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面向医生的临床研讨会:议程由谁设定?

Clinical conferences for physicians: Who sets the agenda?

作者信息

Abakumova T R, Safina A F, Ziganshina L E

出版信息

Int J Risk Saf Med. 2015;27 Suppl 1:S91-2. doi: 10.3233/JRS-150703.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Clinical conferences are generally defined as scheduled events at which practicing physicians themselves present to their colleagues interesting clinical cases, share their new experiences and learn about the latest achievements of medical science and practice. The value of a clinical conference is thought to be in direct communication between physicians, in analysis of topical issues in a given specialty with the aim to improve the quality of care. Speakers based on their own observations and studies reveal the most urgent problems, analyze results and offer potential decisions to their colleagues interested in the same questions. The event format may be different: workshops, highly specialized sections, round tables and seminars with participation of the leading specialists in a given field. These conferences are generally organised by the Ministries and Departments of Health, by leading research and/or educational institutions in the field, by recognised medical centres and other institutions. Recently pharmaceutical companies got actively involved in medical events, acting as sponsors of various scientific conferences and congresses, however threatening the mission of these events [1]. This brings up some uneasy questions: who are the medical conferences for? Who is in charge of setting the conference agenda? Do they contribute to evidence-based medicine; do they contribute to better health? Unfortunately, there is a trend to duplication or multiplication of conferences: various agencies and departments deliver the same conferences, presentations at which are often pre-arranged by pharmaceutical companies and do not have clear scientific novelty, while the conferences themselves have largely transformed into advertising of new pharmaceuticals or new technologies [2]. Pharmaceutical corporations sponsor invited speakers paying for their trips and paying honoraria, organising cocktail parties as part of medical activities. With the help of leading experts with impressive titles serving as speakers at the conferences, pharmaceutical companies are trying to be as close as possible to routine practice of prescribing of certain drugs, manipulating evidence, controlling scientific societies as well as the process of clinical guideline development and publication of research results [3]. The degree of expert involvement depends on their level of influence [4].

OBJECTIVE

We aimed to study how often regular medical practitioners attend these conferences; to analyse who were keynote speakers and where they were coming from; to identify which organizations were responsible for organisation of these conferences and for sending out invitations to these conferences and for disseminating information about them.

METHODS

We summarized all the invitations (printed on paper) received by one regular medical practitioner employed with the outpatient clinical of the city of Kazan for the period of two years (2012-2013).

RESULTS

During the study period (2012-2013), a regular medical practitioner received 47 printed paper invitations to scientific conferences: 22 in 2012 and 25 in 2013. The conferences were not distributed evenly over the months of the years. November appeared to be the month with the highest density/number of medical conferences: 7 conferences in 2012 and 10 in 2013. If the distribution was even, then we could calculate the number per month dividing the number per year by 9 active months (excluding July, August and September). This resulted in 2.4 and 2.8 conferences per month. Among these studied conferences 4 were organized by public health agencies: invitation tickets were accompanied by the corresponding official order to organise a conference, issued by the Health Department. Noteworthy, that 2 of these conferences were held in conference rooms of the largest hotels of the city. Forty-one out of 47 medical conferences were sponsored by big pharma: either jointly with the major medical higher educational institutions of the city or plainly by pharmaceutical companies. Seventeen conferences were held during official working hours, in the first half of the day. Not only the logo of the pharmaceutical companies was printed on invitation tickets, but there was also an advert of the promoted pharmaceutical brand.Nine conference invitations contained invitation to dinner. In one of the invitations to a conference on neuroscience it was written: "dinner under the unforgettable music". Two conference invitations contained invitation to a lunch. Programs of 20 conferences (which were included) listed guest lecturers, coming from the leading medical universities in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Opinion leaders' involvement: some of the leading experts acted as speakers from 4 to 7 conferences a month in this sample conference invitations package of a regular polyclinic physician.

CONCLUSIONS

In 2012-2013 health practitioners were invited to attend medical conferences regularly, at least 2 times a month, with November being the busiest month. The keynote speakers were the opinion leaders from the local medical educational institutions and visitors from Moscow and St. Petersburg; their involvement with the conferences was repetitive. Governmental institutions jointly with big pharma were responsible for organisation of these conferences and attracting audience.Limitations of these observations:Unfortunately, the information on printed-paper conference invitations was not complete because not all tickets have survived. From the interview with the physician we know that in addition to these printed on paper invitations there were many invitations and alerts sent out by e-mail, SMS messages and personal phone calls, making the regularity of these conferences much higher. The physician, who kindly provided this information to us, asked not to be named or thanked in any public presentation of the results of these analyses.

摘要

背景

临床会议通常被定义为定期活动,执业医师在会上向同行展示有趣的临床病例、分享新经验并了解医学科学与实践的最新成果。临床会议的价值被认为在于医师之间的直接交流,以及对特定专业领域热点问题的分析,旨在提高医疗质量。演讲者基于自身观察和研究揭示最紧迫的问题,分析结果并向对相同问题感兴趣的同行提供潜在解决方案。活动形式可能多种多样:研讨会、高度专业化的板块、圆桌会议以及由特定领域顶尖专家参与的研讨会。这些会议通常由卫生部和各部门、该领域的领先研究和/或教育机构、知名医疗中心及其他机构组织。近来,制药公司积极参与医学活动,充当各种科学会议和大会的赞助商,然而这对这些活动的使命构成了威胁[1]。这引发了一些令人不安的问题:医学会议是为谁举办的?谁负责设定会议议程?它们对循证医学有贡献吗?它们对改善健康状况有贡献吗?不幸的是,存在会议重复或增多的趋势:各种机构和部门举办相同的会议,会议上的报告往往由制药公司预先安排,缺乏明确的科学新颖性,而会议本身在很大程度上已变成新药品或新技术的广告宣传[2]。制药公司赞助受邀演讲者,支付其差旅费和酬金,组织鸡尾酒会作为医学活动的一部分。借助在会议上担任演讲者的头衔令人印象深刻的顶尖专家,制药公司试图尽可能贴近某些药物的常规处方实践,操纵证据,控制科学学会以及临床指南的制定过程和研究结果的发表[3]。专家的参与程度取决于其影响力水平[4]。

目的

我们旨在研究普通执业医师参加这些会议的频率;分析主旨演讲者是谁以及他们来自何处;确定哪些组织负责组织这些会议、发出会议邀请以及传播会议信息。

方法

我们汇总了喀山市一名在门诊临床工作的普通执业医师在两年(2012 - 2013年)期间收到的所有(纸质)会议邀请。

结果

在研究期间(2012 - 2013年),一名普通执业医师收到47份科学会议的纸质邀请:2012年22份,2013年25份。这些会议在一年中的各月份分布不均。11月似乎是医学会议密度/数量最高的月份:2012年有7场会议,2013年有10场。如果分布均匀,那么我们可以通过将每年的会议数量除以9个活动月(不包括7月、8月和9月)来计算每月的会议数量。这得出每月2.4场和2.8场会议。在这些研究的会议中,有4场由公共卫生机构组织:邀请券附有卫生部发布的组织会议的相应官方命令。值得注意的是,其中2场会议在该市最大酒店的会议室举行。47场医学会议中有41场由大型制药公司赞助:要么与该市主要的医学高等教育机构联合赞助,要么单纯由制药公司赞助。17场会议在正常工作时间的上午举行。不仅制药公司的标志印在邀请券上,还印有推广药品品牌的广告。9份会议邀请包含晚宴邀请。在一份神经科学会议的邀请中写道:“在难忘的音乐下共进晚餐”。2份会议邀请包含午餐邀请。20场会议(包含在内)的议程列出了来自莫斯科和圣彼得堡顶尖医科大学的客座讲师。意见领袖的参与情况:在这位普通全科医生的样本会议邀请套餐中,一些顶尖专家每月作为演讲者参加4至7场会议。

结论

在2012 - 2013年,卫生从业人员被定期邀请参加医学会议,每月至少2次,11月是最繁忙的月份。主旨演讲者是当地医学教育机构的意见领袖以及来自莫斯科和圣彼得堡的访客;他们对会议的参与具有重复性。政府机构与大型制药公司共同负责组织这些会议并吸引听众。这些观察结果的局限性:不幸的是,纸质会议邀请的信息并不完整,因为并非所有邀请券都留存下来。从与这位医生的访谈中我们了解到,除了这些纸质邀请外,还有许多通过电子邮件、短信和个人电话发出的邀请和提醒,这使得这些会议的频率更高。这位好心为我们提供此信息的医生要求在这些分析结果的任何公开展示中不提及其姓名或表示感谢。

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