Saturday, February 2, 2013

From Yale U: Medical school gift restriction policies and physician prescribing of newly marketed psychotropic medications

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23372175


 2013 Jan 30;346:f264. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f264.

Medical school gift restriction policies and physician prescribing of newly marketed psychotropic medications: difference-in-differences analysis.

Source

Yale University School of Management, New Haven, CT, USA.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

To examine the effect of attending a medical school with an active policy on restricting gifts from representatives of pharmaceutical and device industries on subsequent prescribing behavior.

DESIGN:

Difference-in-differences approach.

SETTING:

14 US medical schools with an active gift restriction policy in place by 2004.

PARTICIPANTS:

Prescribing patterns in 2008 and 2009 of physicians attending one of the schools compared with physicians graduating from the same schools before the implementation of the policy, as well as a set of contemporary matched controls.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE:

Probability that a physician would prescribe a newly marketed medication over existing alternatives of three psychotropic classes: lisdexamfetamine among stimulants, paliperidone among antipsychotics, and desvenlafaxine among antidepressants. None of these medications represented radical breakthroughs in their respective classes.

RESULTS:

For two of the three medications examined, attending a medical school with an active gift restriction policy was associated with reduced prescribing of the newly marketed drug. Physicians who attended a medical school with an active conflict of interest policy were less likely to prescribe lisdexamfetamine over older stimulants (adjusted odds ratio 0.44, 95% confidence interval 0.22 to 0.88; P=0.02) and paliperidone over older antipsychotics (0.25, 0.07 to 0.85; P=0.03). A significant effect was not observed for desvenlafaxine (1.54, 0.79 to 3.03; P=0.20). Among cohorts ofstudents who had a longer exposure to the policy or were exposed to more stringent policies, prescribing rates were further reduced.

CONCLUSION:

Exposure to a gift restriction policy during medical school was associated with reduced prescribing of two out of three newly introduced psychotropic medications.

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