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NPR doc didn't disclose pharma payments

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We've heard about drugmaker's payments and grants to prescribing doctors, researchers, medical societies, teaching hospitals, CME companies... and now, a radio host. The psychiatrist and former NIMH director Dr. Frederick K. Goodwin (photo), whose radio program "The Infinite Mind" airs on NPR, collected some $1.3 million from drugmakers between 2000 and 2007. Goodwin never mentioned those payments to listeners, despite the fact that some of his programs dealt with subjects "important to the commercial interests of the companies for which he consults," the New York Times reports.

The payments have come to light as part of a Congressional investigation into drugmakers' potential influence on prescribing habits. For instance, Goodwin told listeners that children with untreated bipolar disorder could suffer brain damage (a view not universally shared in psychiatry). During the same program, Goodwin touted the safety and efficacy of treatments for the disease, particularly mood stabilizing drugs. And the same day, GlaxoSmithKline paid the psychiatrist $2,500 to give a promotional lecture for its mood stabilizer Lamictal, just part of the $329,000 he collected for promoting Lamictal that year, Congressional records show.

Goodwin told the NYT that the radio show's producer knew about his consulting with drugmakers, but that neither he nor the producer realized at the time that they should have disclosed the relationships. "In retrospect, that should have been disclosed," Goodwin told the paper. But the NPR producer told the paper that Goodwin had denied getting money from drugmakers. "The fact that he was out on the stump for pharmaceutical companies was not something we were aware of. It would have violated our agreements," producer Bill Lichtenstein said in an interview.

NPR now says it's pulling the program as soon as possible and that, had it been aware of Goodwin's financial relationships, it would not have aired "The Infinite Mind." A Glaxo spokesperson said that the responsibility for disclosing its payments to Goodwin lay with the doctor. "We continue to believe that healthcare professionals are responsible for making disclosures to their employers and other entities, in this case National Public Radio and its listeners."

- read the NYT story

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Harvard officials to probe psychiatrists' drug payments
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Americans want doc payments disclosed
Pharma faces payment disclosure law (Sept 2007)

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More stories about Payments   GlaxoSmithKline   Frederick Goodwin   DTC advertising   Drug Marketing   Disclosure  

Comments

This is the way of the world that needs to change if we don't want to go back to trading chickens, pigs, cows and gold, for whatever else we need. Our entire economy, even our entire society is built on trust. If we don't trust the decisions and honesty of the people controlling our currency then that currency has no value. If we can't trust our doctors then we won't take their advice and we won't pay them.

The whole of human society is a very delicate house of cards. This house of cards takes only a relatively small nudge to topple. We can see how quickly our economy can fall apart from just a slight (but long duration) imbalance of debt vs. value. Every aspect of our government, laws, business, etc. needs to do everything possible to try and earn back the trust of the people, or we are going to pay a very heavy price.

Snuffing out the union movement created a power vacuum and now we lack a meaningful check on corporate authority. My belief is that organized labor can restore the balance of power in this world.

Unfortunately, who watches those who are watching. I work for a company with a unionized force. Many of the union officials are just as self-centered and opportunistic as the executives. i.e. securing the rights/perks of the older generation of workers while sacrificing the younger and less influential generation.

Organized labor has a long history in the U.S....It did wonders for the US Steel Industry. The UAW is about to finish their 'restoration of power' over GM, Ford, and Chrysler.

The employee compensation plan that would make the most sense would be giving employees a choice between lower guaranteed benefits or higher potential benefits based on earnings or group productivity. Of course, this is antithetical to organized labor.

Organized labor is like Communism, the Community Reinvestment Act, and Fannie and Freddie - it sounds like a good idea, but human nature always gets in the way.

This just reveals the condition that started developing in education and government some 40 to 50 years ago. It will continue to get worse until all that are in the system to day and those who are teaching in the system are gone. Until we the USA and its population return to a time of personal integrity.

i always got a weird vibe from this dude. i've heard him on more than one occassion uncomfortably press his to agree with his opinions even when they obviously disagreed and didn't want to be rude. i guess my intuition not to trust the guy was well founded.

I dated a girl that was a drug rep for some company 30 years ago.
Write the right scrips and enough of them. - Bamo / 2 week Hawaiian all paid - semanar

And NPR doesn't do its homework either, as usual.

This is par for the course with NPR. Their credibility continues to erode, and they blame everyone but themselves.

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