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Rosemary Keane
Chief Communications Officer
rk2152@columbia.edu

701 W. 168th St.
HHSC 2-206
New York, NY 10032

Phone: 212-305-3900
Fax: 212-305-4521
cumcnews@columbia.edu



 Media Contacts:
Elizabeth Streich
P: 212-305-6535
eas2125@columbia.edu

Alex Lyda
P: 212-305-0820
mal2133@columbia.edu

Karin Eskenazi
P: 212-342-0508
ket2116@columbia.edu



 Publications Contacts:
Bonita Eaton Enochs
P: 212-305-3877
edb3@columbia.edu

Susan Conova
P: 212-342-0507
sc2100@columbia.edu

 

Columbia University Medical Center Newsroom

CUMC Expert Resources
[picture of David Rothman, Ph.D. ]David Rothman, Ph.D. ,
Concerns over conflicts of interest in medicine—both in medical research and in clinical practice—have grown steadily over the past few years. The marketing practices of drug companies, particularly those that involve direct contact with doctors, are falling under increasing scrutiny by state and federal policymakers. A rapid-fire succession of articles questioning the authenticity of scientific studies written by researchers with drug-industry ties —not to mention those financed by the drug companies themselves—have recently appeared in the mainstream press.

David J. Rothman, Ph.D., Bernard Schoenberg Professor of Social Medicine at Columbia University''s College of Physicians and Surgeons and president of the Institute of Medicine as a Profession, is a leading expert on medical conflicts of interest. Under the auspices of a project co-sponsored by the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation, Dr. Rothman has written an analysis of new federal guidelines for physician-pharmaceutical industry exchanges and has developed recommendations for controlling conflicts of interest at academic medical centers. Dr. Rothman co-authored an article, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (Jan. 25, 2006), on health industry practices that create conflicts of interest, calling for greater disclosure and more stringent regulation of doctor/industry ties and proposing that academic medical centers take the lead in helping eliminate the problem.

“The data are overwhelming. Gifts, travel grants, consulting contracts, support for continuing medical education and speaking fees affect which drugs doctors prescribe for their patients,” says Dr. Rothman. “The system has to change, and no one is in a better position to affect change than the academic medical center.”

For press inquiries, please contact Elizabeth Streich (eas2125@columbia.edu or 212-305-6535) or Alex Lyda (mal2113@columbia.edu or 212-305-0820).






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