| Literature DB >> 28926592 |
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This article aims to describe how Polish physicians cooperate with the pharmaceutical industry and show how this relationship may pose a threat to public health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28926592 PMCID: PMC5604986 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184862
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Socio-demographic characteristics and different aspects of cooperation with PSRs.
| Sample characteristic | Usually met with PSR* | n | Total | n |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEX | ||||
| Female | 88.3% | 196 | 60.4% | 229 |
| Male | 80.0% | 116 | 39.6%. | 150 |
| SENIORITY | ||||
| Less than 5 years | 82.0% | 41 | 15.6% | 59 |
| From 6 to 15 years | 83.1% | 74 | 24.1% | 90 |
| From 16 to 25 years | 84.7% | 84 | 26.5% | 99 |
| Over 26 years of seniority | 87.2% | 109 | 33.7% | 126 |
| PROFESSIONAL STATUS | ||||
| Intern and Resident | 80.0% | 32 | 12.4% | 47 |
| Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor under the training | 94.1% | 32 | 10.0% | 38 |
| Specialist doctor | 85.7% | 239 | 73.9% | 280 |
| Other | 64.3% | 9 | 3.7% | 14 |
| WORKING PLACE | ||||
| Public hospital | 82.3% | 153 | 51.2% | 194 |
| Non-public hospital | 87.5% | 21 | 6.6% | 25 |
| Public clinic | 90.7% | 98 | 28.8% | 109 |
| Non-public clinic | 88.0% | 139 | 42.5% | 161 |
| Office, clinic or hospital without a contract with the National Health Fund | 83.2% | 89 | 22.3% | 109 |
| Emergency | 75.0% | 9 | 3.4% | 13 |
| Other | 66.7% | 14 | 5.5% | 21 |
| NUMBER OF WORKING PLACES | ||||
| One | 86.2% | 175 | 55.6% | 212 |
| More than one | 83.5% | 137 | 44.4% | 167 |
| REPRESENTATIVE EXPERIENCE | ||||
| Worked as PSR | 100% | 15 | 4.5% | 17 |
| Not worked as PSR | 84.4% | 297 | 96.5% | 362 |
| PLACE OF DOMICILE | ||||
| Village and cities up to 200,000 residents | 89.6% | 173 | 52.2% | 198 |
| City with over 201,000 residents | 79.9% | 139 | 47.8% | 181 |
Observed counts (expected counts) and % within gender for the chi-square test of association between gender and meeting PSRs.
| Meeting of PSR | Gender | Observed Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | ||
| 196 (188.7) 88.3% | 116 (123.3) 80.0% | 312 | |
| 26 (33.3) 11.7% | 29 (21.7) 20.0% | 55 | |
| 222 | 145 | 367 | |
Observed counts (expected counts) and % within professional status for the chi-square test of association between professional status and meeting PSRs.
| Professional status | Meeting of PSR | Observed Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intern and Resident | Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor in training | Specialist doctor | Other | ||
| 32 (34.0) 80% | 32 (34.0) 94.1% | 239 (237.2) 85.7% | 9 (11.9) 64.3% | 312 | |
| 8 (6) 20% | 2 (5.1) 5.9% | 40 (41.8) 14.3% | 5 (2.1) 35.7% | 55 | |
| 40 | 34 | 279 | 14 | 367 | |
Observed counts (expected counts) and % within place of domicile for the chi-square test of association between place of domicile and meeting PSRs.
| Place of domicile | Meeting of PSR | Observed Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Village and cities up to 200,000 residents | City with over 201,000 residents | ||
| 173 (164.1) 89.6% | 139 (147.9) 79.9 | 312 | |
| 20 (28.9) 10.4 | 35 (26.1) 20.1 | 55 | |
| 193 | 174 | 367 | |
Fig 1Reasons why physicians met with pharmaceutical sales representatives.
Note. Percentages do not add up to 100% because physicians chose the three most important reasons.
Associations between doctors’ seniority and different methods of cooperation between Polish doctors and the pharmaceutical industry in the 12 months preceding the survey.
| Means of cooperation | Less than 5 years | 6–15 years | 16–25 years | Over 26 years | Statistic parameters | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Participation as an audience member in a conference, presentation, meeting, or educational training organized by a pharmaceutical company. | 80.5% | 78.7% | 84.5% | 82.7% | χ2(3) 1.0, p = .79 | |
| 2. Participation as a presenter in a conference, presentation, meeting, or educational training organized by a pharmaceutical company. | 7.3% | 12.0% | 17.9% | 19.1% | χ2(3) 4.3, p = .23 | |
| 3. Participation in post-marketing examinations (Phase IV trials): completing a questionnaire about the reaction of patients to a medicine produced by a company. | 7.3% | 21.3% | 21.4% | 10.9% | χ2(3) 7.9, p < .05 | |
| 4. Participation in a marketing survey sponsored by a pharmaceutical company about the work of pharmaceutical sales representatives. | 19.5% | 14.7% | 17.9% | 12.7% | χ2(3) 1.5, p = .67 | |
| 5. Participation in free-for-patient examinations sponsored by a pharmaceutical company. | 0.0% | 5.3% | 7.1% | 4.5% | χ2(3) 5.0, p = .17 likelihood ratio | |
| 6. Writing or endorsement of articles about a drug or active substance at the request of a pharmaceutical company. | 2.4% | 4.0% | 7.1% | 0.0% | χ2(3) = 10.5, p < .05 likelihood ratio |
Note. Total percentages do not add up to 100 because respondents could select all forms of cooperation engaged in during the previous 12 months.
Observed counts (expected counts) and % within seniority for the chi-square test of association between seniority and participation in post-marketing examinations.
| Participation in post-marketing examinations | Seniority | Observed Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less than 5 years | From 6 to 15 years | From 16 to 25 years | Over 26 years | ||
| 3 (6.5) 7.3% | 16 (11.9) 21.3% | 18 (13.3) 21.4% | 12 (17.4) 10.9% | 49 | |
| 38 (34.5) 92.7% | 59 (63.1) 78.7% | 66 (70.7) 76.6% | 98 (92.6) 89.1% | 261 | |
| 41 | 75 | 84 | 110 | 310 | |
Observed counts (expected counts) and % within seniority for the likelihood ratio chi-square test of association between seniority and participation in writing or endorsing articles.
| Writing or endorsement articles | Seniority | Observed Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Less than 5 years | From 6 to 15 years | From 16 to 25 years | Over 26 years | ||
| 1 (1.3) 2.4% | 3 (2.4) 4.0% | 6 (2.7) 7.1% | 0 (3.5) 0% | 10 | |
| 40 (39.7) 97.6% | 72 (72.6) 96.0% | 78 (81.3) 92.9% | 110 (106.5) 100% | 300 | |
| 41 | 75 | 84 | 110 | 310 | |
Differences in doctors’ knowledge indices across selected socio-demographic characteristics.
| Sample characteristic | M | SD | Mean rank | Rank sum | Statistic parameters |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEX | |||||
| Female | 2.5 | 1.3 | 199.1 | 45601.5 | |
| Male | 2.2 | 1.4 | 176.0 | 26408.5 | |
| SENIORITY | |||||
| Less than 5 years | 1.8 | 1.5 | 152.1 | ||
| From 6 to 15 years | 2.5 | 1.4 | 193.3 | ||
| From 16 to 25 years | 2.5 | 1.3 | 191.2 | ||
| Over 26 years of seniority | 2.5 | 1.2 | 195.6 | ||
| PROFESIONAL STATUS | |||||
| Intern and Resident | 2.0 | 1.4 | 149.5 | ||
| Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor under the training | 2.3 | 1.3 | 180.9 | ||
| Specialist doctor | 2.5 | 1.3 | 199.3 | ||
| Other | 2.0 | 1.6 | 167.2 | ||
| NUMBER OF WORKING PLACES | |||||
| One | 2.4 | 1.4 | 185.7 | 38448.5 | |
| More than one | 2.4 | 1.3 | 187.4 | 30929.5 | |
| REPRESENTATIVE EXPERIENCE | |||||
| Worked as PSR | 2.7 | 1.2 | 213.4 | 3628 | |
| Not worked as PSR | 2.4 | 1.3 | 188.9 | 68382 | |
| PLACE OF DOMICILE | |||||
| Village and cities up to 200,000 residents | 2.6 | 1.2 | 203.2 | 40239 | |
| City with over 201,000 residents | 2.1 | 1.4 | 175.5 | 31771 |
Mann-Whitney tests of differences in doctors’ knowledge indices across seniority groups.
| SENIORITY | Mean rank | Mann-Whitney U |
|---|---|---|
| Less than 5 years | 65.3 | U = 2085.5, p < .05 |
| From 6 to 15 years | 81.3 | |
| Less than 5 years | 68.8 | U = 2288.5, p < .05 |
| From 16 to 25 years | 85.9 | |
| Less than 5 years | 78.0 | U = 2836.0, p < .01 |
| Over 26 years of seniority | 100.0 | |
| From 6 to 15 years | 95.2 | U = 4439, p = .96 |
| From 16 to 25 years | 94.8 | |
| From 6 to 15 years | 107.9 | U = 5614.5, p = .9 |
| Over 26 years of seniority | 108.9 | |
| From 16 to 25 years | 112.0 | U = 6140.5, p = .84 |
| Over 26 years of seniority | 113.8 |
Mann-Whitney tests of differences in doctors’ knowledge indices across professional status groups.
| PROFESIONAL STATUS | Mean rank | Mann-Whitney U |
|---|---|---|
| Intern and Resident | 39.7 | U = 737.5, p = .16 |
| Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor under the training | 47.0 | |
| Intern and Resident | 127.4 | U = 4850.0, p < .01 |
| Specialist doctor | 170.2 | |
| Intern and Resident | 30.5 | U = 304.5, p = .67 |
| Other | 32.8 | |
| Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor under the training | 144.9 | U = 4766.5, p = .28 |
| Specialist doctor | 161.5 | |
| Non-specialist doctor and specialist doctor under the training | 27.0 | U = 244.5, p = .65 |
| Other | 25.0 | |
| Specialist doctor | 148.6 | U = 1638.5, p = .28 |
| Other | 124.5 |
Fig 2Gifts received by Polish physicians from pharmaceutical companies.
Note. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents could select all applicable responses. Grey bars indicate gifts that are in accordance with Polish law, black bars indicate illegal gifts.