Showing posts with label Gifts to Physicians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gifts to Physicians. Show all posts

Proposed Rules for Physician Payment Sunshine Act: Some Clouds on the Horizon

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released their proposed rule for the Physician Payment Sunshine provision of the Affordable Care Act (see "CMS Releases Proposed Physician Sunshine Act Regulations", where you can also download the proposed rule). Because CMS was late issuing this rule, the drug industry will NOT have to begin data collection on Jan. 1, 2012, as "required" by the Sunshine provision, and will not need to begin data collection until final regulations are issued. Final regulations come AFTER comments on the proposed rule are accepted through Feb. 17, 2012.

That means that only PART of the 2012 payments may be submitted on Mar. 31, 2013 and available for public scrutiny by Sep. 30, 2013.

It's possible, however, that CMS may be further delayed if the comments received are plentiful and difficult to respond to before the agency issues the final rule.

Of course, pharma companies by now should be ready to begin data collection by January 1, 2012. Which means that they could theoretically submit a full year's (2012) worth of data regardless of the timing of the final rule. CMS said "we recognize that some manufacturers and GPOs may begin to collect certain data voluntarily." How many companies, however, will do this when they can claim they were waiting for CMS? It's just another test of willingness of the industry to be pro-actively transparent and open.

Also, CMS is seeking comments "on the amount of time applicable manufacturers and applicable GPOs will need following publication of the final rule in order to begin complying with the data collection requirements." I anticipate that many comments might cite CMS's estimate of 90 days to be too little and request more time. Thus, we may not see any 2012 data at all!

CMS's Tardiness in Issuing Sunshine Act Rule May Mean We'll See No 2012 Data!
"Finally," says CMS, we also seek input on specific challenges that applicable manufacturers and applicable GPOs may face when setting up the necessary data collection and reporting systems."

This is the Achilles' Heel that may mean that we will not see any 2012 data at all! If drug and device companies cite significant challenges that CMS's final rule must mitigate, that could delay issuance of the final rule or significantly limit how the information is reported. The industry may claim, for example, that it is "challenged" to breakdown payments into specific categories and ask that payments be lumped into larger, more encompassing categories. This would make it more difficult to analyze the data to see exactly what physicians are being paid to do, especially research versus marketing assistance.

Here are some other tidbits from CMS's proposed rule:

Foreign Drug Companies Must Also Report Payments
CMS proposes that any drug or device company that sells or markets products in the U.S. are subject to the rule regardless of where their corporate headquarters are located. Thus, says CMS, "Under this definition, manufacturers of a covered drug, device, biological, or medical supply are deemed to be an 'applicable manufacturer' if their products are sold or distributed in the United States (U.S.), regardless of where the covered drug, device, biological, or medical supply is actually produced or where the entity is actually located or incorporated... The opportunity for undue influence or inappropriate relationships caused by payments or transfers of value to covered recipients is the same for manufacturers of drugs, devices, biologicals, or medical supplies sold or distributed in the United States regardless of where the product is actually manufactured, and we, therefore, propose to treat them the same."

"Common Ownership" Loophole Closed
CMS wants to be sure that a wholly or even partially owned subsidiary of a drug or device company set up to dole out payments to physicians cannot escape the regulation. Such companies under "common ownership" -- as when "the same individual, individuals, entity, or entities, directly or indirectly, own any portion of two or more entities" -- "are also subject to the reporting requirements under this provision, even though they themselves may not be involved in the "manufacturing" process." CMS is seeking comments regarding its definition of "common ownership" to see if changes are necessary.

OTC Drug Manufacturers Excluded
CMS's proposed rule excludes manufacturers/marketers of drugs and biologicals that are considered "over-the-counter" (OTC) from being covered by the regulations. "We believe that this exclusion may be appropriate for manufacturers that manufacture only these products (and not also products which fall within the proposed definition of 'covered drug, device, biological, or medical supply'), since physicians and teaching hospitals have less influence over patients' choice of OTC products."

Perhaps physicians have less influence over patients' choice of OTC products, but they surely play a role in Rx-to-OTC conversions. They sit on FDA advisory boards, for example, which determine if an Rx drug can be sold OTC.

Identifying "Covered Physicians"
There is some confusion on how to uniquely identify physicians. There are more than one "unique identifier" for physicians. The law refers to a National Provider Identifier (NPI) number, which is required under HIPAA.

CMS states "We seek comments on what other unique identifiers could be used, including whether these unique identifiers are readily obtainable by applicable manufacturers."

CMS is also closing a loophole I noticed in data already being reported by some drug companies; ie, certain payments are reported to be made to institutions or organizations rather than to individual physicians. CMS proposes that "payments or other transfers of value provided through a group or practice should be reported individually under the name(s) of the physician covered recipient(s)."

Categories of Information to be Reported
This is probably the most important issue that needs clarification. CMS provides details of how data such as names, addresses, medical specialty, date of payment, etc. are to be reported.

Name of Drug: The Sunshine Law requires that manufacturers to report the name of the covered drug, device, biological, or medical supply associated with that payment, if the payment is related to "marketing, education, or research" of a particular covered drug, device, biological, or medical supply.

"In cases when a payment or other transfer of value is reasonably associated with a specific drug, device, biological, or medical supply, the name of the specific product must be reported," says CMS. "For example, if a sales representative takes a physician to dinner to explain the benefits of the applicable manufacturer's new product, the name of the product must be included since it was associated with the dinner."

The Multiple Drug Conundrum
If the payment relates to multiple drugs, only one drug needs to be named. CMS, however, does not mention how the named drug should be chosen.

As an alternative, however, CMS is considering "allowing applicable manufacturers to report multiple covered drugs, devices, biologicals, or medical supplies as related to a single payment or other transfer of value. Allowing the reporting of multiple covered drugs, devices, biologicals and medical supplies may be easier for applicable manufacturers since many financial relationships are not specific to one product only, but would make aggregating payments by product difficult. We seek comment on this approach."

I'm betting the drug industry would prefer the one-drug naming approach where they have the option to name the drug of choice. This could make it difficult to link specific payments to specific drugs or assign payments to specific drugs to "even out" the distribution, Say, for example, that a sales rep is responsible for promoting 2 drugs at a dinner meeting, but is given a physician payment budget that apportions 80% to just drug A. The total budget could be reported under drug B, thus diverting attention away from drug A. I think you get what I mean!

Nature of Payment - Nondisclosure of Assumptions Make an Ass Out You and Me!
This is important. The Sunshine Act lists the following categories of payment:
  • Consulting fees. 
  • Compensation for services other than consulting. 
  • Honoraria. 
  • Gift. 
  • Entertainment. 
  • Food. 
  • Travel (including the specified destinations). 
  • Education. 
  • Research. 
  • Charitable contribution. 
  • Royalty or license. 
  • Current or prospective ownership or investment interest. 
  • Direct compensation for serving as faculty or as a speaker for a medical education program. 
  • Grant. 
  • Any other nature of the payment or other transfer of value (as defined by the Secretary).
CMS suggests that manufacturers explain the reasoning behind how they categorize payments (in a mandatory "assumptions document") since there may be significant differences among manufacturers on this issue. However, CMS will NOT make these"assumption documents" public because "they may contain information applicable manufacturers would consider proprietary."

That's a pretty big "transparency loophole," IMHO. Although CMS will monitor the assumptions, there is no way for the public to monitor CMS! The drug industry can be free to define these categories as it sees fit and not run into trouble unless different companies use wildly different assumptions and raise red flags at CMS. Also, the politically-appointed HHS Secretary may overrule the CMS as she did with the FDA!

Also, the CMS is seeking comments on whether or not the "assumption document" submission should be mandatory or voluntary! I can only guess what industry's comments will be about that!

One Category for ALL Speakers' Fees
CMS does, however, specify how manufacturers should interpret "Direct compensation for serving as faculty or as a speaker for a medical education program." CMS proposes that this category be "interpreted broadly to encompass all instances in which applicable manufacturers pay physicians to serve as speakers, and not just those situations involving 'medical education programs.'"

Under that rule, accredited CME programs would be lumped in with all other speaking activities, such as satellite symposia.

"We are considering, and welcome comments on, whether to limit this category to CME-accredited speaking engagements and report other speaking engagements in another category, such as compensation for services other than consulting, or additional category."

I anticipate a lot of comments on this issue will be submitted.

There are many more proposed rules in the CMS document, which runs to 121 pages! I have gotten only as far as page 34 in this summary. I hope to publish a more complete summary with comments from experts in an upcoming issue of Pharma Marketing News (subscription required).

I invite you to submit comments to this post.

Without Free Gifts from Pharma to Docs, Would Research be Useless?

In a recent blog post (here), PhRMA said "Without Promotion Research will be Useless." To support its case, PhRMA cited "an interesting opinion editorial" in the latest edition of the Annals of Emergency Medicine – the medical journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP). In the op-ed, entitled "Limiting Gifts, Harming Patients," Emory University economist Paul Rubin, Ph.D. expressed concern that ACEP policy regarding Gifts to Emergency Physicians from Industry "could have the unfortunate effect of limiting the exchange of critical information between medicine makers and physicians about the benefits and risks of new medicines, how to use them properly and how best to diagnose the right candidates for particular treatments."

Basically, Rubin and PhRMA are saying that gifts to physicians are an integral part of promoting new discoveries to physicians and without these gifts and promotion, medical research would be "useless."

I haven't read the op-ed piece because it cost about $32 to download the pdf file for 24 hours! Highway robbery is all I have to say about that! I did, however, request a complimentary copy, but haven't received any response yet. No matter. The op-ed piece obviously is attacking ACEP policy on the subject of free gifts to emergency physicians. You can find that policy here.

What's so onerous about the ACEP policy that an op-ed piece would attack it as "harmful to patients" and PhRMA would claim it renders research useless?  I looked at the policy to learn first hand why it's research Agamemnon.

First, the ACEP policy does NOT make ALL gifts to physicians from pharma unacceptable by their members. Here are gifts ACEP says are perfectly acceptable:

Emergency physicians may accept educational gifts that are not of substantial value ($100 or less). Examples include:
  • Occasional modest meals in an office, clinic, or hospital setting that accompany an educational presentation 
  • Evidence-based clinical care guidelines or pocket handbooks 
  • Anatomical models designed for patient education 
  • Informational materials to facilitate patient understanding of a disease or treatment
This sounds familiar. The PhRMA Code on Interactions with Healthcare Professionals says essentially the same thing. Code #11 states "It is appropriate for companies, where permitted by law, to offer items designed primarily for the education of patients or healthcare professionals if the items are not of substantial value ($100 or less) and do not have value to healthcare professionals outside of his or her professional responsibilities. For example, an anatomical model for use in an examination room is intended for the education of the patients and is therefore appropriate..."

The ACEP policy, however, cites examples of gifts that should NOT be accepted. These include:
  • Meals provided for physicians or their family members, staff, or guests (other than modest meals accompanying educational presentations, as noted above)
  • Personal or recreational items, such as tickets to theatrical or sporting events
  • Direct subsidy of any expenses (such as registration, travel, lodging, meals) incurred in attending CME events or other educational or professional meetings (All industry support for such activities should be provided directly to the activity provider to offset program costs or to a general fund for continuing education programs.)
  • Cash or cash equivalents such as gift certificates or vouchers
  • Gifts offered in exchange for prescribing or using a product
  • Medical equipment, such as stethoscopes or otoscopes
  • Payment for token consultant or advisory arrangements
  • Medical products for the personal use of the physician, the physician's staff, or family members
Again, PhRMA takes a similar stance. Code #3 states: "To ensure the appropriate focus on education and informational exchange and to avoid the appearance of impropriety, companies should not provide any entertainment or recreational items, such as tickets to the theater or sporting events, sporting equipment, or leisure or vacation trips, to any healthcare professional who is not a salaried employee of the company."

It seems tio me that Dr. Rubin could just as well criticized the PhRMA Code, which limits gifts to physicians, as being "harmful to patients." So, I am confused why PhRMA would cite Rubin's op-ed piece in defense of promotion being necessary for research success.

Of course, the drug industry is free to promote drugs to emergency and other physicians. There's nothing in the ACEP policy that limits access to physicians for promotional purposes. In fact, the policy states:
"The College also recognizes that emergency physicians should be free to interact with industry representatives if they choose, and that physicians may receive useful information about particular products from industry representatives. Emergency physicians may receive compensation at fair market value from pharmaceutical and biomedical device companies for legitimate professional services rendered, including participation in research and service as faculty in continuing education programs."
What PhRMA and Dr. Rubin should have focused on is the role of "promotion" in general and not the free gifts to physicians straw man. Rubin, for example, says that "Research and promotion are merely 2 sides of the same coin," which is a more rational point of view that deserves a bit more analysis.

What PhRMA and Rubin are claiming is that pharmaceutical companies need to have the freedom to promote new medicines to physicians (and "maybe" consumers too, says Rubin) in order for research to have a successful commercial outcome. I can agree with that. But are gifts to physicians really necessary to achieve that outcome? I don't think so.

There are many other ways for pharmaceutical companies to reach physicians with promotional messages, including social media (eg, Twitter posts). If a gift is required to get the message out about research, then pharma is in deep doo doo.

What's needed is NOT promotion. What's needed is true two-way communication. Without that kind of communication, research truly is useless.

The Pharma Marketing News article "Physician Participation in Peer-to-Peer Social Media Sites," which will be published on October 12, 2011 (free to subscribers; available here to everyone else for $4.95) speaks about what physicians want from pharma: users of online physician peer-to-peer communities want open and transparent participation by pharma and non-promotional information: “Give us the data, let us make up our minds, don’t try to spin me, I’ve got a rep who does that,” is a typical physician comment. “Make dialogue two-way, respect us, and focus on scientific exchange,” is another. Physicians are looking for negative findings also!

Some other information physicians want from pharma companies include:
  • Drug pipeline information. 
  • New information about product—not interested in being detailed, however. 
  • Focus on topics like re-imbursement, patient education materials, etc.
So there's a lot more to "promotion" than detailing physicians after gaining access made possible by free gifts!

P.S. I finally did get a copy of Dr. Rubin's Op-Ed piece from ACEP. Thanks very much. The Annals of Emergency Medicine will publish a "rebuttal" to Dr. Rubin in the next few weeks. Meanwhile, here's my rebuttal:
After reading just the first three paragraphs of Dr. Rubin's op-ed, I am bowled over by his cherry picking of "the best evidence" (eg, 3 citations of the same author). Dr. Rubin also said that "the best evidence" indicates that ACEP's policies are "likely to lead to worse outcomes for patients." He did not cite any references to "the best evidence." 
Dr. Rubin's naivete regarding the FDA approval process is breathtaking. According to Dr. Rubin,  the FDA drug approval is "restrictive"; ergo "this means that we would expect that newer drugs would be better than older drugs. Because this is so [my emphasis], actions that lead to increased sales of newer drugs [eg, free gifts for physicians] would be expected to improve patient health." Whaaa? Dr. Rubin offered no proof -- eg, clinical outcomes -- that this is so. That did not stop him, however, from criticizing studies that find fault with pharma advertising because they too offered no real proof; ie, "clinical outcomes."
It doesn't take a PhD in economics to rebut Dr, Rubin's shoddy analysis. Even so, I can't wait to see the rebuttal to be published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine!

Survey That Rewarded NYC Physicians with $100 Gift Card Concludes Physicians View Pharma Gifts Positively. Duhhh!

I don't know whether to laugh or cry about all the brouhaha regarding results of a survey of NYC physicians just reported in Archives of Surgery.

The survey finds that 72 percent of the 590 physicians and medical students at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine who responded "have positive attitudes toward various marketing overtures, including small gifts and lunches" (see this Pharmalot post with the headline: "Most Docs Remain Positive About Pharma Marketing").

Not mentioned in the Pharmalot post is the fact that "participants who completed the survey were able to submit their names and e-mail addresses separately for the opportunity to receive 1 of 2 gift cards worth $100 each" (you have to access the METHODS section of the paper to see this; it's not in the abstract, which Pharmalot cited).

To which I say: DUHhh! Whaddaya (NYC-speak) expect from physicians who are offered not just one, but maybe TWO $100 gift cards?

Nevertheless, expect to see many more headlines like "Most Docs Remain Positive About Pharma Marketing" in the future.

Pfizer Reveals (Almost) All Payments to Physicians

Pfizer recently published its list of physician payments it made during the last half of 2009 (Q3 and Q4). The list, which is presented on this web page using javascript, includes these categories of payments:
  • Professional Advising
  • Expert-Led Forums
  • Research, including Phase I-IV clinical trials and investigator-initiated research
  • Meals, business travel expenses and educational items that are greater than or equal to $25 in value, and where the aggregate amount paid to an individual health care professional is greater than or equal to $500 in a calendar year.
Pfizer is the only pharma company to reveal how much it pays healthcare physicians and/or institutions for research. GSK and Merck, whose payments I analyzed in a recent Pharma Marketing News article ("Pharma Begins to Reveal Payments to Physicians"), only revealed payments for educational activities (speaker fees) and consulting. Neither Merck nor GSK revealed payments related to clinical research, or travel and entertainment expenses. None of these companies included payments for continuing medical education (CME) activities.

I asked Pfizer last Wednesday for the data in Excel format, but so far they haven't sent it to me, although they said they are looking into it. Meanwhile, Eric Milgram, author of Pharma Conduct Blog gave me his copy of the data in Excel format. Eric has looked into which physicians and organizations got paid the most. I looked at how the money was distributed on a state-by-state basis and by category of payment.

For my analysis, I used these categories:
  • Pfizer Research (Pfizer Sponsored Research)
  • Speaking (Expert-Led Forums)
  • Consulting (Professional Advising)
  • Travel & Meals (Business Related Travel and Meals)
  • IIR (Investigator-initiated Research)
  • Unknown
  • Educational Items (ie, tchtockes given away by sales reps)
The breakdown is illustrated in the following pie chart (click on it for an enlarged view):


Payments for educational items totaled only $12,275 out of a total of $35,436,797. This is too small to be picked up in this chart, which round to the nearest whole percent. Keep in mind that Pfizer is only reporting items with a value of $25 or greater and that the new PhRMA physician marketing code limits "gifts" to physicians (ie, the code prohibits distribution of non-educational items such as pens, mugs and other “reminder” objects typically adorned with a company or product logo). "Educational" items are supposed to be for the education of patients or healthcare professionals and should not exceed a value of $100. Such items include anatomical models that physicians may use to show patients what their insides look like.

It could be that Pfizer is giving away lots of educational items worth less than $25 and therefore not reporting this expense, but I doubt it. The physician gift (educational item) industry is essentially dead.

How much is spent on marketing vs research activities? "Consulting" fees may be paid for either type of activity, but most often physician consultants are paid by the marketing department to help it position the product with physicians. Let's say 75% of Pfizer's consulting fees were for marketing purposes.  Investigator-initiated research (IIR) is also often just a marketing ploy designed to get key physicians to prescribe more of the product. Let's put 50% of that into the marketing bucket. Travel and meals is a substantial category. Let's also say 50% of that goes to the physician marketing consultants. Pfizer has an "unknown" category that totals $899,688. Let's say 25% of that should be in the marketing bucket. And all of the $12,275 worth of "educational" items I consider marketing related.

The total amount of payments Pfizer made to physicians for marketing purposes in the 2nd half of 2009 was $17,390,969 or 49.1% of the total ($35,436,797). This is the first time I have been able to analyze how much a pharmaceutical company pays for physician marketing versus research. Of course, this does not include direct-to-consumer marketing expenses or research that is done in Pfizer's own labs or by research contract organizations. The latter could be a huge research expense.

The other analysis I did was a state-by-state breakdown, which is shown in the following bubble chart (click on it for an enlarged view):


Each bubble's size is proportional to the amount of money physicians/institutions in that state received (for a comparison with GSK and Merck, see "Why Does GSK Prefer New York Physicians & Will Governor Patterson Ruin It for Them?").

The five states receiving the most money from Pfizer are represented by red bubbles. North Carolina (NC) is one of the top five states receiving money from Pfizer. This was primarily because Duke University received over $1 million for research. That represents about 44% of all the money Pfizer paid physicians and other institutions in that state.