Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.

Medical faculties have a role in ensuring that their students are protected from undue commercial influence during their training, and are educated about professional-industry interactions. In North America, many medical faculties have introduced more stringent conflict of interest (COI) policies du...

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Main Authors: Paul Scheffer, Christian Guy-Coichard, David Outh-Gauer, Zoéline Calet-Froissart, Mathilde Boursier, Barbara Mintzes, Jean-Sébastien Borde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5221756?pdf=render
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author Paul Scheffer
Christian Guy-Coichard
David Outh-Gauer
Zoéline Calet-Froissart
Mathilde Boursier
Barbara Mintzes
Jean-Sébastien Borde
author_facet Paul Scheffer
Christian Guy-Coichard
David Outh-Gauer
Zoéline Calet-Froissart
Mathilde Boursier
Barbara Mintzes
Jean-Sébastien Borde
author_sort Paul Scheffer
collection DOAJ
description Medical faculties have a role in ensuring that their students are protected from undue commercial influence during their training, and are educated about professional-industry interactions. In North America, many medical faculties have introduced more stringent conflict of interest (COI) policies during the last decade. We asked whether similar steps had been taken in France. We hypothesized that such policies may have been introduced following a 2009-2010 drug safety scandal (benfluorex, Mediator) in which COIs in medicine received prominent press attention.We searched the websites of all 37 French Faculties of Medicine in May 2015 for COI policies and curriculum, using standardized keyword searches. We also surveyed all deans of medicine on institutional COI policies and curriculum, based on criteria developed in similar US and Canadian surveys. Personal contacts were also consulted. We calculated a summary score per faculty based on 13 criteria. [range 0-26; higher scores denoting stronger policies].In total, we found that 9/37 (24%) of French medical schools had either introduced related curriculum or implemented a COI-related policy. Of these, only 1 (2.5%) had restrictive policies for any category. No official COI policies were found at any of the schools. However, at 2 (5%), informal policies were reported. The maximum score per faculty was 5/26, with 28 (76%) scoring 0.This is the first survey in France to examine COI policies at medical faculties. We found little evidence that protection of medical students from undue commercial influence is a priority, either through institutional policies or education. This is despite national transparency legislation on industry financing of health professionals and limits on gifts. The French National Medical Students Association (ANEMF) has called for more attention to COI in medical education; our results strongly support such a call.
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spelling doaj.art-3ec9b3a0b15a45c3b5ce1e8a1cee59142022-12-22T01:50:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01121e016825810.1371/journal.pone.0168258Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.Paul SchefferChristian Guy-CoichardDavid Outh-GauerZoéline Calet-FroissartMathilde BoursierBarbara MintzesJean-Sébastien BordeMedical faculties have a role in ensuring that their students are protected from undue commercial influence during their training, and are educated about professional-industry interactions. In North America, many medical faculties have introduced more stringent conflict of interest (COI) policies during the last decade. We asked whether similar steps had been taken in France. We hypothesized that such policies may have been introduced following a 2009-2010 drug safety scandal (benfluorex, Mediator) in which COIs in medicine received prominent press attention.We searched the websites of all 37 French Faculties of Medicine in May 2015 for COI policies and curriculum, using standardized keyword searches. We also surveyed all deans of medicine on institutional COI policies and curriculum, based on criteria developed in similar US and Canadian surveys. Personal contacts were also consulted. We calculated a summary score per faculty based on 13 criteria. [range 0-26; higher scores denoting stronger policies].In total, we found that 9/37 (24%) of French medical schools had either introduced related curriculum or implemented a COI-related policy. Of these, only 1 (2.5%) had restrictive policies for any category. No official COI policies were found at any of the schools. However, at 2 (5%), informal policies were reported. The maximum score per faculty was 5/26, with 28 (76%) scoring 0.This is the first survey in France to examine COI policies at medical faculties. We found little evidence that protection of medical students from undue commercial influence is a priority, either through institutional policies or education. This is despite national transparency legislation on industry financing of health professionals and limits on gifts. The French National Medical Students Association (ANEMF) has called for more attention to COI in medical education; our results strongly support such a call.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5221756?pdf=render
spellingShingle Paul Scheffer
Christian Guy-Coichard
David Outh-Gauer
Zoéline Calet-Froissart
Mathilde Boursier
Barbara Mintzes
Jean-Sébastien Borde
Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
PLoS ONE
title Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
title_full Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
title_fullStr Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
title_full_unstemmed Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
title_short Conflict of Interest Policies at French Medical Schools: Starting from the Bottom.
title_sort conflict of interest policies at french medical schools starting from the bottom
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5221756?pdf=render
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