Chimonas Susan, Brennan Troyen A, Rothman David J
Center on Medicine as a Profession, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Feb;22(2):184-90. doi: 10.1007/s11606-006-0041-z.
Interactions between physicians and drug representatives are common, even though research shows that physicians understand the conflict of interest between marketing and patient care. Little is known about how physicians resolve this contradiction.
To determine physicians' techniques for managing cognitive inconsistencies within their relationships with drug representatives.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Six focus groups were conducted with 32 academic and community physicians in San Diego, Atlanta, and Chicago.
Qualitative analysis of focus group transcripts to determine physicians' attitudes towards conflict of interest and detailing, their beliefs about the quality of information conveyed and the impact on prescribing, and their resolution of the conflict between detailers' desire to sell product and patient care.
Physicians understood the concept of conflict of interest and applied it to relationships with detailers. However, they maintained favorable views of physician-detailer exchanges. Holding these mutually contradictory attitudes, physicians were in a position of cognitive dissonance. To resolve the dissonance, they used a variety of denials and rationalizations: They avoided thinking about the conflict of interest, they disagreed that industry relationships affected physician behavior, they denied responsibility for the problem, they enumerated techniques for remaining impartial, and they reasoned that meetings with detailers were educational and benefited patients.
Although physicians understood the concept of conflict of interest, relationships with detailers set up psychological dynamics that influenced their reasoning. Our findings suggest that voluntary guidelines, like those proposed by most major medical societies, are inadequate. It may be that only the prohibition of physician-detailer interactions will be effective.
尽管研究表明医生了解营销与患者护理之间的利益冲突,但医生与药品代表之间的互动却很常见。对于医生如何解决这一矛盾,人们知之甚少。
确定医生在与药品代表的关系中处理认知不一致的技巧。
设计、地点和参与者:在圣地亚哥、亚特兰大及芝加哥,对32名学术型和社区医生进行了6次焦点小组访谈。
对焦点小组访谈记录进行定性分析,以确定医生对利益冲突和药品推广活动的态度、他们对所传达信息质量及其对处方影响的看法,以及他们如何解决药品推广人员推销产品的欲望与患者护理之间的冲突。
医生理解利益冲突的概念,并将其应用于与药品推广人员的关系中。然而,他们对医生与药品推广人员的交流仍持赞许态度。持有这些相互矛盾的态度,医生处于认知失调的状态。为了解决这种失调,他们采用了各种否认和合理化的方式:他们避免思考利益冲突,不同意行业关系会影响医生行为,否认对该问题负有责任,列举保持公正的技巧,并且辩称与药品推广人员的会面具有教育意义且对患者有益。
尽管医生理解利益冲突的概念,但与药品推广人员的关系产生了影响他们推理的心理动态。我们的研究结果表明,像大多数主要医学协会提议的那些自愿性准则是不够的。或许只有禁止医生与药品推广人员的互动才会有效。