Title: Is medicine corrupt
1Is medicine corrupt?
- Richard Smith
- Editor, BMJ
- www.bmj.com/talks
2What I want to talk about?
- What is corruption?
- Evidence from medical students
- Richard Horton story
- The Banerjee case
- Doctors and drug companies
- Examples from medical publishing
- Other possible areas of corruption
- Why is this happening?
- What might be done?
3(No Transcript)
4What is corruption?
- Corrupt (verb transitive) to taint, destroy the
purity of, to pervert, to debase, to spoil, to
bribe - Corrupt (verb intransitive) to rot, go bad, to
lose purity, spoil
5What is corruption?
- Corrupt (adjective) defiled, depraved,
dishonest, venal, of the nature of--or
involving--bribery, bribed, not genuine or pure,
rotten, putrid, debased or made very faulty in
transcription
6Is medicine corrupt?
7Of course, everything is corrupt to some degree
8So the question is How corrupt is medicine?
9Evidence from studies on medical students
10Are "tomorrow's doctors" honest? Questionnaire
study exploring medical students' attitudes and
reported behaviour on academic misconduct S
C Rennie and J R Crosby BMJ 2001 322
274-275.
- 676 students surveyed in Dundee
- 471 responded (62 response rate)
11Survey of 461 medical students
- Do you consider it misconduct to write Nervous
system--examination normal when it hasnt been
done? - Yes 75
- Have you done it?
- Yes 32
12Survey of 461 medical students
- Do you consider it misconduct to forge a doctors
signature on a piece of work? - Yes 93
- Have you done it?
- Yes 9
13Survey of 461 medical students
- Do you consider it misconduct to copy text
directly without acknowledging the source? - Yes 82
- Have you done it?
- Yes 14
14Understanding the clinical dilemmas that shape
medical students' ethical development
questionnaire survey and focus group study
Lisa K Hicks, Yulia Lin, David W Robertson,
Deborah L Robinson, and Sarah I Woodrow BMJ
2001 322 709-710.
- 108 students in Toronto
- 90 response rate
- 47 had been asked to act unethically
15Survey of 103 medical students in Toronto
- Conflict between medical education and patient
care (17) - Patients asked to return to clinic for follow up
visits and not informed that the visits were
entirely for teaching purposes - Students asked to perform pelvic examinations on
patients under general anaesthesia without
patients' prior consent - House officer instructed a student to perform a
femoral puncture, for purely educational reasons,
on a comatose patient who did not need the
procedure
16Survey of 103 medical students in Toronto
- Responsibility exceeding student's capabilities
(15) - Student completed antenatal visits with patients
who were never seen by a doctor - House officer refused to respond to student's
request for help in assessing an unstable patient - Student and house officer left by teacher to
close wound, without knowing how to close it
properly - Student expected to give weekly psychotherapy
sessions without supervision
17Survey of 103 medical students in Toronto
- Involvement in care perceived to be substandard
(9) - Patient requested a narcotic-free vaginal
delivery but given intravenous narcotics without
her knowledge - Student witnessed house officer responding
inappropriately to patient's refusal to have
joint aspiration consent form completed, but
consent not meaningfully given - Student instructed by house officer to repair a
child's scalp laceration with inappropriate
supplies
18The ethics of intimate examinations teaching
tomorrow's doctorsYvette Coldicott, Catherine
Pope,
Clive Roberts BMJ 2003 326 97-101.
- 452 students in Bristol
- 386 responded (85 response rate)
19Intimate examinations without consent being
recollected
20Medical students see that academic misconduct is
common
- Survey among 229 German medical students
- 97 response rate
- Results are from 201 who had completed their MD
dissertation - Eysenbach G. BMJ 2001 322 1307
21Medical students see that academic misconduct is
commonEysenbach G. BMJ 2001 322 1307
- Survey among 229 German medical students
- 97 response rate
- Results are from 201 who had completed their MD
dissertation
22Survey of 201 German medical students
- 12 completely agreed that students have to
deliver the results expected by the supervisor - 16 had been omitted from a publication despite
contributing work - 9 had been plagiarised
23Survey of 201 German medical students
- 5 had taken words or ideas from others without
credit - 5 had presented results selectively
- 7 had trimmed or falsified results
24Survey of 201 German medical students
observations on others
- Selective reporting 43
- Trimming or falsifying results 36
- Wrong authorship attribution 25
- Multiple publication 18
- Wilfully misleading 14
- Plagiarism 14
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26Institutional corruption in medicine Peter
Wilmshurst BMJ 2002 325 1232-5.
27Anjan Kumar Banerjee
28Banerjees story
- Awarded honours and distinction in his final
medical exams - Won 24 undergraduate prizes
- Junior jobs at the Hammersmith and Northwick Park
- Within a few years of graduating had 49
publications and the first part of his FRCS
29Banerjees story
- Started research with Professor Tim Peters
- 1988--doubts raised about his research included
authors on his papers who said that they had not
been involved doubts that he could have done the
work - Moved with Tim Peters to Kings
30Banerjees story
- Received grants from charities and pharmaceutical
companies for research into the effect of NSAIDs
on the gut - Colleagues said the work was fraudulent
- Banerjee confessed that it was--but it had
already been printed as an abstract in Gut in
1990 - Gut was not notified until 2000 that the work was
fraudulent the retracted it
31Banerjees story
- 1990--full paper submitted to Gut with Banerjee
and Peters as sole authors - Retracted as fraudulent 10 years later
- 1990--widespead doubts about Banerjee Kings
starts an inquiry
32Banerjees story
- July 1991 Inquiry completed. Chairman writes to
Peters and school secretary "Having carefully
examined the documentary evidence which you sent
me, I am totally satisfied that much of the
research data reported by Dr Banerjee since 1988
is at best unreliable, and in many cases
spurious.
33Banerjees story
- The report disappeared
- Kings didnt notify the MRC or Gut
- University of London awarded him an MD degree
based on the fraudulent research never retracted - Royal College of Surgeons made him a Hunterian
professor based on his (fraudulent) research
34Banerjees story
- Early 90s Banerjee became a consultant surgeon in
Halifax - 2000 resigned
- November 2000--found gulity of serious
professional misconduct for falsifying research - February 2001--Peters found guilty of serious
professional misconduct for failing to act on
Banerjee
35Banerjees story
- September 2002 found guilty of serious
professional misconduct for financial dishonesty
misled patients about the length of NHS waiting
lists to induce patients to opt for private
treatment and sought payments for treatments not
performed. Concerns were also expressed about
clinical skills.
36Banerjees story
- More than 10 years elapsed between there being
clear evidence of fraud and proper action being
taken - He flourished professionally despite strong
evidence of misconduct - Many were harmed by his behaviour
- Many knew about his misconduct
- Documents were lost
- Whistleblowers were threatened