got the bastards!


Harvard medics 'concealed drug firm cash'

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/harvard-medics-concealed-drug-firm-cash-842792.html

By Guy Adams
Monday, 9 June 2008

Harvard University is at the centre of an academic and political
scandal after three prominent members of its psychiatry department
were accused of breaking conflict-of-interest rules by failing to
declare millions of dollars in consulting fees from drugs
manufacturers.

An investigation by Senator Charles E Grassley uncovered evidence that
Dr Joseph Biederman, a world-renowned child psychiatrist who helped
fuel an explosion in the use of powerful antipsychotic medicines,
neglected to tell university officials that he had earned at least
$1.6m (£810,000) from pharmaceutical companies that make them.

Two of Dr Biederman's colleagues, Dr Timothy E Wilens and Dr Thomas
Spencer, also allegedly violated federal and academic rules by
concealing outside income from the drugs industry of $1.6m and $1m
respectively. Senator Grassley, a Republican, had discovered that data
about consulting fees disclosed by the academics differed sharply from
payment information held by drugs companies.

In one example, Dr Biederman, whose work is held responsible for a
40-fold increase in the diagnosis of bipolar disorder, claimed in an
annual report to the university that he received no income from
Johnson & Johnson in 2001. When Senator Grassley queried this figure,
he confessed to receiving $3,500. The company says Dr Biederman was
paid $58,169 that year, a discrepancy that remained unexplained last
night.

The relationship between the Harvard academics and drug companies is
highly controversial because their research has advocated the use of
previously unapproved psychiatric medicines in children. The
university began a formal investigation yesterday into their outside
earnings.

"The information released by Senator Grassley suggests that, in
certain instances, each doctor may have failed to disclose outside
information ... that should have been referred," read a statement by
the university published by The New York Times, which revealed details
of the affair.

Dr Biederman said he took conflict of interest policies very
seriously, adding: "My interests are solely in the advancement of
medical treatment through rigorous and objective study." Dr Wilens and
Dr Spencer said they thought they had complied with the rules.



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