Physician-industry collaboration: Conflicts of interest and the imputation of motive

被引:23
|
作者
Wadmann, Sarah [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Publ Hlth, Sect Hlth Serv Res, DK-1014 Copenhagen, Denmark
关键词
blame; conflict of interest; Denmark; hypertension; innovation; pharmaceutical industry; public-private partnership; strategic ignorance; RESEARCH-AND-DEVELOPMENT; PHARMACEUTICAL-INDUSTRY; RECENT TRIALS; SCIENCE; PUBLICATION; INNOVATION;
D O I
10.1177/0306312714525678
中图分类号
N09 [自然科学史]; B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ; 010108 ; 060207 ; 060305 ; 0712 ;
摘要
Policies about physicians' involvement with pharmaceutical companies spawn contradictory ideas. One set of policies aims to stimulate collaboration between private companies and publicly employed researchers to spur innovation and economic growth, another addresses what is seen as the problem of physicians' conflicts of interest stemming from industry collaboration. This article explores how these contradictory policies interact with everyday practice in clinical hypertension research in Denmark. I argue that corporate' and academic' research is entangled as physicians participate in industry trials to pursue their own research. Building on document analysis, observations of contract research, and interviews with clinician researchers and industry executives, I show how the establishment of industry ties' can serve as a way for physicians to navigate the constraints of research infrastructures and live up to intergenerational norms that knit the medical collective together. I discuss how this entanglement shapes medical research in ways that may run counter to the aims of medical innovation policies and that conflicts of interest policies do little to address. I conclude that appreciation of the ways in which economic and moral valuations come together is necessary to understand the conditions for medical research in an intertwined public-private research environment.
引用
收藏
页码:531 / 554
页数:24
相关论文
共 41 条
  • [1] Physician-industry relationship and conflicts of interest: Historical, normative aspects, negative impact and proposals
    Genta-Mesa, Giuseppe
    Florez, Ivan D.
    IATREIA, 2019, 32 (04) : 298 - 310
  • [2] Counterpoint - Physician-industry relationships can be ethically established, and conflicts of interest can be ethically managed
    White, Andrew P.
    Vaccaro, Alexander R.
    Zdeblick, Thomas
    SPINE, 2007, 32 (11) : S53 - S57
  • [3] Physician-industry conflict of interest: public opinion regarding industry-sponsored research
    Fisher, Charles G.
    DiPaola, Christian P.
    Noonan, Vanessa K.
    Bailey, Christopher
    Dvorak, Marcel F. S.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY-SPINE, 2012, 17 (01) : 1 - 10
  • [4] New paradigms for physician-industry relations: Overview and application for SVS members
    Singh, Niten
    Bush, Ruth
    Dalsing, Michael
    Shortell, Cynthia K.
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2011, 54 : 26S - 30S
  • [5] Patient responses to physician disclosures of industry conflicts of interest: A randomized field experiment
    Rose, Susannah L.
    Sah, Sunita
    Dweik, Raed
    Schmidt, Cory
    Mercer, MaryBeth
    Mitchum, Ariane
    Kattan, Michael
    Karafa, Matthew
    Robertson, Christopher
    ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES, 2021, 166 : 27 - 38
  • [6] The physician and the conflicts of interest
    Lama, A
    REVISTA MEDICA DE CHILE, 2003, 131 (12) : 1463 - 1468
  • [7] Patient Advocacy Organizations, Industry Funding, and Conflicts of Interest
    Rose, Susannah L.
    Highland, Janelle
    Karafa, Matthew T.
    Joffe, Steven
    JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2017, 177 (03) : 344 - 350
  • [8] Conflicts of Interest: can a physician serve two masters?
    Greenberg, Robert D.
    CLINICS IN DERMATOLOGY, 2012, 30 (02) : 160 - 173
  • [9] Industry-funded research bias and conflicts of interest
    Elliott, David B.
    OPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, 2013, 33 (01) : 1 - 2
  • [10] Conflicts of interest and industry professional relationships in psychiatric neurosurgery: a comparative literature review
    Cabrera, Laura Y.
    Boyce, Hayden M. K.
    McKenzie, Rachel
    Bluhm, Robyn
    NEUROSURGICAL FOCUS, 2018, 45 (02)