BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Recently the financial relationships between industry and professional medical associations have come under increased scrutiny because of the concern that industry ties may create real or perceived conflicts of interest. Professional medical associations pursue public advocacy as well as promote medical education, develop clinical practice guidelines, fund research, and regulate professional conduct. Therefore, the conflicts of interest of a professional medical association and its leadership can have more far-reaching effects on patient care than those of an individual physician. PURPOSE: Few if any professional medical associations have reported their experience with implementing strict divestment and disclosure policies, and among the policies that have been issued, there is little uniformity. We describe the experience of the North American Spine Society (NASS) in implementing comprehensive conflicts of interest policies. STUDY DESIGN: A special feature article. METHODS: We discuss financial conflicts of interest as they apply to professional medical associations rather than to individual physicians. We describe the current policies of disclosure and divestment adopted by the NASS and how these policies have evolved, been refined, and have had no detrimental impact on membership, attendance at annual meetings, finances, or leadership recruitment. No funding was received for this work. The authors report no potential conflict-of-interest-associated biases in the text. RESULTS: The NASS has shown that a professional medical association can manage its financial relationships with industry in a manner that minimizes influence and bias. CONCLUSIONS: The NASS experience can provide a template for other professional medical associations to help manage their own possible conflicts of interest issues.
BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Recently the financial relationships between industry and professional medical associations have come under increased scrutiny because of the concern that industry ties may create real or perceived conflicts of interest. Professional medical associations pursue public advocacy as well as promote medical education, develop clinical practice guidelines, fund research, and regulate professional conduct. Therefore, the conflicts of interest of a professional medical association and its leadership can have more far-reaching effects on patient care than those of an individual physician. PURPOSE: Few if any professional medical associations have reported their experience with implementing strict divestment and disclosure policies, and among the policies that have been issued, there is little uniformity. We describe the experience of the North American Spine Society (NASS) in implementing comprehensive conflicts of interest policies. STUDY DESIGN: A special feature article. METHODS: We discuss financial conflicts of interest as they apply to professional medical associations rather than to individual physicians. We describe the current policies of disclosure and divestment adopted by the NASS and how these policies have evolved, been refined, and have had no detrimental impact on membership, attendance at annual meetings, finances, or leadership recruitment. No funding was received for this work. The authors report no potential conflict-of-interest-associated biases in the text. RESULTS: The NASS has shown that a professional medical association can manage its financial relationships with industry in a manner that minimizes influence and bias. CONCLUSIONS: The NASS experience can provide a template for other professional medical associations to help manage their own possible conflicts of interest issues.
Authors: Claire D Johnson; Scott Haldeman; Margareta Nordin; Roger Chou; Pierre Côté; Eric L Hurwitz; Bart N Green; Deborah Kopansky-Giles; Kristi Randhawa; Christine Cedraschi; Arthur Ameis; Emre Acaroğlu; Ellen Aartun; Afua Adjei-Kwayisi; Selim Ayhan; Amer Aziz; Teresa Bas; Fiona Blyth; David Borenstein; O'Dane Brady; Peter Brooks; Connie Camilleri; Juan M Castellote; Michael B Clay; Fereydoun Davatchi; Jean Dudler; Robert Dunn; Stefan Eberspaecher; Juan Emmerich; Jean Pierre Farcy; Norman Fisher-Jeffes; Christine Goertz; Michael Grevitt; Erin A Griffith; Najia Hajjaj-Hassouni; Jan Hartvigsen; Maria Hondras; Edward J Kane; Julie Laplante; Nadège Lemeunier; John Mayer; Silvano Mior; Tiro Mmopelwa; Michael Modic; Jean Moss; Rajani Mullerpatan; Elijah Muteti; Lillian Mwaniki; Madeleine Ngandeu-Singwe; Geoff Outerbridge; Shanmuganathan Rajasekaran; Heather Shearer; Matthew Smuck; Erkin Sönmez; Patricia Tavares; Anne Taylor-Vaisey; Carlos Torres; Paola Torres; Alexander van der Horst; Leslie Verville; Emiliano Vialle; Gomatam Vijay Kumar; Adriaan Vlok; William Watters; Chung Chek Wong; Jessica J Wong; Hainan Yu; Selcen Yüksel Journal: Eur Spine J Date: 2018-08-27 Impact factor: 3.134
Authors: Anna R Gagliardi; Pascale Lehoux; Ariel Ducey; Anthony Easty; Sue Ross; Chaim Bell; Patricia Trbovich; David R Urbach Journal: PLoS One Date: 2017-03-30 Impact factor: 3.240