Most Popular Stories
- Proposed cosmetic surgery tax is wrinkling a few brows
- Health plans will still pay for under-50 mammograms
- Doctors' neckties may transmit illness, AMA says
- VA study: Communication is main cause of surgical errors
- Pennsylvania ambulatory surgery centers flourishing despite recession
- Study: Current EMRs don't have measurable impact on cost or quality
Featured Jobs
-
Nurse Practitioner - Oncology
AVA Search Group - Eastern, TX -
Family Nurse Practitioner
Makro Health - Grundy -
Clinical Program Manager Transplant
Makro Health - Fort Worth, TX -
ENT Job for Indiana
StaffPointe, LLC - north, IN -
Dir Respiratory Therapy job for Southwest
StaffPointe, LLC - confidential, NV
Events
- Security Audits: Is Your Organization Prepared and In Compliance?
Dec.3 at 12 pm CT - Mobile Healthcare Industry Summit
1-2 Dec 09 — London - Harvard Business School 7th Healthcare Conference
January 30, 2010
Paid Research Reports
- Pricing and Reimbursement in Key Asia Pacific Markets
- Delivery Mechanisms for Large Molecule Drugs: Successes and failures of leading technologies and key drivers for market success
- The Cardiovascular Market Outlook to 2013: Competitive landscape, global market analysis and pipeline analysis
- Intellectual Property and Outsourcing in China: Minimizing risk whilst maximizing return on investment
- Health Care Equipment & Supplies: Global Industry Guide
- 2009 Trends to Watch: Healthcare Technology
FEATURES >> YouTube | Top acute-care hospitals | Women in Health IT | Top BlackBerry Apps | Commentary
TOPICS >> Stimulus | Health Reform | CMS News | Finance | EMRs | Mobile Healthcare | Hospital Leadership Blog
Free Newsletter
FierceHealthcare is the leading source of healthcare management news for healthcare industry executives. Join 46,000+ healthcare industry insiders who get FierceHealthcare via daily email. Sign up today!
Popular Topics
- Medicare
- health plans
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
- Insurance
- Electronic Medical Records (EMRs)
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- Medicaid
- American Medical Association (AMA)
- healthcare system
- prescription drugs
- health reform
- pharmaceutical companies
CME accreditation body plans exposure of courses violating drugmaker influence rules
To remain certified, doctors must take continuing medical education courses each year. With about half of the $1 billion per year cost of these courses being picked up by pharmaceutical companies, questions have always lingered as to whether such sponsorships unduly influence physicians. That's particularly the case, critics say, because the nonprofit that accredits course providers--the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education--hasn't done enough to police drug industry influence on such content.
This week, however, the accrediting group has signaled that it's ready to take a tougher stand on the issue of pharma influence on CME content. The head of the ACCME said this week that he would soon be revealing a list of classes and companies that already have violated rules against imposing commercial bias on this content.
The group also is considering a proposal that would require educators to tell doctors if a course is later found to be too biased in favor of a drug firm, as well as supply corrective materials, according CEO Dr. Murray Kopelow.
Dr. Kopelow previously had told a Senate committee that his group had acted on only 12 inquiries about commercial biased in CME courses during 2008 and 2009, and found only five of them to have violated the rules. That's a vanishingly small number, considering that the nonprofit accredits more than 100,000 classes. Small wonder that the group is under pressure to impose tougher screens on content--particularly given the general trend toward tougher scrutiny of pharma-doctor relationships.
To learn more about this story:
- read this piece in The New York Times
Related Articles:
Study: Doctors largely support commercial funding for CME
Case study: NY hospital drops pharma CME funding
Stanford limiting drugmaker CME financing
Related Stories
- Pharmas settle $124M Medicaid fraud suit; Legislators fight for 'critical access' funding for rural hospitals;
- SPOTLIGHT: Public blames drugmakers for H1N1 vaccine shortage
- Price hikes could raise $10 billion in additional income for pharmas
- Reform bill would require pharma disclosures of CME funding
- Fight erupts on Hill over attempt to raise pharma contributions to reform
- Reform bill now includes pharma, devicemaker disclosure of physician consulting
- SPOTLIGHT: Aides working on reform have health industry connections
- Study: Some physicians uninformed about approved uses of drugs
- Pharma gift disclosure law wins Eli Lilly support
- Pharmas adopt voluntary marketing guidelines banning doctor gifts
Comments
Post new comment
Home
| Subscribe | Advertise | Mobile Edition | RSS |
Privacy
| Site Map | List in Marketplace | Supplier MarketplaceTHE FIERCEMARKETS NETWORKFierceFinance | FierceFinanceIT | FierceComplianceIT | FierceHealthcare | FierceHealthFinance | FierceHealthIT | Hospital Impact | FierceMobileHealthcare | FierceCIO | FierceCIO:TechWatch | FierceContentManagement | FierceMobileIT | FierceGovernmentIT | FierceBiotech | FierceBiotech Research | FiercePharma | FierceVaccines | FierceBiotechIT | FiercePharma Manufacturing | FierceIPTV | FierceOnlineVideo | FierceTelecom | FierceVoIP | FierceBroadbandWireless | FierceDeveloper | FierceMobileContent | FierceWireless | FierceWireless:Europe© 2009 FierceMarkets, Inc. All rights reserved. |
![]() |





