PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Medical royal colleges receive millions from drug and medical devices companies

But payments are not always made public and critics say voluntary industry transparency initiatives don’t go far enough

2023-07-27
(Press-News.org) Royal colleges in the UK have received more than £9 million in marketing payments from drug and medical devices companies since 2015, but do not always disclose the payments publicly, finds an investigation published by The BMJ today. 

Investigative journalist Hristio Boytchev asked the colleges to disclose all payments from industry, campaign groups or patient associations, including the specific amount received from each donor, but they all refused to do so. 

Instead, data was compiled from Disclosure UK, a website run by the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) and Transparent MedTech, run by MedTech Europe, the European trade association for medical device firms. 

This showed that pharmaceutical companies contributed £7.5 million in the years 2015-2022, with more than half going to the Royal College of Physicians (£2.8 million) and the Royal College of GPs (£2.4 million), mainly for sponsorship of events, donations and grants, and joint ventures.

The biggest donor overall was Pfizer, with £1.8 million, followed by Novo Nordisk with £730,000 and Daiichi Sankyo with £478,000. 

Medical devices companies declared a total of £1.7 million of payments to royal colleges for the years 2017 to 2021 for “educational grants” and “support to educational events.”

The top recipient was the Royal College of GPs, with £674,000, followed by the Royal College Surgeons (England) with £414,000 and the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh with £227,000. More than 90% of the money came from just two donors, Johnson & Johnson and Thermo Fisher Scientific, who donated £905,000 and £644,000 respectively.

The colleges are not obliged to disclose these payments; they are not included in their annual reports and are only available through voluntary industry transparency initiatives.

The colleges told The BMJ that pharmaceutical and medical device company payments make up a fraction of their overall budgets and that there are clear governance rules around industry payments, while the companies said that all payments to royal colleges were disclosed transparently and were given with the goal of improving patient care.

Industry transparency initiatives are the only way the public can see payments from individual companies to the colleges, but experts say they have severe limitations.

The ABPI, for example, only saves the data on payments for the most recent three years and deletes historical data.

“I can see no justification for anything but full and mandatory disclosure”, said Emma Hardy, Labour MP and chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Surgical Mesh Implants. “Medicine is literally a matter of life and death, and patients must be confident they are receiving the best treatment available for the right reasons.”

“Even if we are told the information is independent, funding skews the types of education or information that gets made,” says Margaret McCartney, a general practitioner and former Royal College of General Practitioners trustee and council member. “It means that we become less independent, because we are not setting our own priorities, and that's bad for the profession.”

Recently, the UK Department of Health announced a public consultation on mandatory disclosure of industry payments to the healthcare sector - a system that already exists in the US as the Physician Payments Sunshine Act.

“It is deeply disappointing that so many Royal Colleges negotiate these payments and don’t even tell the full and detailed truth about them“, says Susan Bewley, honorary professor emeritus in Obstetrics and Women’s Health at King's College London and former chair of the transparency initiative Healthsense-UK. “Patients need to trust medical institutions that educate, or create and implement guidelines which should be based on best available evidence, not lobbying. (...) Sunshine, and full transparency are the very least,” she says. 

Although welcome, is transparency enough to reduce the impact of bias on patients, asks Margaret McCartney in a linked feature.

She examines the situation in the UK and finds that declaring and managing conflicts is a complex business that can lead to enormous disparities in the quality of reporting of individual healthcare professionals' declarations of interests.

A consistent approach is needed, she says, but unless new systems of declarations can actually reduce the negative impacts of conflicts, they will be wasted.

In a linked study published by BMJ Open, researchers set out to test whether professionals and laypeople can find and interpret declarations of interest made by professionals in the UK.

They found that declarations of interest are important and conflicts of interest concern patients and professionals, particularly in regard to trust in decision-making. However, if declarations, as currently made, are intended to improve transparency, they do not achieve this, due to difficulties in locating and interpreting them.

The authors say clarity about the purposes of transparency is needed and that future policies “may be more successful if focused on reducing the potential for negative impacts of conflicts of interest, rather than relying on individuals to locate declarations and interpret them.”

[Ends]

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A third of children with history of social care face school exclusion

2023-07-27
Pupils in state secondary schools in England are much more likely to be excluded if they have a history of receiving social care or special educational needs services, finds a new study by UCL researchers. The research, published in Child Abuse and Neglect, used anonymised data from the Department for Education’s National Population Database, which covered all children starting state secondary school in September 2011 and 2012 across the country – equating to around one million students. The team examined the proportion of pupils who had been excluded – either temporarily suspended or permanently expelled – during their time at secondary ...

UC San Diego health among first in nation to perform regenerative brain cell procedure for epilepsy

UC San Diego health among first in nation to perform regenerative brain cell procedure for epilepsy
2023-07-27
In what could lead to a revolutionary advancement in the treatment of temporal lobe epilepsy, UC San Diego Health has become one of the first health systems in the country to inject regenerative cells into the brain to treat epileptic seizures.  Part of a national clinical trial, UC San Diego Health’s multidisciplinary team performed the third ever experimental regenerative brain cell therapy procedure earlier this month. UC San Diego Health is the only nationally designated Level 4 Adult Epilepsy Center in the region. During the surgery, Sharona ...

AAN issues guidance on new treatments for early Alzheimer’s disease

2023-07-27
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2023 AAN Issues Guidance on New Treatments for Early Alzheimer’s Disease   MINNEAPOLIS – New therapies for early Alzheimer’s disease, monoclonal antibodies that remove amyloid-β plaques in the brain, are bringing hope to people whose lives have been affected by the disease. To help neurologists discuss these therapies with patients and caregivers, the American Academy of Neurology has developed an Emerging Issues in Neurology article, published online on July 26, 2023, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Emerging Issues in Neurology articles are designed ...

Mapping the changing landscape of gender-affirming care for teens

2023-07-27
Many families whose transgender children need gender-affirming care will need to drive much further than before because of laws and other actions passed since 2021 in 20 states, a new study shows. The restrictions mean that 25% of Americans age 10 to 17 now live more than a day’s drive away, round trip, from a clinic that could provide medications and hormones to support their gender transition. Before the restrictions, less than 2% lived this far from a clinic that could provide such care. One ...

A simpler method for learning to control a robot

2023-07-26
Researchers from MIT and Stanford University have devised a new machine-learning approach that could be used to control a robot, such as a drone or autonomous vehicle, more effectively and efficiently in dynamic environments where conditions can change rapidly.  This technique could help an autonomous vehicle learn to compensate for slippery road conditions to avoid going into a skid, allow a robotic free-flyer to tow different objects in space, or enable a drone to closely follow a downhill skier despite being buffeted by strong winds. The researchers’ approach incorporates certain structure from control theory into the process for learning a model in such a way that leads ...

Astronomers reveal new features of galactic black holes

Astronomers reveal new features of galactic black holes
2023-07-26
LAS VEGAS – July 26, 2023 – Black holes are the most mysterious objects in the universe, with features that sound like they come straight from a sci-fi movie.  Stellar-mass black holes with masses of roughly 10 suns, for example, reveal their existence by eating materials from their companion stars. And in some instances, supermassive black holes accumulate at the center of some galaxies to form bright compact regions known as quasars with masses equal to millions to billions of our sun. A subset of accreting stellar-mass black holes that can launch jets of highly magnetized plasma are called microquasars.  An international ...

Screening won’t solve racial disparities in melanoma outcomes, study suggests

Screening won’t solve racial disparities in melanoma outcomes, study suggests
2023-07-26
Increased skin cancer screening in individuals with skin of color is not sufficient to address racial disparities in melanoma survival rates, according to a new JAMA Dermatology study by UPMC and University of Pittsburgh researchers. Melanoma causes the most deaths of any skin cancer, but is usually treatable if caught early. Although the disease is most common in white individuals, survival odds are worse in people with darker skin tones. “In this study, we asked whether screening could address this disparity by helping detect melanoma early,” said senior author Laura Ferris, M.D., Ph.D., dermatologist at UPMC and professor of dermatology at the Pitt School of Medicine. ...

Petrified trees reveal Yellowstone geyser’s ongoing battle with drought

Petrified trees reveal Yellowstone geyser’s ongoing battle with drought
2023-07-26
American Geophysical Union 25 July 2023 AGU Release No. 23-29 For Immediate Release This press release and accompanying multimedia are available online at: https://news.agu.org/press-release/petrified-trees-reveal-yellowstone-geysers-ongoing-battle-with-drought/  AGU press contact: Liza Lester, +1 (202) 777-7494, news@agu.org (UTC-4 hours) Contact information for the researchers: Shaul Hurwitz, U.S. Geological Survey, shaulh@usgs.gov (UTC-7 hours)  WASHINGTON — Yellowstone’s Steamboat Geyser has had decades-long dry spells brought on by a history of droughts, a new study finds. With global temperatures on the rise, the American West is projected to become drier. ...

Lab on a chip technologies to improve the assessment of stored red blood cells

2023-07-26
https://www.massgeneral.org/news/research-spotlight/lab-on-chip-technology-red-blood-cellsZiya Isiksacan, PhD, a research fellow in the Center for Engineering in Medicine and Surgery (CEMS) is the lead author, and Osman Berk Usta, PhD, an investigator in the CEMS at Massachusetts General Hospital and an associate professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School, is the senior author of a new study published in PNAS, Assessment of Stored Red Blood Cells Through Lab-on-a-Chip Technologies for Precision Transfusion Medicine. The article is a collaboration between multiple international institutes ...

Breakthrough in solid-state storage innovates how biological materials are stored and handled

Breakthrough in solid-state storage innovates how biological materials are stored and handled
2023-07-26
Scientists have developed a novel method for storing biological materials such as RNA and proteins in a solid-state. The storage in solid-state resembles the form of a pill or a tablet, which dissolves in water for on-demand use.  The innovation provides a new way to overcome current limitations in the storage and handling of products derived from living cells used for a variety of health care and scientific research purposes.  Biological materials that are frequently used in developing new medicines and diagnostic testing tools such as mRNA, enzymes, and antibodies are highly ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Salk Institute’s Nicola Allen receives 2024 NIH Director’s Pioneer Award

The secret strength of our cell guards

DataSeer and AAAS partner to boost reporting standards

Mizzou researchers awarded $8 million in grants to discover new bullying prevention strategies

Holographic 3D printing has the potential to revolutionize multiple industries, say Concordia researchers

Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit in older adults

How diabetes risk genes make cells less resilient to stress

Aerobic physical activity and depression among patients with cancer

Incidence of hospitalizations involving alcohol withdrawal syndrome

Study: One-time cooperation decisions unaffected by increased benefits to society

Soil volatile organic compound profiles as indicators for soil evaluation in soybean fields

Shedding light on how tissues grow with sharply defined structures

JAMA Network launches JAMA+ AI

Climate report warns of escalating crisis, urges immediate action as UN summit nears

Scientists issue urgent warning on climate emergency

First successful demonstration of a dual-media NV diamond laser system

A call to bridge the gap in cancer clinical trial funding

Despite heavy marketing, most Americans reject the new weight-loss drugs

Ochsner Children’s Hospital named No.1 hospital for kids in Louisiana for fourth consecutive year

Rates of a tick-borne parasitic disease are on the rise

Crohn's & Colitis Foundation survey reveals more than 40% of IBD patients made significant financial sacrifices to pay for their healthcare

Sperm whale departure linked to decline in jumbo squid population in Gulf of California: new study unveils long-term impact on ecosystem health

New apps will enable safer indoor navigation for blind people

Scientists from IOCB Prague help to improve medical drugs

Recreating a hallmark of Parkinson's disease in human neurons

Solar-powered desalination system requires no extra batteries

When it comes to emergency care, ChatGPT overprescribes

Speakers to tackle global health challenges at WISH 2024

Mental health app could help prevent depression in young people at high risk

Dogs contaminate London ponds with parasite medications

[Press-News.org] Medical royal colleges receive millions from drug and medical devices companies
But payments are not always made public and critics say voluntary industry transparency initiatives don’t go far enough