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New Hampshire Amends Patient Privacy Law Following IMS v. Sorrell Decision

May 11, 2012 — In the wake of the June 2011 U.S. Supreme Court decision in IMS v. Sorrell, which ... read more

CMS: Sunshine Act Data Collection Will Be Delayed Until 2013

May 7, 2012 — The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) stated on the CMS blog that following its ... read more

Common Marketing Violations Still Occurring, OPDP Says in 2012 Q1 Enforcement Webinar

May 7, 2012 – Many of the alleged violations cited by the Office of Prescription Drug Promotion (OPDP) in five ... read more

Guest Column: Heavy Meddle by Peter Pitts

May 7, 2012 — The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (aka, “the stimulus package”) provided AHRQ with $29.5 million for ... read more

Proposed OTC Drug Distribution Would Expand Patient Access to “Rx” Drugs

April 30, 2012 – Comments are due May 7 on an FDA-proposed paradigm that would allow the agency to approve ... read more

PDUFA V Bills Moving Forward Without Specific Marketing Provisions

April 23, 2012 — The House and Senate both issued draft legislation last week to reauthorize the Prescription Drug User ... read more

CHC and TAC Comments Object to “Dual Modality” Risk Communication in DTC TV Ads

April 16, 2012 – The Coalition for Healthcare Communication (CHC) and The Advertising Coalition (TAC) recently told the FDA’s Office ... read more

ACRE Study Finds Medical Journal Discussion of Academic/Industry Relationships Unbalanced

April 12, 2012 – The Association of Clinical Researchers and Educators (ACRE) announced yesterday the publication of a study in ... read more

FDA Draft Guidance on DTC TV Ads Raises Important Questions

By John Kamp April 9, 2012 – The only thing really clear about the new guidance on pre-review of the ... read more

FTC to Industry: Adopt Consumer Privacy Best Practices Now

March 28, 2012 – Industry members needing another reason to join the fray of companies participating in the Digital Advertising ... read more

Call for Industry Comments: Proposed FDA Study on “Corrective” DTC TV Advertising

March 26, 2012 – Note to Industry Leaders The Coalition for Healthcare Communication needs your input on a study FDA ... read more

New Video Highlights Advances in CME Conflicts of Interest Policies

March 19, 2012 – A new video produced by CME Peer Review – “Conflict of Interest: The Bottom Line” – ... read more

FDA Draft Guidance on DTC TV Ads Identifies Campaigns Subject to 45-day Pre-Review Process

March 13, 2012 – Draft guidance released today by the FDA – “Guidance for Industry Direct-to-Consumer Television Advertisements” – calls ... read more

CHC & Other Industry Leaders Warn Congress That New Laws Could Thwart Progress of Voluntary Privacy Programs

March 8, 2012 – Fifteen trade associations – including the Coalition for Healthcare Communication – sent a letter to Congressional ... read more

Court Decision in Tobacco Case Bolsters First Amendment Protections for Commercial Speech

March 5, 2012 – In a case that highlights First Amendment limits to FDA regulation of marketing, the U.S. District Court ... read more

DAA’s Self-regulatory Ad Program to Protect Consumers Online Is Praised by White House, DOC and FTC

 Feb. 23, 2012 – At a White House meeting held today to unveil the blueprint for the Obama Administration’s “Consumer ... read more

Coalition Calls for Substantial Revisions to Sunshine Act Proposed Rules

Feb. 16, 2012 – Further notice and comment are necessary for the implementation of Section 6002 of the Affordable Care ... read more

Refuting Inaccurate CER Results Is “Right” of Drug Sponsors, Temple Says

Feb. 13, 2012 – Dr. Robert Temple, the unofficial dean of drugs at the FDA, recently addressed one of the ... read more

Digital Health Coalition Issues Guiding Principles and Best Practices to Help Lead Way on Robust Use of Social Media by Medicine Companies

Feb. 7, 2012 – Responding to patient and professional calls for more industry participation in the Internet and social media, ... read more

Drug Facts Literature Review: Call for Comments

Feb. 3, 2012 – There are just 10 days left to comment on an FDA draft report that explores the ... read more

Digital Advertising Alliance Launches Consumer Education Campaign

Jan. 27, 2012 – The Digital Advertising Alliance (DAA) last week launched its “Your AdChoices” public education campaign to inform ... read more

MMM: CME Video Addresses Conflict of Interest

Jan. 26, 2012 – Avoiding conflict of interest in continuing medical education (CME) may seem like a daunting task, but ... read more

Does Novo Nordisk’s Victoza + Paula Deen = Recipe for Success?

Jan. 20, 2012 – Common sense should tell people that some of celebrity chef Paula Deen’s infamously unhealthy dishes – ... read more

Sunshine or Rain?

By Jack E. Angel, Education Foundation Executive Director, Coalition for Healthcare Communication Jan. 17, 2012 – The Affordable Care Act ... read more

MMM Features Kamp’s Call for Industry Leadership on Off-label, Online Communications

 Jan. 6, 2012 — This article, written by Coalition for Healthcare Communication Executive Director John Kamp, was featured in the ... read more

OPDP to Industry: Voluntary Compliance Efforts in New Year Can Prevent Same Old Violations

Jan. 6, 2011 – As the pharmaceutical industry begins 2012, the FDA’s Office of Prescription Drug Promotion (OPDP) recommends that ... read more

FDA Issues Draft Guidance on Unsolicited Off-label Info Requests, Addresses both Professional and Internet Media

Jan. 2, 2012 – In the waning days of 2011, the FDA released a significant draft guidance on company responses to ... read more

Finally, CMS Issues Sunshine Act Proposed Rule and Resets Compliance Deadlines

Dec. 15, 2011 – The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued its long-awaited Proposed Rule for implementing the Physician ... read more

MMM Previews Pharma Debates in DC: Prepare for a Wild Ride in 2012

Dec. 12, 2011 — Facing a need to decrease spending and boost revenues, the federal government will continue to target ... read more

Government, Industry and Educators Are Called to Action on a Looming Health Crisis

  By Jack E. Angel, Education Foundation Executive Director, Coalition for Healthcare Communication Nov. 14, 2011 — In response to ... read more

FDA Approval Report Contains Good News for Patients and Industry

  By John Kamp, Executive Director, Coalition for Healthcare Communication – Nov. 7, 2011 – Until the research labs and ... read more

RPM Report: Pandora’s Box Officially Open as New Legal Challenges to FDA’s Off-label Restrictions Emerge

Oct. 24, 2011 – After the U.S. Supreme Court struck down speaker- and content-based restrictions in Sorrell v. IMS Health, ... read more

Par Pharma Case Asserts That First Amendment Protects Truthful Off-label Speech

Oct. 18, 2011 – A case filed by Par Pharmaceutical, Inc. against the FDA seeks to preserve Par’s First Amendment ... read more

Kamp on the Sunshine Act: Collaboration Key to Patient Care

Dec. 14, 2011 — UPDATE — CMS has published the proposed rules enforcing the Sunshine provisions of the Affordable Care ... read more

Fall 2011 Update: Four Things Industry Should Know

  By John Kamp, Coalition for Healthcare Communication Executive Director Sept. 13, 2011 — Debates over health care and related ... read more

Experts Weigh In on Implications of Sorrell Decision

Aug. 1, 2011 — The recent Supreme Court decision in Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc. is earning robust commentary in ... read more

Academic Detailing and Health Plan Communications: Is the Playing Field Level?

By Kenneth P. Berkowitz, Esq. July 21, 2011 — Why does the government fail to apply current regulatory requirements and ... read more

Sorrell v. IMS: What Marketing Professionals Need to Know

By John Kamp, Executive Director, Coalition for Healthcare Communication July 18, 2011 — For those who have not read the ... read more

Kamp Column: Industry Must Embrace Internet and Social Media or Become Irrelevant in Many Health Conversations

By John Kamp, Executive Director, Coalition for Healthcare Communication June 29, 2011 — Yesterday I had the pleasure of moderating ... read more

PhRMA Survey Shows That Physicians Value Industry Communication

March 31, 2011 — At a time when interaction between biopharmaceutical companies and physicians is under increased scrutiny, a recent ... read more

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Coalition, Stakeholders Weigh In During CMS “Sunshine Act” Call

March 28, 2011 – The Coalition for Healthcare Communication (CHC) and other stakeholders warned government regulators that they must be very careful to limit the scope of regulations that enforce the new “Sunshine Act” to avoid a serious regulatory burden on both the government and industry. Regulators also need to avoid sending a signal to the press and the public that collaboration between the medicines and device industries and medical providers is inherently bad, they asserted.

Indeed, the CHC strongly believes such collaborations improve patient care by providing enhanced communications that result in better use of medicines and devices with patients. Accordingly, Coalition Education Foundation Executive Director Jack Angel participated in last week’s call held by officials at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to seek guidance on how to best implement Section 6002 of the Affordable Care Act. Section 6002 creates a national registry of gifts and payments to physicians, i.e., public reporting of payments/transfers made by manufacturers and group purchasing organizations of medical products covered by Medicare and Medicaid to physicians and teaching hospitals.

During a CMS Open Door Forum held March 24 to collect stakeholder input regarding that implementation, entitled “Open Door Forum on Transparency Reports and Reporting of Physician Ownership or Investment Interests,” Barbara Cebuhar, CMS Office of External Affairs, explained that CMS is working toward the publication of a draft regulation in 2011. She asked that call participants provide “insight and experience” on how to best craft transparency provisions.

“Transparency is appropriate,” the CHC’s Angel said, but only when financial relationships are not portrayed negatively, and when the data provided publicly are accurate and are put in the proper context. It’s also important that the costs of compliance are as low as possible in order to avoid increasing the cost of medical products.”  

Similar views were expressed by many industry stakeholders, who raised concerns about any potential expansion of the categories of payments and asked that CMS set clear requirements, allow for stakeholder review of any data before public dissemination and establish technological requirements for submission, review and correction.

“The process is already quite onerous,” said Michael D. Seidman, M.D., otolaryngology/ENT, at the Henry Ford Medical Group in the Detroit area. “Regulations should not further stifle innovation,” Seidman remarked.

Industry to CMS: No Expansion Necessary

In response to the first questions posed by CMS – whether other forms of payment or transfers of value should be considered as part of the draft regulation – several commenters stated that they were not aware of any need to expand the category, and that any expansion would be redundant.

Marjorie Powell, senior assistant general counsel at PhRMA, said that CMS should carefully consider the amount of transaction data that will be required to be collected, aggregated and reported under the currently defined forms of payment. “CMS is going to be inundated with transaction data. We have heard from one mid-size pharmaceutical company that it would expect to report up to one million transactions involving approximately 300,000 physicians in the first year alone.”

Requirements should be “very clear and simple for manufacturers to use and for CMS to compile,” Powell added, and should include a master list of teaching hospitals and physicians for whom payments must be reported. “Given the complexity of the statute as written, we encourage CMS to focus on getting proposed regulations prepared rather than on expanding the universe,” she said.

CMS also asked call participants to provide input on the definitions of the nature of payment or transfers of value and whether the agency should consider more than the 14 types of payment specified in the legislation or whether additional categories of information should be reported. Doug Petticord, executive director, Association of Clinical Research Professionals (ACRO), told CMS that ACRO’s answer “largely would be ‘no,’” and that it was “hard to see what additive value would be brought by new categories.”

Public Should Receive Contextual Information

A question from CMS about which types of information should be reported to the public and how it can maximize the use of collected information on its Website was met by industry comments about appropriate context for consumers. Sandi Dennis, deputy general counsel for BIO, advised CMS to include objective background for consumers, directed at targeted consumer audiences.

“We recommend that the agency conduct focus group research and consult with experts to ensure that the information provided is clearly defined and explained,” Dennis said, and that it is “useful and not misleading.” CMS also should consider creating a task force of industry members, providers and public advocates to help establish what contextual information should be included on the Website, she said.

Julie Cohen, vice president, governmental affairs, for AdvaMed, stated that although AdvaMed supports disclosure about relationships between medical technology companies and physicians, the organization wants to “ensure that consumers get accurate information,” including clear background information about why these relationships exist and benefit patients. “For example, physicians themselves are often the inventors of new technology. Other physicians provide valuable feedback, research and technical expertise to improve existing technology,” Cohen said.

“It’s also important to emphasize that physicians receive critical training both from companies and other skilled physicians so they can use and operate medical technology safely and effectively,” Cohen told CMS. “AdvaMed believes that the information provided in the public database should emphasize how these interactions contribute to continued medical advances in technology and to providing safe and effective medical care.” She also noted that companies should be permitted to provide additional context surrounding payments in the database, so that “patients can better understand the relationships that exist.”

Several other commenters requested that CMS work to ensure that the requirements neither stifle innovation nor chill relationships between companies and physicians. Also addressed was establishing a defined pathway for all entities to correct any data errors before information is publicly disseminated. Technical considerations, such as CMS possibly designing submission templates and providing data that is searchable and downloadable, also were presented. 

CMS has made a recording of the call available until midnight on March 28. It can be accessed by calling 1-800-642-1687 and referencing conference number 51513536. CMS also is accepting written comments sent to the following e-mail address through April 7 at: physiciansunshine@cms.hhs.gov.