By Nicholas
Regush
This was
not good news. But not terribly surprising. The famous and over-rated
New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) was announcing that it would now
allow doctors with money ties to drug companies to review the products
those companies sell.
These "review"
articles can greatly boost a company's profits. Some terribly confused
person at the NEJM thinks that the reviewer should receive no more than
$10,000 annually from the company whose products s/he is reviewing. Makes
a lot of sense, doesn,t it? Does someone have the inside track on
how much money will create undue influence? How about $9, 900, or $12,226?
Are we being actually asked to believe that the sum of $10,000 will not
prevent a reviewer from slanting the review? I can imagine the reviewer
thinking, "hell, they didn,t pay me enough, so I'm still
going to write off their new drug as crap."
The confused
person at the NEJM may actually be its editor, Dr. Jeffrey Drazen, not
known to be shy in developing good relations with the drug industry. Drazen
says that without the new policy, the journal will not be able to attract
good reviewers. There are not enough of them around.
No, there
are not enough of them around on Mars or Pluto, but on planet Earth, there
are some good ones to be had who don,t even take money from drug
companies. Former NEJM editor Jerome Kassirer had no difficulty in finding
people. Imagine that. My guess is he didn,t look for them with a
telescope.
Drazen is
big trouble. His leadership at the NEJM comes at a time when medicine
is fighting a blizzard of criticism about corruption, particularly its
incestuous ties with drug companies. This new policy only gives the profession
another black eye.
This gaff
certainly won,t help the NEJM, a journal that has been steadily in
decline in the past decade, facing one controversy after another - including
the inability to adequately monitor the conflicts of interest of some
of its contributors.
The journal
bigwigs should fire Drazen and try to find someone who actually understands
the grand stupidity of the new policy. Otherwise, the NEJM will be best
for puppy poop, rather than for informing doctors intelligently about
the value of new drugs.