Dive Brief:
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Doctors and teaching hospitals received $8.4 billion from drug and device companies in 2017, according to the latest Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Open Payments data. That's up from $8.2 billion a year earlier.
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Open Payments published 11.54 million payment records. Payments included nearly $4.7 billion in research-related payments, $2.82 billion in non-research-related payments, such as meals, fees and travel to speaking events and more than $927 million in ownership or investment interests held by physicians or immediate family members.
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About 628,000 doctors received $79.1 million in research-related payments.
Dive Insight:
CMS each year releases data about the financial interactions between doctors, teaching hospitals and drug and devicemakers.
Open Payments, which was part of the Provider Payment Sunshine Act in 2015, includes a search tool for patients to research by doctor, hospital and company.
Calculating the totals takes some math, but the numbers are eye-popping nonetheless. For example, Pfizer's U.S. unit alone made $47 million in general payments and $446 million in research-related payments. On the medical device side, Medtronic made $518,000 in general payments and about $7.4 million in research payments.
Sen. Chuck Grassley R-Iowa, who co-sponsored the legislation, said on Monday that Open Payments shines a light on the industry, though he added that “many of these payments are for legitimate research and patient care.”
The leading types of payments in 2017 were:
- Compensation for services other than consulting, including serving as faculty or as a speaker at a venue other than a continuing education program — $560 million
- Royalty of license — $499 million
- Consulting fee — $409 million
- Food and beverage — $237 million
- Travel and lodging — $188 million
California topped the list for highest contributions to any state in 2017. Companies donated more than $250 million to doctors and hospitals in California. The mean contribution was $3,701. Other states with more than $100 million in contributions were Texas, New York and Florida.
Though well below those states for the total amount, New Mexico had the highest mean contributions ($9,290). Other states with high mean contributions were Minnesota, Maryland and Massachusetts. Each had mean contributions of more than $5,000.
The $8.4 billion given to doctors and hospitals in 2017 was less than the $8.81 billion reported in 2016 and similar to the $8.42 billion in 2015.
The American Medical Association has questioned Open Payments in previous years. While pledging a commitment to transparency, the AMA raised concerns about the program in 2016, namely about data errors and issues with registration.
"The integrity goals of the Open Payments database will not be met as long as physician review is obstructed by a registration procedure that is confusing, time consuming and overly burdensome," the AMA said. "Patients deserve to have access to accurate information. Publishing inaccurate data leads to misinterpretations, harms reputations and undermines the trust that patients have in their physicians. It can also discourage research and care delivery improvements that benefit patients."
The AMA added that it opposes inappropriate and unethical interactions between physicians and the industry, but not all payments are unethical or inappropriate.