Published: December 7, 2009
A top Republican senator, Charles E. Grassley, has sent letters to the American Medical Association, the American Cancer Society
and 31 other disease and medical advocacy organizations asking them to
provide details about the amount of money that they and their directors
receive from drug and device makers.
Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Senator Charles E. Grassley has been studying the influence of drug and device makers on the medical profession.
Such financing amounts are
often considered proprietary by the organizations and their directors,
but critics contend that the industry’s sway over such groups leads
them to lobby on the industry’s behalf.
Mike Lynch, a spokesman
for the A.M.A., said the organization had received the senator’s letter
and would respond. Mr. Lynch said industry financing made up less than
2 percent of the organization’s budget.
Steve Weiss, a
spokesman for the American Cancer Society, sent an e-mail message
stating that the society “holds itself to the highest standards of
transparency and public accountability, and we look forward to working
with Senator Grassley to provide the information he requested.”
Kate
Meyer, a spokeswoman for the Alzheimer’s Association, which also
received a letter from the senator, said the organization “was going to
answer all of his questions,” but she would not immediately say what
share of the organization’s financing comes from drug or device makers.
The letter is part of Mr. Grassley’s long-running investigation
into the influence of drug and device makers on the practice of
medicine. Mr. Grassley, an Iowa Republican, has also long been
interested in how charities get and spend their tax-deductible
contributions.
“These organizations have a lot of influence over
public policy, and people rely on their leadership,” he said. “There’s
a strong case for disclosure and the accountability that results.”
Earlier
this year, Mr. Grassley sent a similar letter to the National Alliance
on Mental Illness. The group told the senator that more than two-thirds
of its donations came from the pharmaceutical industry. In response to
the disclosure, Dr. H. Richard Lamb resigned from the group’s board.
Dr.
Lamb joined the board of the organization in 2005, when he was “shocked
to learn that approximately half of NAMI’s income comes from the large
pharmaceutical companies,” he wrote in a resignation letter that Mr.
Grassley made public. Alliance officials assured Dr. Lamb that the
situation would change. “However,” Dr. Lamb wrote, “very little has
changed, right up to the present day.” In an interview, Dr. Lamb said
that NAMI’s dependence on the drug industry made some actions
impossible. For instance, Dr. Lamb said that NAMI should consider
warning against the use of some mental health
drugs with life-threatening side effects. But Dr. Lamb said the
organization could not consider such a move because it could threaten
much of its financing.
Michael J. Fitzpatrick, the organization’s
executive director, promised that the industry’s share of the group’s
fund-raising would drop significantly next year.
Mr. Grassley’s
request that organizations provide details about the outside income of
directors may cause some consternation. While a few large patient
advocacy groups have provided general guidance about their reliance on
industry, almost none have given such details about their leaders.
Posted on
Thu, December 17, 2009
by Doug Snyder