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Report finds poor ethics policing at CDC in 2007

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  • Report finds poor ethics policing at CDC in 2007

    By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer - Fri Dec 18, 2:39 PM PST
    ATLANTA -



    The government's top public health agency frequently failed to police its outside experts for conflicts of interest, according to a new government report released Friday.


    The report looked at how well the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked for and dealt with conflicts among about 250 scientific experts who served on 17 advisory panels in 2007.

    Panel members are supposed to disclose whether they have been paid by ? or own stock in ? drug companies or other entities that might have an interest in the panel's decisions. The panels provide advice to the CDC on topics such as how many people should get vaccinated and guidelines for cancer screenings.


    Almost none of the 250 advisers that year properly or completely filled out forms in which they were required to state potential conflicts of interest, according to the report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Office of the Inspector General.


    The report concluded that the CDC failed to follow-up with some of the experts who disclosed potential conflicts: 85 because of jobs or grants, 28 with stock ownership and 13 who received consulting fees.


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