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Big Pharma uses red meat rhetoric in a fight over drug costs. A school shooting mother opposes guns for teachers. Campus protests against the Gaza war continue, and activists decry the killing of reporters there.

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Drug, Device Makers Must Disclose Payments to Docs

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013   

PHOENIX - It's a little-known aspect of the Affordable Care Act: drug and medical-device makers will soon have to publicly disclose their payments to doctors and hospitals. At the same time, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is looking for dozens of doctors to serve on committees that evaluate new medical devices before they hit the market. But the new rules could make it harder to fill those vacancies.

Dr. Ned Feder, staff scientist with the Project On Government Oversight, said it's part of a trend to bring more transparency to the health-care industry.

"When you ask one of these people, 'Is this affecting your vote?' the answer is invariably, 'No, it's not, of course not; I'm giving you my best expert advice,'" Feder remarked. "But we want you at the very least to disclose it, and in many cases, you can't serve on the committee if you have a conflict of interest."

Feder says doctors already have to discuss potential conflicts of interest with the FDA, but the information is not disclosed, even to other committee members. The new doctor-payment details are being compiled by the Secretary of Health and Human Services and should be available to the public next year.

This issue made headlines recently when the birth control pill Yaz was taken off the market. Some FDA committee members who approved it had financial ties to either Bayer, the original manufacturer of Yaz, or to the company that made the drug's generic equivalent.

Feder says doctor payments range from a few hundred dollars to tens of thousands.

"It's hard to imagine that a person receiving this kind of payment will maintain complete objectivity over the value of the drug, its safety, and its effectiveness."

Critics of the new disclosure requirement say it will slow the approval of new medical breakthroughs, and that payments aren't payoffs, but are legitimate fees for speaking, consulting or testing drugs and devices.

Feder says the goal of the new disclosure rule isn't to keep doctors off committees, but to ensure that potential conflicts are more transparent.





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