NIH Proposes More Funding Disclosures to Curb Conflicts of Interest

Amid growing concerns about conflicts of interest, the National Institutes of Health proposed new guidelines Thursday for scientific researchers receiving federal funds. Under the new rules, researchers would have to disclose funding of $5,000 or more from drug companies or any other industry with an interest in the research they perform, The Washington Post reports. The minimum payment researchers must currently report is $10,000.

Universities, research centers and businesses whose researchers receive money from the NIH will have to monitor compliance, and payments will be posted on a public website. The new guidelines would affect 40,000 researchers. The National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine last year urged doctors to stop taking money and gifts from pharmaceutical companies. Sen. Charles Grassley, R.-Iowa, has been leading an investigation into the conflicts of interest that led to the changed guidelines.

The Pew Prescription Project says the NIH should require disclosure of all payments, not just those of more than $5,000.

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