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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 19734

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: Electronic Source

Conflicts of Interest in Medicine
Current Medicine.TV 2011 Dec 28
http://currentmedicine.tv/2011/other-categories/policy/conflicts-of-interest-in-medicine/


Full text:

The Institute of Medicine (IOM), part of the National Academy of Sciences, issued in April a much-awaited report recommending guidelines for how doctors and medical societies should handle and report industry support and payments.

We interviewed one of the authors, Dr. Eric Campbell of Harvard

 

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Cases of wilful misrepresentation are a rarity in medical advertising. For every advertisement in which nonexistent doctors are called on to testify or deliberately irrelevant references are bunched up in [fine print], you will find a hundred or more whose greatest offenses are unquestioning enthusiasm and the skill to communicate it.

The best defence the physician can muster against this kind of advertising is a healthy skepticism and a willingness, not always apparent in the past, to do his homework. He must cultivate a flair for spotting the logical loophole, the invalid clinical trial, the unreliable or meaningless testimonial, the unneeded improvement and the unlikely claim. Above all, he must develop greater resistance to the lure of the fashionable and the new.
- Pierre R. Garai (advertising executive) 1963