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Polish physicians’ cooperation with the pharmaceutical industry and its potential impact on public health

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  • Marta Makowska

Abstract

Objective: This article aims to describe how Polish physicians cooperate with the pharmaceutical industry and show how this relationship may pose a threat to public health. Methods: It considers the results of an online survey of 379 physicians. The survey was hosted by surveymonkey.com with links from a Polish physicians’ website (Medycyna Praktyczna) between 29 October 2013 and 31 December 2013. The sample was purposive, respondents having to be physicians working in Poland. Results: The majority of respondents (96.8%) said that they had talked with pharmaceutical sales representatives (PSRs) in their practice, with 85% saying that they had had regular contact with them. Despite the existing legal ban in Poland, 35% of respondents admitted that they had usually met with PSRs in their office during working hours. As many as 81.8% of surveyed doctors said that they had taken part in an educational meeting organized by the pharmaceutical industry at least once during the 12 months preceding the study. A majority of the respondents (72.3%) said they trusted the information provided by PSRs. Over one third of respondents (36.4%) claimed that Polish doctors accepted gifts of a type that they should not accept according to Polish law. Conclusions: The study showed that Polish physicians cooperate in different ways with pharmaceutical companies and have frequent contact with them. This can influence their knowledge and doctors whose knowledge of drugs is based mainly on information from pharmaceutical industry materials may prescribe medicines in a biased way, possibly exposing their patients to sub-optimal treatments and burdening both their patients and the state budget with unnecessary costs. Lack of trust in doctors and pharmaceutical companies have other implications too: there may be a decline of faith in the efficacy of therapy and patients may be encouraged to engage in self-diagnosis and self-treatment. For these reasons it is necessary to increase transparency and strengthen the ethical guidelines surrounding the physician–pharmaceutical industry relationship in Poland. The present findings also have implications for public health policy.

Suggested Citation

  • Marta Makowska, 2017. "Polish physicians’ cooperation with the pharmaceutical industry and its potential impact on public health," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(9), pages 1-17, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0184862
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184862
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Ozierański, Piotr & McKee, Martin & King, Lawrence, 2012. "Pharmaceutical lobbying under postcommunism: universal or country-specific methods of securing state drug reimbursement in Poland?," Health Economics, Policy and Law, Cambridge University Press, vol. 7(2), pages 175-195, April.
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