Medical Researchers Fail to Disclose Financial Ties, Survey Finds

Only seven of 32 consultants paid $1 million or more by medical device manufacturers in 2007 disclosed their financial connections in all of their  journal articles published the following year, according to an analysis published in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

The study, conducted by a Columbia University team, focused on physicians and other medical researchers who were highly paid consultants to orthopedic device companies in 2007, and who then published articles in professional journals. It found that 25 of the 32 consultants it tracked failed to disclose their financial connections on some or all occasions.

“It is one more indication of the widespread corruption of the medical profession by industry money,” Marcia Angell, a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine, told the The New York Times.

Of the 95 articles published by the consultants, only 44 included a mention of a financial relationship between the doctor and manufacturer.

The Times said the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors has proposed better disclosure policies in the last two years, but each journal sets its own policy, and critics say many of the publications have not gone far enough.

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