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Transparency reporting by pharmaceutical industry in decline

7 February 2019
Call for mandatory disclosure of payments to healthcare sector
Researchers warn Australian pharmaceutical companies are no longer required to publicly disclose many payments to the health sector, and advocate for US-style legislation to ensure full and long-lasting transparency.

Research shows that and payments to individual health professionals, health consumer groups and third parties such as hospitals can have serious consequences 鈥 including increased prescribing of unnecessary and costly drugs.

Once at the forefront of transparency around this type of spend, a new paper published today in BMJ Open聽reveals Australia is now falling behind.

Following updates of Australian pharmaceutical industry Codes of Conduct in 2015, researchers from the at the University of Sydney鈥檚 examined the impact of resulting changes to transparency reporting requirements.

Reduced reporting of spend to healthcare sector

Analysis of over 900 transparency reports on pharmaceutical industry payments revealed a 34.1 percent reduction in disclosed spending to the Australian healthcare sector, by member companies of pharmaceutical trade association Medicines Australia, in the year after the changes were introduced.

鈥淭hese changes allowed for reduced reporting of spending on food and beverages at events and for sponsored healthcare professionals, with the result that over a third of previously reported industry spending on healthcare professionals is now hidden,鈥 said co-author , from the University of Sydney School of Pharmacy.

Past studies have shown that even the provision of modest meals at such educational events hosted by pharmaceutical companies can influence prescribing behaviour of healthcare professionals, so the reduced transparency around pharmaceutical industry spending on food is a cause for concern.
Dr Lisa Parker

鈥淭he new Code also fails to require disclosures about other industry interactions with health professionals that countries such as the UK and USA have introduced, such as pharmaceutical company spending on free drug samples and funding for research," Dr Parker added.

鈥淭here is one positive change: companies now report the names of individual health professionals who receive payments.

鈥淗owever, the changes to the Code have added an extra layer of complexity as payments are scattered in more databases and the data in each of them is difficult to understand. This is hindering transparency when there is increasing societal interest in disclosure,鈥 Dr Parker added.

Wakeup call for governments and regulators

颁辞-补耻迟丑辞谤听聽鈥 group lead of the Evidence, Policy and Influence Collaborative and from the School of Pharmacy 鈥 said the findings should act as a wakeup call to Australian governments and regulators.

This study demonstrates the limitations of a self-regulatory system, which can be quietly changed in such a way as to reduce overall public reporting of industry funding in the healthcare sector.
Professor Lisa Bero

鈥淪elf-regulated transparency enables voluntary reporting and fails to regulate companies that are not members of the relevant industry body," Professo Bero added.

Mandatory disclosure by pharmaceutical industry recommended

鈥淲e propose mandatory disclosure on spending. We recommend expanding the reporting to include funding of drug samples and research, and that legislation reinstates previously compulsory reporting of food, beverages and venue costs at company-run educational events and advisory board meetings.

鈥淥f course while transparency is essential, limiting or preventing such spend 鈥 and the resulting potential impacts 鈥 would be ideal,鈥 Professor Bero concluded.

Rachel Fergus

Central Media Manager

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