When I was a member
of the Massachusetts Public Health Council, a policy-setting division of the
Department of Public Health, I had to recuse myself every time we voted on a
proposal in which I had a personal financial stake. In fact, I often couldn’t
participate in the discussion or make a decision whenever there was an
appearance of a conflict of interest, even when there really wasn’t a conflict
at all. Massachusetts took this matter very seriously and had a number of
lawyers scrutinize every council member and every vote to make sure we were
scrupulously following the roles. So it came as quite a shock when I learned
that roughly 30% of US senators and 20% of House members hold assets in
biomedical and health care companies but are perfectly free to introduce,
discuss, and vote on legislation that significantly impacts those companies.
According to a
report by STAT, a new non-profit organization devoted to investigative journalism in the
health care industry, our Congressional representatives are substantial
investors in Pfizer, Johnson &Johnson, and Merck, along with assorted other
companies. Their investments exceeded $68 million in 2014. The people who have
the biggest stake often use their influence in Congress to promote legislation
that just happens to coincide with their personal interest. Republican
representative Chris Collins, for example, has co-sponsored a bill that would
repeal the recently instituted tax on medical devices (which is one of the ways
the Affordable Care Act pays for health insurance for the previously uninsured)
and he just happens to be invested in the medical device industry, which
vociferously opposes the tax. He also has supported abandoning FDA surveillance
of products after they are on the market and just happens to be the single
largest stockholder in a biotech company. This in the face of the
recommendations of an independent Institute of Medicine report that the absence
of any meaningful post-market surveillance is one of the weakest links in the
FDA and has been responsible for delays in discovering drug toxicity that have
led to numerous deaths.
It’s not just
Republicans who influence health care policy despite their clear and
unequivocal personal financial stake. Democrat Scott Peters has spearheaded an
effort to essentially allow drug companies to prolong their already lengthy
patent protection of drugs, the principal bulwark against price competition in
the pharmaceutical industry. His wife is a major investor in the industry,
buying over half a million dollars worth of stock in 2015 alone.
Even when they have
what appears to be a conflict of interest, our congressional representatives
sometimes vote against their own interests. STAT cites the case of Senator
David Ritter who introduced a bill that would allow US consumers to buy
medications from Canada, something that the pharmaceutical industry opposes. He
has a modest personal investment (in the neighborhood of $100,000) in health
care stocks. But by and large, those with the greatest influence in Congress also
have the largest stakes. Collins, for instance, is a member of the House Energy
and Commerce Committee—which is charged with overseeing the FDA.
Why is this a
geriatric issue? Older people are
disproportionately large users of medications and devices. By way of example,
more than 60% of all total knee replacements are inserted in people over age 65.
The mean for pacemaker insertion is 75.5 and the mean age for ICD (implantable cardiac
defibrillator) is 66.2.
In the drug arena, data from 2010 showed that seniors account for 13% of the
population but consumer 34% of all prescription drugs. So while conflict of interest in
Washington affects us all, it affects older people most dramatically. And older
people vote—they can vote out those who support their personal interests and
not those of their constituents.
We've known about the perils of conflict of interest among legislators for some time, just as we've known about potential conflict of interest among physicians who prescribe drugs and devices for their patients. The widely accepted solution to the problem is disclosure. And in fact it is the
federal disclosure requirement that generated the thousands of pages of
congressional disclosure forms which STAT used to generate its report. Maybe
this is just the first step: maybe disclosure, when analyzed the way STAT has
done, will lead to shaming and behavioral change. More likely, it won’t lead to
any meaningful change. Disclosure isn’t enough. Transparency isn’t enough. We
need to change the rules of the game.
No comments:
Post a Comment