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Abstract
Physicians' ratings of the appropriateness of collaboration and of receiving payment
for collaboration with the pharmaceutical and medical device industries may differ.
We administered an anonymous, cross-sectional survey to a convenience sample of faculty
and postgraduate physicians from all departments within the 11 hospitals affiliated
with the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City and New Jersey. We examined
12 collaborations with the pharmaceutical and medical device industries using 4-point
Likert scales, ranging from very appropriate to very inappropriate.
Surveys were distributed to physicians within 35 departments at 11 hospitals; 590
surveys were completed by physicians at 9 hospitals, yielding a 67% response rate.
Physicians' assessment of appropriateness varied among the different collaborations,
ranging from nearly all rating developing a drug or device (92%) and designing a drug/device
trial (91%) as appropriate to fewer rating preparing a manuscript of a drug/device
trial (60%) and recruiting patients for a drug/device trial (65%) as appropriate for
physicians not involved in trial design. Physicians consistently rated receiving payment
for collaboration as appropriate less often than they rated the collaboration itself
as appropriate and ratings varied among the collaborations. For example, 81% rated
receiving payment to develop a drug or device as appropriate, whereas 38% rated receiving
payment to recruit patients for a drug/device trial when the physician was not involved
in trial design as appropriate.
Physicians' broadly perceived most collaboration with the pharmaceutical and medical
device industries, and of receiving payment for collaboration, as appropriate.