Patients and the public benefit when physicians and researchers collaborate with
pharmaceutical, medical device, and biotechnology companies to develop products that
benefit individual and public health. At the same time, concerns are growing that
wide-ranging financial ties to industry may unduly influence professional judgments
involving the primary interests and goals of medicine. Such conflicts of interest
threaten the integrity of scientific investigations, the objectivity of professional
education, the quality of patient care, and the public’s trust in medicine. This Institute of Medicine report examines conflicts of interest in medical research,
education, and practice and in the development of clinical practice guidelines. It
reviews the available evidence on the extent of industry relationships with
physicians and researchers and their consequences, and it describes current policies
intended to identify, limit, or manage conflicts of interest. Although this report
builds on the analyses and recommendations of other groups, it differs from other
reports in its focus on conflicts of interest across the spectrum of medicine and
its identification of overarching principles for assessing both conflicts of
interest and conflict of interest policies. The report, which offers 16 specific
recommendations, has several broad messages.
Copyright © 2009, National Academy of Sciences