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Letters
JAMA. 2006;295(24):2845. doi: 10.1001/jama.295.24.2845-a

Academic Medical Centers and Conflicts of Interest

  1. Kimford J. Meador, MD
  1. kimford.meador@neurology.ufl.edu
    McKnight Brain Institute
    University of Florida
    Gainesville

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.

To the Editor: In their Special Communication, Dr Brennan and colleagues1 have proposed policies to eliminate the conflicts of interest that create bias in medical decisions and threaten scientific integrity. However, incomplete safeguards that ignore important contributors to bias will never be effective.

This proposal focused solely on some conflicts of interest related to industry, ignoring other important factors that create bias. For example, scientific and educational meetings routinely require disclosure of conflicts related to industry but do not ask for disclosures related to clinical income or National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants, both of which are major factors for professional success and involve financial sums much greater than the small gifts that the authors strongly argue can influence the behavior of physicians and scientists. If small gifts can create bias, there may be an even greater effect from larger amounts of money from clinical income, NIH grants, advertisements …

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