ABSTRACT
The Open Payments Database (OPD), the legally binding database of payments made by pharmaceutical companies and device manufacturers to all physicians,1 was launched in 2013 in the United States, in order to improve transparency in the financial relationship between healthcare professionals and industry. Meanwhile, a large number of the general public and physicians were not aware of the OPD2,3 and there has been no reducing trend among rheumatologists so far.4.
ABSTRACT
In the US, research has established that a funding relationship exists between pharmaceutical industries and physicians, particularly cardiologists. This study aimed to fill a research gap via an in-depth data analysis of the impact that the coronavirus 2019 restrictions had on this dynamic. The payments per cardiologist declined by 55.7% (95% confidence interval: 52.0%â-59.0%, P < 0.001) in monetary amounts, and by 66.6% (95% confidence interval: 66.1%-67.1%, P < 0.001) in the number of payments right after the COVID-19 pandemic onset, respectively. Cardiologists must consider the ethical implications of the potential for their clinical practice to be influenced by industry payments.
Aux États-Unis, la recherche a établi l'existence d'une relation de financement entre l'industrie pharmaceutique et les médecins, particulièrement les cardiologues. Cette étude visait à combler une lacune dans la recherche grâce à une analyse approfondie des données concernant les répercussions des restrictions relatives à la COVID-19 sur cette dynamique. Les rétributions versées par cardiologue ont baissé de 55,7 % (intervalle de confiance [IC] à 95 % : 52,0 % à 59,0 %, p < 0,001) en argent et de 66,6 % (IC à 95 % : 66,1 % à 67,1 %, p < 0,001) en nombre de versements, juste après le début de la pandémie de COVID-19. Les cardiologues doivent considérer les implications éthiques liées à l'influence potentielle de ces versements sur leur pratique.