Better Health: Smart Health Commentary Better Health (TM): smart health commentary

Article Comments

Are For-Profit Healthcare Companies Inherently Less Ethical Than Non-Profit Organizations?

I was a little surprised by a recent reader comment suggesting that pharmaceutical companies are no different than tobacco manufacturers. While I am strongly opposed to misleading pharmaceutical marketing tactics, the bottom line is that most drugs have a legitimate therapeutic value. Tobacco, on the other hand, is a known carcinogen with no medical value that I can think of. This comparison, however, brought into focus a common underlying assumption: that for-profit companies are inherently less ethical than  non-profit and academic centers.

I’d like to question the tendency to absolve academic centers of any possible wrongdoing on the basis of their educational reputation or non-profit status. Of course, financial gain is not the only motivator behind endeavors, initiatives, and behaviors – though it may be the easiest to measure.

As a medical student I witnessed a sad example of academic misbehavior. Senior residents in the department of plastic surgery were performing liposuction procedures after hours for cash. When a patient experienced an infectious complication from a thigh liposuction procedure, an investigation ensued. The residents claimed to be putting the cash into the residency fund, to be used to support travel, lodging and participation in annual assemblies – therefore exonerating themselves of wrong-doing.

It is unclear if the department chair was fully aware of what the residents were up to, though he was reprimanded, terminated, and ended up teaching at another institution. The plastic surgery department lost its accreditation, and all of the residents had to finish their training elsewhere. As for me, I lost my mentor (the department chair) and ended up not pursuing a career in surgery. There certainly was a lot of fall out from that debacle on all sides.

A case of academic double standards was highlighted recently by Dr. George Lundberg in a Medscape editorial where journal editors claimed that continuing medical education (CME) courses should never be sponsored by for-profit companies. Meanwhile the journal accepted advertising from these same companies:

…The JAMA editors who wrote in 2008: “…providers of continuing medical education courses should not condone or tolerate for-profit companies…providing funding or sponsorship for medical education programs….” This is from a publication that, for more than 100 years, has been supported primarily by advertising revenue, mostly pharmaceutical. The editors will say “yes, but we follow rules to prevent bias or improper influence.” True. So do we, a for-profit company, follow rules that prevent bias and improper influence.

On the positive side, there are many examples of for-profit companies who cultivate a culture of environmental responsibility and charity - Ben & Jerry’s, SC Johnson, and Patagonia come to mind. And let’s not forget the foundations created by Bill and Melinda Gates, Warren Buffet and many others thanks to overflow from for-profit endeavors.

In the end, conflicts of interest, hidden agendas, and secret quid pro quos are a matter of individual character and corporate culture. The people who build a company (or a country) have more to do with its behaviors and processes than the simple label “for profit” or “non profit” or any assumptions made at such a superficial level.

We are all biased in many ways, both consciously and unconsciously. The best we can do is to strive for transparency. It may be best to judge each entity and/or individual by their degree of transparency rather than profit status, academic status, or subject matter expertise. For-profit companies can be highly ethical, and academic centers can be rife with undisclosed conflicts and questionable behaviors.

Healthcare organizations should not avoid or incur scrutiny based on their profit status alone. Bias comes in many forms - and the best we can do is work for the good of others in full knowledge of the influences around us.


You may also like these posts

Read comments »


2 Responses to “Are For-Profit Healthcare Companies Inherently Less Ethical Than Non-Profit Organizations?”

  1. Emily Downward says:

    I wholeheartedly agree with you. Companies should be judged individually, and I bristle at the comparison of pharmaceutical companies to tobacco companies. Pharma, while being for-profit, strives to make products to improve or control disease and enhance our lives.

  2. “Tobacco, on the other hand, is a known carcinogen with no medical value that I can think of.”

    I believe it helps with Crohn’s disease.

Return to article »

Leave a Reply

Latest Interviews

Dr. Val Reports Live From HIMSS To ABC News

httpv www.youtube.com watch v KDGYwm ty…

Read more »

How Much Does Technology Improve Health?

Watch CBS News Videos Online Last week’s CDC report Health United States confirms that Americans are increasingly turning to medications scans and procedures to improve their health. Exercising eating right and weight loss not so much. Don’t get me wrong. I love technology as much as the next guy. Maybe…

Read more »

See all interviews »

Latest Cartoon

cardiaccath

See all cartoons »

Latest Book Reviews

Genius On The Edge - The Life Story Of Dr. William Stewart Halsted

I am one who loves medical history and Genius On The Edge the bizarre double life of Dr. William Stewart Halsted was a captivating read. For those who don t know Dr. Halsted is known as the Father of Surgery and practiced medicine after the civil war. Written by author…

Read more »

Book Review: Genius On The Edge

I received a free copy of the book Genius on the Edge The Bizarre Double Life of Dr. William Stewart Halsted by Gerald Imber MD a week ago. I have enjoyed reading it. The book is the biography of Dr Halsted but also gives you a glimpse into the life…

Read more »

Book Review: Time to Care: Personal Medicine in the Age of Technology

In Francis Peabody famously said The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient. A new book by Norman Makous MD a cardiologist who has practiced for years is a cogent reminder of that principle. In Time to Care Personal Medicine in the Age of…

Read more »

See all book reviews »