GlaxoSmithKline to Quit Paying Doctors for Promotional Talks

November 4, 2020 0 By HearthstoneYarns

In a major departure from industry practice, GlaxoSmithKline, the sixth-largest global drug maker, announced Tuesday that it will no longer hire doctors to promote its drugs.

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The company also will stop tying compensation for sales representatives to the number of prescriptions written for drugs they market. The changes will be made worldwide over the next two years.

The New York Times broke the news late Monday. But the company said it will continue to pay doctors for research, consulting and “market research.” It will also continue to provide unsolicited funding for continuing medical education activities run by “independent” groups.

Glaxo’s move is more evolutionary than revolutionary, the last step in a dramatic reduction in its spending on physician speakers in recent years. Some competitors have shown no signs of letting up.

Glaxo first began reporting its payments to doctors in 2009. During the last nine months of that year, it spent an average of $15.4 million per quarter on paid promotional talks, according to ProPublica’s Dollars for Docs database of pharmaceutical company payments to physicians.

Spending on promotional speaking dropped to $13.2 million per quarter in 2010, to $6 million per quarter in 2011 and to $2.5 million in each of the first three quarters of 2012, data show.

That’s an overall decline of more than 80 percent.

By comparison, Forest Labs, a much smaller drug maker, spent more than $9 million a quarter on physician speakers last year.

Earlier this year, Glaxo spokeswoman Mary Anne Rhyne wrote in an email to ProPublica that the company’s promotional spending tracks with new drugs or new uses for existing products. “That activity has been relatively low in the past year, so spending for speaker programs has been lower, too,” she said.

Glaxo’s well-known drugs include Advair for asthma, Lovaza for high triglyceride levels and Avodart for prostate enlargement. It also makes the diabetes drug Avandia, which was subjected to tough restrictions from the FDA in 2010 because of concerns about heart risks. The FDA recently eased those restrictions after reconsidering the risks.

The top recent speaking programs for Glaxo involved Advair and Jalyn, which treats problems with urination for men with enlarged prostates, Rhyne said earlier this year.

In an email this morning, Rhyne said the company had taken a number of steps to change its sales and marketing practices in recent years. “This is the next step of that evolution,” she wrote.

Pharmaceutical companies have faced increased pressure as their payments to doctors have been made public, in part through efforts like Dollars for Docs. More than 15 drug companies report their payments to doctors for speaking, consulting, meals, travel and research under Corporate Integrity Agreements with the federal government that arose from settling lawsuits alleging unlawful marketing.

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