Cargando…

The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine

OBJECTIVES: Financial conflicts of interest have come under increasing scrutiny in medicine, but their impact has not been quantified. Our objective was to use the results of a national survey of academic emergency medicine (EM) faculty to determine if an association between money and personal opini...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Birkhahn, Robert H., Blomkalns, Andra, Klausner, Howard, Nowak, Richard, Raja, Ali S., Summers, Richard, Weber, Jim E., Briggs, William M., Arkun, Alp, Diercks, Deborah
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2908643/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20823958
_version_ 1782184211579404288
author Birkhahn, Robert H.
Blomkalns, Andra
Klausner, Howard
Nowak, Richard
Raja, Ali S.
Summers, Richard
Weber, Jim E.
Briggs, William M.
Arkun, Alp
Diercks, Deborah
author_facet Birkhahn, Robert H.
Blomkalns, Andra
Klausner, Howard
Nowak, Richard
Raja, Ali S.
Summers, Richard
Weber, Jim E.
Briggs, William M.
Arkun, Alp
Diercks, Deborah
author_sort Birkhahn, Robert H.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Financial conflicts of interest have come under increasing scrutiny in medicine, but their impact has not been quantified. Our objective was to use the results of a national survey of academic emergency medicine (EM) faculty to determine if an association between money and personal opinion exists. METHODS: We conducted a web-based survey of EM faculty. Opinion questions were analyzed with regard to whether the respondent had either 1) received research grant money or 2) received money from industry as a speaker, consultant, or advisor. Responses were unweighted, and tests of differences in proportions were made using Chi-squared tests, with p<0.05 set for significance. RESULTS: We received responses from 430 members; 98 (23%) received research grants from industry, while 145 (34%) reported fee-for-service money. Respondents with research money were more likely to be comfortable accepting gifts (40% vs. 29%) and acting as paid consultants (50% vs. 37%). They had a more favorable attitude with regard to societal interactions with industry and felt that industry-sponsored lectures could be fair and unbiased (52% vs. 29%). Faculty with fee-for-service money mirrored those with research money. They were also more likely to believe that industry-sponsored research produces fair and unbiased results (61% vs. 45%) and less likely to believe that honoraria biased speakers (49% vs. 69%). CONCLUSION: Accepting money for either service or research identified a distinct population defined by their opinions. Faculty engaged in industry-sponsored research benefitted socially (collaborations), academically (publications), and financially from the relationship.
format Text
id pubmed-2908643
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29086432010-09-07 The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine Birkhahn, Robert H. Blomkalns, Andra Klausner, Howard Nowak, Richard Raja, Ali S. Summers, Richard Weber, Jim E. Briggs, William M. Arkun, Alp Diercks, Deborah West J Emerg Med Academic Medicine OBJECTIVES: Financial conflicts of interest have come under increasing scrutiny in medicine, but their impact has not been quantified. Our objective was to use the results of a national survey of academic emergency medicine (EM) faculty to determine if an association between money and personal opinion exists. METHODS: We conducted a web-based survey of EM faculty. Opinion questions were analyzed with regard to whether the respondent had either 1) received research grant money or 2) received money from industry as a speaker, consultant, or advisor. Responses were unweighted, and tests of differences in proportions were made using Chi-squared tests, with p<0.05 set for significance. RESULTS: We received responses from 430 members; 98 (23%) received research grants from industry, while 145 (34%) reported fee-for-service money. Respondents with research money were more likely to be comfortable accepting gifts (40% vs. 29%) and acting as paid consultants (50% vs. 37%). They had a more favorable attitude with regard to societal interactions with industry and felt that industry-sponsored lectures could be fair and unbiased (52% vs. 29%). Faculty with fee-for-service money mirrored those with research money. They were also more likely to believe that industry-sponsored research produces fair and unbiased results (61% vs. 45%) and less likely to believe that honoraria biased speakers (49% vs. 69%). CONCLUSION: Accepting money for either service or research identified a distinct population defined by their opinions. Faculty engaged in industry-sponsored research benefitted socially (collaborations), academically (publications), and financially from the relationship. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2010-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2908643/ /pubmed/20823958 Text en Copyright © 2010 the authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Academic Medicine
Birkhahn, Robert H.
Blomkalns, Andra
Klausner, Howard
Nowak, Richard
Raja, Ali S.
Summers, Richard
Weber, Jim E.
Briggs, William M.
Arkun, Alp
Diercks, Deborah
The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title_full The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title_fullStr The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title_full_unstemmed The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title_short The Association Between Money and Opinion in Academic Emergency Medicine
title_sort association between money and opinion in academic emergency medicine
topic Academic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2908643/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20823958
work_keys_str_mv AT birkhahnroberth theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT blomkalnsandra theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT klausnerhoward theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT nowakrichard theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT rajaalis theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT summersrichard theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT weberjime theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT briggswilliamm theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT arkunalp theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT diercksdeborah theassociationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT birkhahnroberth associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT blomkalnsandra associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT klausnerhoward associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT nowakrichard associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT rajaalis associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT summersrichard associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT weberjime associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT briggswilliamm associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT arkunalp associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine
AT diercksdeborah associationbetweenmoneyandopinioninacademicemergencymedicine