This is topic IDSA-You Listening??? (Conflicts of Interest) in forum Medical Questions at LymeNet Flash.


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Posted by jklynd (Member # 7550) on :
 
In the NY Times this weekend.. http://tiny.cc/3dDca
Click on link to go right to the page...(No Ads)
Perhaps we should put Sen.Grassley in touch with the IDSA? Joe

[ 08. June 2008, 10:46 AM: Message edited by: jklynd ]
 
Posted by soonermom (Member # 14494) on :
 
Hey, I am newly diagnosed and really want to know what is the conflict of interest with the ISDA?? Why are they so against long term treatment?
 
Posted by mikej2323 (Member # 8913) on :
 
Well, if Sen. Grassley hasn't heard of it by now...he will now. As soon as I'm done writing this, I'm going straight to his sight.

Although, I have written him numerous times and all I get is a form letter. I've never been able to make any of his townhall meetings, but you can bet I'll make the next one he has around here!!!!

Good post Joe- thanks.


Mike
[email protected]

www.caringbridge.com/visit/angelsforalex

[ 08. June 2008, 03:38 PM: Message edited by: mikej2323 ]
 
Posted by bettyg (Member # 6147) on :
 
copying ENTIRE article here since it's ALL IN TIMESNEWROMAN THATRUNSALLWORDSTOGETHERFORME! uffda.


Researchers Fail to Reveal Full Drug Pay
***************************************

By GARDINER HARRIS and BENEDICT CAREY

Published: June 8, 2008


A world-renowned Harvard child psychiatrist whose work has helped fuel an explosion in the use of [/B] powerful antipsychotic medicines in children earned at least $1.6 million in consulting fees from drug makers from 2000 to 2007 but for years did not report much of this income to university officials, according to information given Congressional investigators. [/b]


J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press


IOWA Senator Charles E. Grassley pushed three experts in child psychiatry at Harvard to expose their income from consulting fees.


A Doctor's Underreported Transactions
***************************************


Dr. Joseph Biederman belatedly reported at least $1.6 million in consulting fees.


By failing to report income, the psychiatrist, Dr. Joseph Biederman, [QB] and a colleague in the psychiatry department at Harvard Medical School, Dr. Timothy E. Wilens, [qb] may have violated federal and university research rules designed to police potential conflicts of interest, according to Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa.


Some of their research is financed by government grants.


Like Dr. Biederman, Dr. Wilens belatedly reported earning at least $1.6 million from 2000 to 2007, and [QB] another Harvard colleague, Dr. Thomas Spencer, reported earning at least $1 million after being pressed by Mr. Grassley's investigators. [/b]


But even these amended disclosures may understate the researchers' outside income because some entries contradict payment information from drug makers, Mr. Grassley found.


In one example, Dr. Biederman reported no income from Johnson & Johnson for 2001 in a disclosure report filed with the university.


When asked to check again, he said he received $3,500.


But Johnson & Johnson told Mr. Grassley that it paid him $58,169 in 2001, Mr. Grassley found.


The Harvard group's consulting arrangements with drug makers were already controversial because of the researchers' advocacy of unapproved uses of psychiatric medicines in children.


In an e-mailed statement, Dr. Biederman said, ``My interests are solely in the advancement of medical treatment through rigorous and objective study,'' and he said he took conflict-of-interest policies ``very seriously.''


Drs. Wilens and Spencer said in e-mailed statements that they thought they had complied with conflict-of-interest rules.


[QB] John Burklow, a spokesman for the National Institutes of Health, said: ``If there have been violations of N.I.H. policy -- and if research integrity has been compromised -- we will take all the appropriate action within our power to hold those responsible accountable.


This would be completely unacceptable behavior, and N.I.H. will not tolerate it.'' [/b]


The federal grants received by Drs. Biederman and Wilens were administered by Massachusetts General Hospital, which in 2005 won $287 million in such grants.


The health institutes could place restrictions on the hospital's grants or even suspend them altogether.


Alyssa Kneller, a Harvard spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement:


``The information released by Senator Grassley suggests that, in certain instances, each doctor may have failed to disclose outside income from pharmaceutical companies and other entities that should have been disclosed.''


Ms. Kneller said the doctors had been referred to a university conflict committee for review.
**********************************************


Mr. Grassley sent letters on Wednesday to Harvard and the health institutes outlining his investigators' findings, and he placed the letters along with his comments in The Congressional Record.


Dr. Biederman is one of the most influential researchers in child psychiatry and is widely admired for focusing the field's attention on its most troubled young patients.


Although many of his studies are small and often financed by drug makers, his work helped to fuel a controversial 40-fold increase from 1994 to 2003 in the diagnosis of pediatric bipolar disorder, which is characterized by severe mood swings, and a rapid rise in the use of antipsychotic medicines in children.


The Grassley investigation did NOT address research quality.


Doctors have known for years that antipsychotic drugs, sometimes called major tranquilizers, can quickly subdue children.


But youngsters appear to be especially susceptible to the weight gain and metabolic problems caused by the drugs, and it is far from clear that the medications improve children's lives over time, experts say.


In the last 25 years, drug and device makers have displaced the federal government as the primary source of research financing, and industry support is vital to many university research programs.


But as corporate research executives recruit the brightest scientists, their brethren in marketing departments have discovered that some of these same scientists can be terrific pitchmen.


[QB] To protect research integrity, the National Institutes of Health require researchers to report to universities earnings of $10,000 or more per year,

for instance, in consulting money from makers of drugs also studied by the researchers in federally financed trials.


Universities manage financial conflicts by requiring that the money be disclosed to research subjects, among other measures. /b]


Published: June 8, 2008
(Page 2 of 2)


The health institutes last year awarded more than $23 billion in grants to more than [QB] 325,000 researchers at over 3,000 universities, and auditing the potential conflicts of each grantee would be impossible, health institutes officials have long insisted. [/b]

So the government relies on universities.


A Doctor's Underreported Transactions
**************************************


Universities ask professors to report their conflicts [QB] but do almost nothing to verify the accuracy of these voluntary disclosures.


``It's really been an honor system thing,'' said Dr. Robert Alpern, dean of Yale School of Medicine. ``If somebody tells us that a pharmaceutical company pays them $80,000 a year, I don't even know how to check on that.'' [/b]


Some states have laws requiring drug makers to disclose payments made to doctors, and Mr. Grassley and others have sponsored legislation to create a national registry.


Lawmakers have been concerned in recent years about the use of unapproved medications in children and the influence of industry money.


Mr. Grassley asked Harvard for the three researchers' financial disclosure reports from 2000 through 2007 and asked some drug makers to list payments made to them.


``Basically, these forms were a mess,'' Mr. Grassley said in comments he entered into The Congressional Record on Wednesday. ``Over the last seven years, it looked like they had taken a couple hundred thousand dollars.''
***********************************


Prompted by Mr. Grassley's interest, Harvard asked the researchers to re-examine their disclosure reports.


In the new disclosures, the trio's outside consulting income jumped but was still contradicted by reports sent to Mr. Grassley from some of the companies.


In some cases, the income seems to have put the researchers in violation of university and federal rules.


In 2000, for instance, Dr. Biederman received a grant from the National Institutes of Health to study in children Strattera, an Eli Lilly drug for attention deficit disorder.


Dr. Biederman reported to Harvard that he received less than $10,000 from Lilly that year, but the company told Mr. Grassley that it paid Dr. Biederman more than $14,000 in 2000, Mr. Grassley's letter stated.


At the time, Harvard forbade professors from conducting clinical trials if they received payments over $10,000 from the company whose product was being studied, and federal rules required such conflicts to be managed.


[QB] Mr. Grassley said these discrepancies demonstrated profound flaws in the oversight of researchers' financial conflicts and the need for a national registry.


But the disclosures may also cloud the work of one of the most prominent group of child psychiatrists in the world.

In the past decade, Dr. Biederman and his colleagues have promoted the aggressive diagnosis and drug treatment of childhood bipolar disorder, a mood problem once thought confined to adults. [/b]


They have maintained that the disorder was underdiagnosed in children and could be treated with antipsychotic drugs, medications invented to treat schizophrenia.


Other researchers have made similar assertions.

As a result, pediatric bipolar diagnoses and antipsychotic drug use in children have soared.


Some 500,000 children and teenagers were given at least one prescription for an antipsychotic in 2007, including 20,500 under 6 years of age, according to Medco Health Solutions, a pharmacy benefit manager.


Few psychiatrists today doubt that bipolar disorder can strike in the early teenage years, or that many of the children being given the diagnosis are deeply distressed.


``I consider Dr. Biederman a true visionary in recognizing this illness in children,'' said Susan Resko, director of the Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation, ``and he's not only saved many lives but restored hope to thousands of families across the country.''


Longtime critics of the group see its influence differently.

``They have given the Harvard imprimatur to this commercial experimentation on children,'' said Vera Sharav, president and founder of the Alliance for Human Research Protection, a patient advocacy group.


Many researchers strongly disagree over what bipolar looks like in youngsters, and some now fear the definition has been expanded unnecessarily, due in part to the Harvard group.


The group published the results of a string of drug trials from 2001 to 2006, but the studies were so small and loosely designed that they were largely inconclusive, experts say.


In some studies testing antipsychotic drugs, the group defined improvement as a decline of 30 percent or more on a scale called the Young Mania Rating Scale -- well below the 50 percent change that most researchers now use as the standard.


Controlling for bias is especially important in such work, given that the scale is subjective, and raters often depend on reports from parents and children, several top psychiatrists said.

More broadly, they said, revelations of undisclosed payments from drug makers to leading researchers are especially damaging for psychiatry.


``The price we pay for these kinds of revelations is credibility, and we just can't afford to lose any more of that in this field,'' said Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, executive director of the Stanley Medical Research Institute, which finances psychiatric studies.


``In the area of child psychiatry in particular, we know much less than we should, and we desperately need research that is not influenced by industry money.''


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR E-mail to

[email protected]
********************


wow, WHAT AN ARTICLE; GREAT FIND JOE!
**************************************


mikej, i write grassley all the time too and get form letters, but when i wrote him about BREAST CANCER FUNDING; he did write some personal paragraphs of HIS wife fighting the disease, and that is the ONLY BILL HE WILL EVER CO-SPONSOR since he's chair of finance!!


mikej, i also made 1 of his meetings in ames when i was fighting for SSDI benefits! that's before i knew i had misdiagnosis for 34 years of CHRONIC LYME ..... 4 years ago!!


mike, when you write him too; always show in SUBJECT LINE; YOU ARE AN IOWAN WRITING; we get 1st priority of replies since we are his constituents!!
 
Posted by Lymetoo (Member # 743) on :
 
Wow
 
Posted by moosejive (Member # 14545) on :
 
There are only two things in this world that make me absolutely furious: psychiatry and Ayn Rand.
 
Posted by bettyg (Member # 6147) on :
 
hi joe,

just got on and was rereading from top on your other 2 links shown to read.

GUESS WHAT? they are both shown on the board as i broke them both up and had a LENGTHY reply to STEERE talking to college graduates about lyme disease !!!


suggestion, if you leave them here, please show the exact name of the articles, who wrote them, the date, and a brief summary what it is about so folks don't take the time to REREAD those they have read and/replied to earlier on ok!


to edit, click pencil/paper to right of your name opening up subject line AND BODY TEXT.


did you mark lower left box to receive all replies to your post? [Smile]

add your additional comments, and edit send.

thx joe for your research work and posting! [group hug] [kiss]
*****************************
 
Posted by mikej2323 (Member # 8913) on :
 
Wrote lengthy, very strong worded letters to Grassley and Harkin.

Betty- Given that Sen. Grassley's wife had breast cancer, how do we know for sure that cancer isn't caused by these bacteria and viruses; i.e, HPV--cervical cancer????


Mike
[email protected]

www.caringbridge.com/visit/angelsforalex
 
Posted by Dancer (Member # 11039) on :
 
Soonermom,

The new book "Cure Unknown" sheds alot of light on the history of all this and why the IDSA is insanely sticking to their position - it is about to hit the stores, you should definitely get a copy.

To sum up as best I can (and, I'm sure, imperfectly) from what I've been reading - the earliest academic doctors studying Lyme (Steere and others) thought they had a new disease. They ignored evidence that the same disease, under the name neuroborreliosis, was known in Europe for many decades. They have never wanted to give up their prize and their pedestal, and have stuck to this notion that Lyme is easily curable, never chronic. The longer they've denied it, with more and more people becoming desperately ill, the more trouble they will be in if they ever admit they were wrong. Imagine the lawsuits! So as far as they're concerned, chronic Lyme does not exist, Lyme is easily cured, period, and therefore, long term antibiotics are absolutely uncalled for. Its a massive coverup and we are all being left to suffer.

Pride, greed, and fear, I think that about sums it up.

Dancer
 
Posted by bettyg (Member # 6147) on :
 
mikej, good guestion; no answers...

please let me know if you hear back from them?


harkin's office is very good on return emails; and they do many now by email!


1 email i sent; i received a reply within 24 HOURS!!!!
 


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