2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2005.07.1250
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Harmonizing legal and ethical standards for interactions between health care providers and industry

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…[8] Lack of compliance to such ethical guidelines has been considered an important limiting factor in their effective implementation. [9] The role of self-regulation in such interactions has been criticized for lack of effectiveness. [10] A paradoxical stance of the doctors on the issue reflected their opposition to incentives but conviction in the fact that accepting gifts would not influence their professional behavior and belief that promotion is ineffective has been highlighted.…”
Section: Yes Nomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[8] Lack of compliance to such ethical guidelines has been considered an important limiting factor in their effective implementation. [9] The role of self-regulation in such interactions has been criticized for lack of effectiveness. [10] A paradoxical stance of the doctors on the issue reflected their opposition to incentives but conviction in the fact that accepting gifts would not influence their professional behavior and belief that promotion is ineffective has been highlighted.…”
Section: Yes Nomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the last five years, physicians of every specialty and type of practice have come under fire from their colleagues, 17 professional medical associations, 8 and even the law 9, 10 and Congress 11, 12 for their financial ties to pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers. In addition to a great deal of attention in high-impact medical journals, the issues have also been treated with heated rhetoric in the popular media, 13–15 with journalists accusing physicians with industry ties as being “entangled in unholy alliances” 16 and of “losing their balance of values as if in the grip of a python.” 17 …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%