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COUCH IN CRISIS 

Insel and Obama Want Transparency—Let’s Oblige

By Daniel Carlat, MD | March 31, 2010

Two events occurred last week that will have significant ramifications for psychiatry. On March 23, The Physician Payments Sunshine Act was signed into law by President Obama. The act was embedded in the larger healthcare reform package, so it didn’t receive a lot of fanfare, but it is huge. The Sunshine Act will require that all drug and device companies report all payments made to physicians and teaching hospitals. All payments will be available on the Health and Human Services website, which will publish unprecedented detail about such payments, including the precise nature of the “service” provided, the date of each check, and the name of the drug or device that a promotional talk supported.

Thus, for example, if you are on AstraZeneca’s speakers bureau, your talk won’t simply be classified as “professional education”—instead, your patients will learn that you were paid $2000 on a particular date for marketing activities in support of Seroquel. This granularity of information constitutes true transparency, as opposed to the rather opaque information provided on the physician payment registries posted voluntarily by some companies.

The second, related, event occurred the day after the Sunshine Act became law. Thomas Insel, the Chief of NIMH, published a commentary in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association, entitled "Psychiatrists' Relationships with Pharmaceutical Companies: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?" While acknowledging (as we all should) that some collaboration between physicians and pharma is a good thing, Insel concluded that industry influence has radically skewed psychiatric practice in favor of the most expensive drugs, even when evidence shows that cheaper generics work as effectively. He also bemoaned the fact that effective psychotherapeutic techniques are "woefully underused and frequently not reimbursed."

Finally he called on organized psychiatry to lead the way to reform:

"The focus on financial conflicts of interest in psychiatry is an opportunity to take the lead in setting new standards for interactions between all medical disciplines and industry. Academic leaders, professional societies, and patient advocacy groups could turn the tables of public trust by developing a culture of transparency for psychiatry's collaborations with industry, including the clear separation of academic-clinical missions from industry marketing."

As it turns out, at our Annual Meeting in New Orleans this May, we have the opportunity to show the public that psychiatry is, indeed, committed to the highest ethical standards. The American Psychiatric Association’s Assembly will vote on whether to approve the recommendations contained in a report written by Dr. Paul Appelbaum and his Work Group on Relationships Between Psychiatrists and Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Industries. The bottom line recommendations of the report are:

1. Psychiatrists should not accept gifts from industry (except for medication samples).

2. Psychiatrists should not give company-sponsored promotional talks, nor should they attend such events, unless they are accredited by the ACCME (the organization that creates and monitors the standards in continuing medical education).

3. Psychiatrists should not participate in “consulting” meetings if they are actually promotional meetings in the guise of consultation.

Many of these provisions have already become policy at the major academic medical centers in the U.S. For example, the major Harvard Medical School hospitals have banned industry gifts and forbid faculty from giving promotional talks. Johns Hopkins, Stanford and several others have followed suit.

Inexplicably, these recommendations have been rejected twice at APA Assembly meetings, where APA members have taken umbrage at the implication that their opinions could be swayed by a free lunch or by a few thousand dollars in payments for drug talks. But the drug companies themselves understand the promotional value of the smallest of gifts, and an increasingly critical public has little patience for doctors who claim that they are impervious to marketing.

I urge all psychiatrists to show their support for the Appelbaum recommendations. You can find out who your Assembly representatives are through your district branch’s website. Give them a ring or send them an email. Let them know that it’s time for psychiatry to take back the ethical high ground.

 

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by Ron Pies | March 31, 2010 3:40 PM EDT

  • Paul Appelbaum's recommendations seem sound and reasonable to me! I agree with Dr. Carlat that we need to regain the moral high ground on this issue of accepting gifts, honoraria, etc., from pharmaceutical companies. At the same time, I don't advocate "breaking off"all contacts with these companies. I haven't met with any "sales reps" in many years, and have no occasion to do so any more. But when I used to meet with them, I always found it fun to show them why their latest study didn't prove what they thought it proved! The better "reps" actually appreciated the critiques.--Best, Ron Pies MD

by broad powers | April 06, 2010 11:10 PM EDT

                        Evidence Based Psychiatry

We are Pacific South Western Advocates in Canada.  We recently filed a Policy Complaint against the Victoria police department for failing to provide ER staff with written objective reports, when police transport citizens under the British Columbia Mental Health Act Section 28.  Verbal reports? We are sorry, but we expect police and psychiatric staff to act professional, and verbal reports where misunderstandings occur is far from professional.

There have been major errors,  (1) a capable citizen was committed and drugged and denied access to lawyer and family?  We found out that there were two other citizens admitted to this same hospital who had the same name including middle name as the citizen in question.

(2)   ER staff released another citizen who police had brought in under the BC MHA Sec 28, the ER staff did not realize this guy was brought in under the Mental Health Act and released him, an hour later, the guy set fire to someone's residence!

Anytime a psychiatrist meets with Pharma representatives, it should be documented, and also note who gets paid what, for what services.  broadpowers

 

 

by Scott Hoopes | April 07, 2010 12:09 AM EDT

I am happy to render the inexplicable explicable for Dr. Carlat.  These recommendations, formulated by an academic psychiatrist and promoted and supported, largely, by other academic psychiatrists, simply reveals the division between academic psychiatry and rank and file clinical psychiatrists, of whom I am one, who resent the professional and ethical contempt inplicit in telling us what we may and may not do in our relationship with the pharmaceutical industry.  I have spoken for various pharmaceutical companies for many years.  In fact, I'm typing this from a hotel room on such a trip.  Today I met with an overworked rural family practice physician who has no psychiatric support and who is doing his best to take care of psychiatric patients.  In the course of our discussion I reviewed the use of the MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview (and offered to train his RN to administer it, by phone, on my dime), suggested he use the PHQ 2 or 4 in routine follow-up, and reviewed the FDA approved indications, the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics and the warnings in the PI for a branded antidepressant.  Pretty sinister stuff, to some, it appears, but a usual day speaking for the pharmaceutical industry doing promotional talks for me.  As for the honorarium, it covers my day away from my private practice and no more.  I do this largely because I love to teach and find a great deal of gratification helping general physicians in my region treat psychiatric patients, I hope, a little bit more effectively.  

by Scott Hoopes | April 07, 2010 12:10 AM EDT

The Northeastern penchant self-righteously to tell other people what to do (heritage of the Puritans?) is at best a curiosity and at worst a provocation to many of us in the West (and the South and the Heartland, I hope).  But in an attempt to be constructive let me make a modest proprosal that will likely be rejected because it does not include sanctions by professional organizations or the involvement of government agencies with three letter acronyms.  Let the AMA recommend, and each certifying specialty board require, that every medical licensing examination include a section on biostatististics.  Every residency program would be required to include formal instruction in biostatistics, which could include regular meetings with pharmaceutical representatives who would be expected to bring copies of studies to support the use of their product.  These fora would be led by an experienced faculty member who would dismantle the studies as an instructional experience for the residents. The pharmaceutical representatives would soon learn not to bring fluff.  This course of action would also create a sophisticated audience for speakers like me that would raise the bar for us and for the pharmaceutical industry in turn.  Problem solved by empowering people rather than telling them what to do.  A bit more of this approach would be salutary in the health care debate, but that is a paragraph for another time.

by Perry Zuckerman | April 07, 2010 2:11 AM EDT

"1. Psychiatrists should not accept gifts from industry (except for medication samples). 2. Psychiatrists should not give company-sponsored promotional talks, nor should they attend such events, unless they are accredited by the ACCME (the organization that creates and monitors the standards in continuing medical education). 3. Psychiatrists should not participate in "consulting"meetings if they are actually promotional meetings in the guise of consultation." Oh, and big Pharma can't give out pens with the names of their drugs on them anymore. How scary. What about the First Amendment? How thin the screen between freedom and tyranny. How easily even highly educated people get caught up in the swarming crowd. By the way, [the illusion of] Freedom of Speech aside, I don't appreciate being essentially told by colleagues that I'm too stupid to tell the difference between a sales pitch and a truly neutral presentation. If the makers of a medication give me a meal and a talk, I'm fully capable of factoring that in to my analysis of everything they say. And unless there is a quid pro quo, "I buy you dinner and you prescribe my drug", there is nothing unethical about it. I should be judged by the treatment my patients receive, not by who bought me a steak.

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