Harvard Revises Conflicts of Interest
After nearly a year and a half of discussion, the Harvard University faculty of medicine committee released a new report Wednesday revising and clarifying the existing policy on conflicts of interest for its 11,000 faculty members. The subcommittee was part of university-wide group that simultaneously released a set of principles intended to guide the policies of all Harvard schools.
Under the new policy, the medical school will prohibit its faculty from delivering promotional talks for drug and medical device makers; accepting personal gifts, travel, or meals; and placing stricter limits regarding earning outside income. The recommended policy revisions and restrictions will be put into effect and practice starting in Jan. 1.
"Within and outside industry, many recognize that industry and academia must seek a new model of academia industry collaboration to achieve greater success at discovery and development of new treatments while fully protecting academic values and those of the medical profession," said Dean Jeffrey Flier, MD, dean of Harvard Medical School, in a statement.
"It is incumbent upon us to create a culture that is open to creative new approaches to collaboration on scientific development, based on transparency, rather than one that makes novel interactions more difficult," he added.
Harvard, like several other medical schools across the country, has come under scrutiny at the federal level in recent years over financial ties between some of its faculty and pharmaceutical and device companies. In 2008, Sen. Charles Grassley (R-IA), the ranking minority member of the Senate Finance Committee, investigated several Harvard physicians on charges that they were receiving payments from drug companies while receiving federal dollars to research that company's product.
Grassley was author of legislation, which was included in the new healthcare reform law, requiring pharmaceutical and device companies to report quarterly the money they give to physicians to the Department of Health and Human Services.
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