Perks for docs who prescribe!
New Page 1
Drug
Companies Pile on Perks for Doctors!
Is
It Unethical For Physicians To Accept?
By
Robert Bazell
Correspondent
NBC
News
Dr. Arnold Kassanoff
says the best gift he ever got from a drug company was a trip to Monaco for him
and his wife in 1982.
"We were told in
advance that there would be, you know, everything was covered except
gambling,” says Kassanoff. “All your meals. No tipping allowed. Nothing. And
just enjoy yourself.”
What did he think they
wanted from him in exchange for the trip?
“Well, I knew that
they had come up with a breakthrough drug,” says Kassanoff. And it was a drug
that the company wanted him to prescribe to his patients.
Kassanoff says the
gifts from drug companies — usually small items such as bags, pens and meals
— start in medical school. "From that point on you are
indoctrinated," he says.
In recent years, the
American Medical Association and U.S. drug manufacturers have agreed to cut back
on the big trips offered to doctors, although Kassanoff says he can still get a
free dinner almost any night for listening to a sales pitch.
"If you look hard
enough you might get a trip to Hawaii," he says.
The gifts have never
been illegal, but Kassanoff wonders about the long-term effect on his practice.
"When you pick up
your prescription pad, you write something out. … It has to do with psychology
and the whole marketing business,” he says.
Today there are 88,000
drug salespeople for the 600,000 practicing doctors in the United States. Six or
seven visit Kassanoff's small practice every week, offering souvenirs and free
lunch for the staff.
“Very, very bright,
attractive people who've got good people skills,” says Kassanoff.
Dr. Jerome Kasserir, former
editor of the New England Journal of Medicine and author of a new book on drug
companies, says the sales people drive up health care costs.
"They're always
marketing the newest drugs and the most expensive drugs and the idea is to get
the doctors to use these more expensive drugs instead of the drugs that may be
just as good but are not as expensive,” says Kasserir.
Pharmaceutical
manufacturers say the sales efforts are critical to educate doctors, but after
practicing medicine for 40 years, Kassanoff is worried about the education they
provide.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7575967