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What Big Pharma pays your doctor: U of T expert

Members of , the lobby group for the large pharmaceutical companies, to health-care professionals and health-care organizations.

Altogether, the 10 reporting companies paid out more than $75 million in 2017.

This is the second year of these disclosures. When they started, Russell Williams, then the IMC president, said on CBC鈥檚 The Current: 鈥溾 the disclosures. According to the new president, Pamela Fralick, the 2016 and she expected more companies to disclose payments in 2017.

Come the 2017 disclosures, and there are still the same 10 companies. Moreover, the disclosures are actually not on the IMC website, they are on the individual companies鈥 websites and are not easy to find. It takes at least a couple of mouse clicks to locate the material. Nor is there any more detail this year than last year about how the money is used.

IMC touts these disclosures as 鈥.鈥

But all that the companies have disclosed are gross figures 鈥 with no information about what they paid for.

Paid to promote opioids?

Why did Purdue Pharma, and a host of other opioid products, in 2017?

All Purdue鈥檚 website says is that the money was for 鈥渟ervices.鈥 Were some of those services speeches made by doctors on behalf of Purdue? In the past .

Amgen Canada , but we don鈥檛 know what these organizations did with that money.

so that doctors and possibly other professionals could go to international congresses and/or global stand-alone meetings.

Who were these health-care professionals? What meetings did they go to? Where were the meetings?

Canada lags behind

Big Pharma here in Canada is far behind the curve when it comes to disclosing where the money is going. The federal government doesn鈥檛 seem to be in any hurry to force the companies to make more information public either.

Just over a year ago, then Health Minister Jane Philpott鈥檚 position was that .

In the United States, companies have had to disclose to a doctor since 2013. The doctors are named.

In Australia, an analysis of information that companies must disclose found that, from October 2011 to September 2015, for health professionals.

In . Many of the European voluntary codes allow doctors to opt out of having their names disclosed.

IMC justified not linking doctors鈥 names to payments on the grounds of , but will require disclosures to include the names of all health-care professionals who receive money or any other 鈥渢ransfer of value.鈥

Later this summer, about the same type of legislation.

Free meals increase prescriptions

Disclosure is only the first step. Payments made to doctors can be linked to how they prescribe.

In the U.S., this has been analyzed using the Medicare database. The links show (cholesterol-lowering drugs) rather than much less expensive generic versions.

Receipt of industry-sponsored meals with a value of less than $20 is associated with an that is being promoted.

Receiving money from opioid makers in one year is associated with the next year.

Perhaps this is why IMC doesn鈥檛 want to take disclosures any further. This lobby group is afraid that Canadians will realize the perverse effects of all the payments its member companies make.

 is an emergency physician at University Health Network, an associate professor of family and community medicine at the  and a professor emeritus of health policy and management at York University. 

This article was originally published on . Read the .

 

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