The Ethical Standards for Physicians – Pharmaceutical Industry Relationship in the United States of America
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18778/1899-2226.11.2.07Keywords:
pharmaceutical companies, physicians, business ethicsAbstract
This paper attempts an overview on the ethical issues of pharmaceutical industry gift-giving in the United States of America. The article shows that law is not the only way in which the relationship between physicians and pharmaceutical industry can be regulated. Most important professional associations of physicians, pharmacists, residents etc. consider industry gifts as a conflict of interest. They created different ethical guidelines for this complicated issue. The paper demonstrates various solutions of ethical matters in the relationship between physicians and pharmaceutical industry by analyzing codes and guidelines of different associations. On the one hand it shows organizations which allow exchanging of gifts of no value. On the other hand it presents associations that forbid physicians accepting even a pen. The article also shows various attitudes of these associations to situations like inviting physicians to dinner, accepting drug samples, taking subsidies from the company to defray the cost of the conference etc. The problem of those relations has been neglected for long time. From society’s point of view it is important for physicians to be informed about the rules and ways that pharmaceutical companies try to influence physicians’ prescription habits.Downloads
Published
2008-05-15
How to Cite
Makowska, M. (2008). The Ethical Standards for Physicians – Pharmaceutical Industry Relationship in the United States of America. Annales. Ethics in Economic Life, 11(2), 75–84. https://doi.org/10.18778/1899-2226.11.2.07
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.