06/04/2024 / By Olivia Cook
Many doctors in the United States receive payments from pharmaceutical companies, a recent study has found.
The study indicated that these financial incentives have a significant impact on prescribing practices, leading to a higher frequency of brand-name drug prescriptions, costly medications and those produced by paying companies. The authors emphasized growing public concern over these payments as they contribute to rising drug costs for patients and healthcare systems.
The 2024 study published in JAMA revealed that from 2013 to 2022, medical hematologists/oncologists and surgical oncologists in the U.S. were more likely to receive significant industry payments from pharmaceutical and medical device companies, surpassing the median amounts received by the average physician.
Researchers analyzed industry payments to physicians across 39 specialties over this period, using data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Open Payments platform and the CMS National Plan and Provider Enumeration System. The study included industry payments for charitable contributions, consulting services, education, entertainment, food and beverages, gifts, grants, honoraria, speaker engagements and travel and lodging.
From August 2013 to December 2022:
A 2022 retrospective cohort study published in JCO Oncology Practice revealed that in 2018, 139 U.S. medical oncologists – comprising just one percent of all oncologists in the country – received over $100,000 each in general payments.
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The median payment for these oncologists was $154,613, totaling $24.2 million. These payments included consulting fees, honoraria, speaking fees and travel expenses, according to Dr. Christopher Booth, a medical oncologist and health services researcher at Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada, and his colleagues.
“These oncologists often hold significant leadership roles, draft treatment guidelines and serve on journal editorial boards,” Booth told MedPage Today. “Our findings highlighted the potential for both perceived and actual conflicts of interest. Given their influential positions, the impact of this small group on oncology practice and policy could be substantial.”
Booth and his co-authors pointed out that revenue from pharmaceutical oncology drugs has surged by 70 percent over the past decade – mirroring an increase in both the number and value of payments to oncologists.
Although a small group of physicians received a disproportionate share of industry payments, the study also identified nearly 52,500 physicians who received modest payments (median $109) related to oncology drugs from 2016 to 2018. (Related: Some doctors are now charging patients for the time it takes them to do paperwork.)
Since even small payments can influence prescribing practices, the large payments to influential physicians are particularly concerning, Booth said.
The researchers used the CMS Open Payments dataset to identify all U.S. oncologists and hematologists receiving over $100,000 from pharmaceutical companies in 2018. They focused on payments related specifically to oncology drugs–excluding those for devices, medical supplies, research, business ownership, or investment interests.
The study identified 139 physicians who received at least six-figure payments in 2018. Of these, 132 (95 percent) were active in clinical practice, and 78 (56 percent) worked in academic settings. Additionally, 43 (31 percent) were affiliated with National Cancer Institute-designated cancer centers and 32 (23 percent) were associated with National Comprehensive Cancer Network centers.
Moreover, 84 of these physicians (60 percent) held or had previously held leadership positions in their hospitals, 33 (24 percent) served on journal editorial boards, and 29 (21 percent) held leadership positions in specialty associations over the past five years.
“Moving forward, the oncology community will need to engage in serious reflection. Oncology specialty associations, guideline panels, and journal editorial boards should reconsider whether it is appropriate for physicians receiving such large payments to occupy these prominent positions. The general public and patients are unlikely to view favorably industry relationships involving hundreds of thousands of dollars,” Booth said.
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bad doctors, big government, Big Pharma, Bribes, conflict of interest, conspiracy, corruption, dangerous doctors, deception, fraud, Medical Tyranny, money supply, oncologists, pharmaceutical fraud, Prescription drugs, traitors
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