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Physicians Educate Congress on Realities of CME Funding


 

WASHINGTON — Without pharmaceutical industry funding, continuing medical education is in danger of faltering, panelists emphasized at a forum aimed at educating Capitol Hill staffers on CME funding.

The forum, sponsored by the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest, a New York-based nonprofit organization, and the Coalition for Healthcare Communication, an umbrella group for advertising agencies and medical journal publishers, was called in response to efforts from senators, House members, and accrediting organizations for greater accountability for CME funding.

In July, a task force of the Association of American Medical Colleges said that academic medical centers should discourage faculty participation in industry-sponsored speakers bureaus. A month earlier, the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education proposed tightening restrictions on commercial support of CME, and possibly even banning industry funding.

But the panelists, who included a group of CME providers, several physicians, and a medical journal editor, warned that withdrawing such funding would undermine a well-run and much-liked enterprise.

“CME in the U.S. is a great success story,” said Dr. George Lundberg, a former editor of JAMA and currently editor-in-chief at Medscape.

It changes knowledge, skills, and patient outcomes, he said, adding that surveys have shown that physicians are in favor of industry support.

Dr. Michael Weber, a professor of medicine at the State University of New York, Brooklyn, said that he views pharmaceutical company funding of CME as a mandate, “not a luxury.” Manufacturers have a responsibility to educate providers on how to use their products, he said.

The pressure for transparency is leading to what Dr. Weber called censorship. He said he has had to alter presentations at the request of meeting leaders in the United States, whereas a recent presentation at the European Society of Cardiology was completely within his control.

Dr. Jack Lewin, CEO of the American College of Cardiology, said he had “serious, serious concerns about the recent attacks” on CME.

The ACC has multiple steps to remove conflicts of interest from its professional and educational programs, he said, adding that in addition, it discloses its industry funding on its Web site.

Dr. Lewin said that there had been abuses in the CME arena, but that the move to clamp down on those bad actors had professional societies and pharmaceutical companies running for cover.

There is evidence to support his claim. Public Citizen's Health Research Group, in comments sent in September to the ACCME on its proposal to limit or ban industry support of continuing medical education, said that, “Despite a quadrupling of commercial support for CME over the past 10 years, in 2007, the percentage of CME income provided by commercial interests actually decreased to 2002 levels.”

Public Citizen advocates an end to commercially funded CME. Because CME is a condition of licensure, demand will remain, according to the group. “Shifting the burden of funding toward physicians (not exactly a group occupying the lower rungs of the earning ladder) would attenuate the effect of lost revenue.”

Drugmakers Set to Disclose Payments

Two pharmaceutical companies will begin publicly disclosing how much each pays physicians.

Eli Lilly & Co. was the first company to step forward, followed a day later by Merck & Co.

Lilly is starting a registry that will compile payments to physicians who have served as speakers or advisers for the company. It will be available to the public on the company's Web site as early as the second half of 2009, Lilly officials said in a statement. The registry will be updated each year to reflect the previous year's payments.

The company said that by 2011, it aims to report whatever is required under the proposed Physician Payments Sunshine Act. That bill (S. 2029) was introduced by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) in November 2007. As currently written, it would require manufacturers of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, and biologics to disclose the amount of money they give to doctors through payments, gifts, honoraria, and travel. Product samples for patients would be excluded.

The bill was endorsed by several major drug companies, including Lilly and Merck, by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the Advanced Medical Technology Association, and by the Association of American Medical Colleges, among others. But it has not had any movement since its introduction.

In a statement, Sen. Kohl congratulated Lilly, saying the company was “fulfilling the obligations of the Physician Payments Sunshine Act before it has been enacted.”

Merck said that beginning this month, it will disclose the grants to patient organizations, professional societies, and others for “independent professional education initiatives,” which would include continuing medical education. Next year, it will include other grants made by the Merck Company Foundation and the Merck Office of Corporate Contributions. The information will be posted on its Web site.

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