The Hidden Curriculum: Medical Students’ Changing Opinions toward the Pharmaceutical Industry
Students, Medical
Drug Industry
Conflict of Interest
4. Education
02 engineering and technology
Competency-Based Education
United States
Education, Pharmacy
Surveys and Questionnaires
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Humans
Curriculum
Educational Measurement
Expert Testimony
Schools, Medical
DOI:
10.1097/acm.0b013e31813e7f02
Publication Date:
2009-03-04T23:31:06Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Authorities suggest academic medical centers eliminate conflicts of interest. The authors evaluated medical students' opinions and knowledge of the pharmaceutical industry.An anonymous 20-item questionnaire was administered to medical students from four different medical schools; 15 items addressed opinions, and five items were free-response knowledge questions. Results were analyzed by Fisher exact test.Authors received 667 responses from the schools. Sixty-five percent of clinical students believed accepting gifts was appropriate; 28% of preclinical students believed it was appropriate (P < .001). Knowledge was the same for clinical and preclinical students.Clinical students were more favorable toward receiving gifts than were preclinical students, yet there was no difference in their knowledge of the industry. Increased formal and informal education about the pharmaceutical industry is necessary during the clinical years.
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