH's rules, which date back to 1995.

Industry pays for much of the medical research in the United States and many scientists have financial relationships with drug and device makers. Researchers at many institutions are expected to fully disclose those ties to their universities, to the NIH and to the medical journals that publish their research.

Beginning in 2008, an inquiry by Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, uncovered millions of dollars in unreported fees paid by drug industry to prominent researchers. The investigation prompted universities and NIH to reassess their conflict-of-interest policies.

When the Grassley inquiry accused seven psychiatrists of failing to report payments they received from drug companies, Insel, himself a psychiatrist, said he tried to determine whether psychiatrists were being targeted unfairly.

He found, instead, evidence that psychiatry may have more drug ties than other medical specialties. In Vermont, for example, which requires public disclosure of industry payments to doctors, psychiatrists receive more money from drug companies than do other types of doctors.

Psychiatric journals report slightly higher rates of industry funding of published studies than other medical journals. And one study found that 90 percent of the advisers who help write American Psychiatric Association guidelines had undisclosed financial ties to industry, Insel writes in JAMA.

Meanwhile, antidepressants and other drug treatments rack up multibillion-dollar annual sales while non-drug treatments such as therapy are "woefully underused," Insel writes.

Insel said he has no financial ties with the drug industry.

Dr. Alan Schatzberg, president of the American Psychiatric Association, told the AP that future leaders of guidelines work groups "will have zero financial relationships with industry during their terms."

Insel's commentary will be influential, said Dr. Emil Coccaro, psychiatry department chairman at the University of Chicago and a recipient of NIH grants.

"It's important that our potential patients and their family members know we're above reproach in terms of undue influence by Big Pharma," Coccaro said.

That's why he threw away all the coffee mugs and pens given to him by drug companies and is careful to report any payments he receives as a board member of a startup biomedical company, he said.

___

On the Net:

JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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ADad-1477522

"If only u would take this pill (that I'm getting a nice kickback from, but unknown to u, the patient), u'll feel *sooo* much better".

The thing is brain drugs (take that to mean anti-depressants to anti-psychotic to anti-convulsants and pain relievers) have different effects on different people. Drugs interact differently. Caution is always advised when even considering using a drug to modify behavior.

    Reply#1 - Fri Aug 13, 2010 12:49 PM EDT
    ray.burchard

    Here is a surprise, as medical knowledge advances and physiological diagnosis and its subsequent remedies become more an observed clinical application and response and therefore, Doctors based in physiology will become simply clinicians.

    Then because of the medical community's reluctance to acknowledge the validity of psychology, what areas of medical ambiguity will still persist, but in the varied interpretations of psychological disorders. So what avenue gives the greatest opportunity for future pharmacological exploitation … psychiatry.

    As Dr. Thomas Insel found evidence that psychiatry may have more drug ties than other medical specialties. Surprise, surprise the medical community's growth industry.

    It would appear that a successful medical career is going to require more actual intellect as opposed to an above average IQ's ability to read, write and remember. "Experience without theory is blind, but theory without experience is mere pseudo intellectual play" ( Kant )

      Reply#2 - Fri Oct 15, 2010 12:30 PM EDT
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