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Medicines/Thousands of medical students urge
schools to eliminate pharmaceutical
marketing influence... National PharmFree
Week commences today
Thousands of medical students
join together this week, National PharmFree
Week, calling upon medical schools to ban
pharmaceutical marketing influence from
their campuses....National PharmFree Week is
sponsored by the American Medical Student
Association (AMSA), the nation's largest,
independent medical student organization.
Over the course of the week, thousands of
future physicians
and healthcare leaders will hold events
across the country, including:
-- Capitol Hill Briefing: AMSA joins
the National Physicians' Alliance and the
Prescription Project to lobby on behalf of
Senate Bill 2029. The legislation will
require disclosure of payments to physicians
by the pharmaceutical industry. (Monday,
October 22, 2:30 p.m.)
-- New Policy Announced at UConn: The
University of Connecticut Medical Center
will announce its new pharmaceutical policy.
(Wednesday, October 24,
12 p.m.)
-- FLIP Symposium: The symposium,
being held at the University of Illinois at
Chicago, will provide skills to become more
critical, evidence-based prescribers. Guest
speakers include several renowned leaders,
including The Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA) Editor in Chief
Catherine DeAngelis. (Saturday, October 27,
9 a.m.)
About 90 percent of the pharmaceutical
industry's $21 billion marketing budget is
directed at physicians, according to JAMA.
There are more than 90,000 pharmaceutical
representatives that visit U.S. physicians
and medical students, providing free
lunches, gifts, marketing paraphernalia and
free medication samples. These enticements
are designed to influence
doctors to prescribe more drugs and more
expensive drugs and have often become a
substitute for objective medical evidence.
"These marketing practices, including the
growing number of "ask your doctor"
commercials, has led to over-medicating the
U.S. population," says Michael Ehlert, M.D.,
AMSA national president. "There is
substantial evidence that marketing shapes
physician prescribing habits. By eradicating
pharmaceutical marketing from all medical
schools, hospitals and academic
medical centers, physicians will be able
to go back to practicing
evidence-based medicine."
Launched in 2002, AMSA's PharmFree
Campaign teaches medical students how to
ethically interact with the pharmaceutical
industry. Earlier this year, AMSA released
its PharmFree Scorecard, a
first-of-it's-kind ranking
of medical schools according to their
pharmaceutical policies. AMSA remains
one of the few national organizations to
ban all pharmaceutical
advertisements and sponsorships. National
PharmFree Week is supported by
The Medical Letter. For more information,
visit
http://www.pharmfree.org.
About the
American Medical Student Association
The American Medical Student Association
(AMSA), with more than a half-century
history of medical student activism, is the
oldest and largest independent association
of physicians-in-training in the United
States.
Founded in 1950, AMSA is a
student-governed, non-profit organization
committed to representing the concerns of
physicians-in-training. With more than
68,000 members, including medical and
premedical students, residents and
practicing physicians, AMSA is committed to
improving medical training
as well as advancing the profession of
medicine. To learn more about AMSA,
please visit us online at
http://www.amsa.org/.
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