| Literature DB >> 27519253 |
Daniel J Carlat1,2, Teddy Fagrelius3, Reshma Ramachandran4, Joseph S Ross5, Sallyann Bergh6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Best practices for conflict-of-interest (COI) policies in medical schools have evolved rapidly over the past decade, in part motivated by the American Medical Student Association (AMSA) scorecard that has publicly graded schools since 2007. This report describes the methodological update and impact of revisions to the scorecard in 2014.Entities:
Keywords: Conflict of interest; Medical schools; Pharmaceutical industry interactions; Policies
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27519253 PMCID: PMC4983088 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0725-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Revision of AMSA scorecard model COI policies
| Policy Area | 2008 AAMC Recommendation | Original AMSA Scorecard Model Policy | 2014 AMSA Scorecard Model Policy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conflict of Interest Disclosure | Domain not addressed | Disclose on public website and/or to patients | Disclose to institution and externally to medical students and trainees |
| Industry-funded speakers’ bureausa | Strongly discouraged | Prohibited | Prohibited |
| Industry-support of accredited CME | Permitted if funds coordinated and overseen by a central CME office | Permitted if funds coordinated and overseen by a central CME office | Permitted in rare circumstances such as blinded pool of funds not earmarked for specific courses |
| Attendance of unaccredited industry-sponsored educational events | Prohibited | Permitted, but travel funds must be awarded independent of industry influence | Prohibited |
| Access of pharmaceutical sales representatives to AMCsa | Permitted by appointment only, and restricted to non-patient areas. | Prohibited; non-marketing interactions permitted | Prohibited; non-marketing interactions permitted |
| Access of medical device representatives to AMCsb | Permitted by appointment, with prior disclosure and patient consent, and for technical assistance and in-service training only. | Domain not addressed | Permitted by appointment, with prior disclosure and patient consent, and for technical assistance and in-service training only. |
| COI curriculuma | Required for all phases of medical education. | Required for all phases of medical education. | Required, with a comprehensive curriculum mirroring AMSA best practices. |
| Extension of AMC COI policies to community teaching affiliates and to all facultyb | Required off-site. | Domain not addressed | Required off-site and for all faculty, including voluntary. |
| Gifts | Prohibited | Prohibited except textbooks | Prohibited |
| Meals | Prohibited, except when in connection with CME programming. | Prohibited, except when in connection with CME programming. | All meals prohibited, including in CME courses |
| Consulting | Permitted if compensation reflects the fair market value of the services provided. | Permitted with prior approval, plus either formal contract or payment commensurate to deliverable | Permitted if consulting is limited to scientific and not marketing topics. |
| Ghostwriting and Honorary Authorshipb | Prohibited | Domain not addressed | Prohibited |
| Industry-Supported Travel Scholarships for Trainees (excluding support for research training) | Permitted, but recipient selection must be independent of industry sponsor | Permitted, but recipient selection must be independent of industry sponsor | Prohibited |
| Enforcementb | Domain not addressed | Required, but not part of formal scoring | Required, and integrated into final score |
aModel policies identical in original and new versions
bPolicies not present in original version of scorecard
Methodology for assigning letter grades to medical schools’ COI policies
| Letter grade | Description | Percentage score | Corresponding raw score |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | For a school to achieve this grade, at least half (7 of 14) of its COI policies were rated as excellent. | ≥ 85 % | ≥ 35 |
| B | Up to 6 COI policies were excellent. | ≥ 72 %. | 28–34 |
| C | Up to half of policies were poor or absent. | ≥ 56 % | 20–27 |
| I | More than half of policies were poor or absent. | ≤ 54 % | ≤ 19 |
Distribution of medical school COI scorecard grades, 2013 vs. 2014
| Overall COI Scorecard Grade | 2013 Scorecard Grading ( | 2014 Scorecard Grading ( |
|---|---|---|
| A | 41 (25.9 %) | 27 (16.9 %) |
| B | 74 (46.8 %) | 82 (50.6 %) |
| C | 13 (8.2 %) | 25 (15.6 %) |
| D | 13 (8.2 %) | N/A |
| F | 11 (7.0 %) | N/A |
| Incomplete or In process | 6 (3.8 %) | 26 (16.3 %) |
p < 0.001for overall distribution of grades
Frequency of model COI policies by individual domains, 2013 vs. 2014
| COI Domain | Model COI Policies, No. (%)a |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 Scorecard Grading | 2014 Scorecard Grading | ||
| ( | ( | ||
| Disclosure | 39 (24.7 %) | 51 (31.7 %) | 0.15 |
| Speakers’ bureausb | 43 (27.2 %) | 79 (49.4 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Continuing medical education | 101 (63.9 %) | 5 (3.1 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Attendance of promotional events | N/A | 25 (15.6 %) | n/a |
| Pharmaceutical sales representativesb | 4 (2.5 %) | 9 (5.6 %) | 0.26 |
| Medical device representatives | N/A | 91 (56.9 %) | n/a |
| COI curriculum | 81 (51.3 %) | 34 (21.3 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Extension of COI policies | N/A | 50 (31.3 %) | n/a |
| Giftsc | 93 (58.9 %) | 79 (49.4 %) | 0.09 |
| Mealsc | 93 (58.9 %) | 24 (15 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Consulting | 71 (44.9 %) | 26 (16.3 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Ghostwriting | N/A | 105 (65.6 %) | n/a |
| Scholarships | 121 (76.6 %) | 3 (1.9 %) | < 0.0001 |
| Enforcement | N/A | 126 (78.8 %) | n/a |
Notes: aModel policy defined as scoring a ‘3’ within the AMSA Scorecard codebook
bCOI domains with model criteria that were identical in 2013 and 2014; all other criteria for model policies were changed in 2014
cGifts and meals were scored as one domain, “gifts”, in the 2013 version
2014 AMSA scorecard grade, stratified by medical school characteristics, 2014
| Medical School Characteristics | Overall AMSA Scorecard Grade |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | I | ||
|
| < 0.0001 | ||||
| Allopathic (136 schools) | 24 (17.6 %) | 79 (58.1 %) | 23 (16.9 %) | 10 (7.4 %) | |
| Osteopathic (24 schools)* | 3 (12.5 %) | 3 (12.5 %) | 2 (8.3 %) | 16 (66.7 %) | |
|
| 0.20 (does not include the Puerto Rico schools) | ||||
| Northeast | 7 (17.9 %) | 22 (56.4 %) | 4 (10.4 %) | 6 (15.4 %) | |
| South | 11 (19 %) | 28 (48.3 %) | 10 (17.2 %) | 9 (15.5 %) | |
| Midwest | 4 (5.6 %) | 18 (50 %) | 11 (30.6 %) | 3 (8.3 %) | |
| West | 5 (21.7 %) | 14 (60.9 %) | 0 (0 %) | 4 (17.4 %) | |
| Other | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) | 0 (0 %) | 4 (100 %) | |
Notes: *Osteopathic medical schools that have not yet graduated a medical school class were not included in the 2014 Scorecard
†United States Census Bureau, “Census Regions and Divisions of the United States,” accessed May 26, 2016, https://www.census.gov/geo/reference/gtc/gtc_census_divreg.html