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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 13316

Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.

 

Publication type: media release

How to Hold Pharma-Free Meetings
AMSA/PharmedOut 2008 Mar 26
http://www.pharmedout.org/PharmaFreeMeetingTipsWeb.pdf


Full text:

The American Medical Student Association’s Pharm-Free Campaign and PharmedOut.org announce the release of a guide “How to Hold Pharma-Free Meetings” for holding independent, industry-free grand rounds, meetings, and conferences. At most academic medical centers, pharmaceutical companies fund food, speaker travel and honoraria for grand rounds and other educational conferences for physicians and physicians-in-training.

None of the academic medical centers that have banned pharmaceutical company gifts to physicians have banned industry-funded educational events. The practical motivation of satisfying industry sponsors prevents the independent discussion of medical therapies. “How to Hold Pharma-Free Meetings” provides practical tips on how to break industry’s grip on medical education and is available at http://www.pharmedout.org/PharmaFreeMeetingTipsWeb.pdf.

The American Medical Student Association’s Pharm-Free Campaign encourages medical students and physicians to refuse money, gifts, or hospitality from the pharmaceutical industry; to seek out objective sources of information; and to avoid conflicts of interest in medical education and practice.

PharmedOut is an independent, publicly funded project that empowers physicians to identify and counter inappropriate pharmaceutical promotion practices. News, slideshows and other teaching tools, and more than 300 credits of pharma-free CME are available at our website.


Alicia M. Bell
Project Manager and Research Assistant, PharmedOut Department of Physiology and Biophysics Complementary and Alternative Medicine Program Georgetown University School of Medicine Box 571460 Washington, DC 20057-1460
Phone: 202-687-1191
Fax: 202-687-7407
Email: amb95@georgetown.edu

 

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...to influence multinational corporations effectively, the efforts of governments will have to be complemented by others, notably the many voluntary organisations that have shown they can effectively represent society’s public-health interests…
A small group known as Healthy Skepticism; formerly the Medical Lobby for Appropriate Marketing) has consistently and insistently drawn the attention of producers to promotional malpractice, calling for (and often securing) correction. These organisations [Healthy Skepticism, Médecins Sans Frontières and Health Action International] are small, but they are capable; they bear malice towards no one, and they are inscrutably honest. If industry is indeed persuaded to face up to its social responsibilities in the coming years it may well be because of these associations and others like them.
- Dukes MN. Accountability of the pharmaceutical industry. Lancet. 2002 Nov 23; 360(9346)1682-4.