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AAMC Recommends Limits on Drug Company 'Freebies'

Published May 19, 2008 4:57 PM by Stephen Cornell

The Association of American Medical Colleges is calling for restrictions on drug companies and medical device companies at medical schools and teaching hospitals, according to an article in American Medical News.

Free lunches, pens or trips to resorts from drug companies should not be accepted. Ghostwriting of pharmaceutical research should be prohibited. And participation in industry-backed speakers' bureaus should be discouraged.

A report by the Assn. of American Medical Colleges calls for these and other restrictions to limit drug and medical device companies' interactions at the nation's medical schools and teaching hospitals. The report's recommendations seek to free the educational environment of industry marketing activities, put buffers in place when industry funding is accepted, and distance physicians and trainees from sales representatives' influence, medical leaders said.

AAMC Chief Scientific Officer David Korn, MD, said the recommendations were prompted by concerns that industry funding is increasingly eroding the objectivity and integrity of medical education.

"Those [industry] influences may not be in the best interest of individual patients and may not be in accord with the best evidence available about particular illnesses," he said.

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