MCI's code of ethics gives docs way to accept freebies
The recently notified 'new' ethical
guidelines of the Medical Council of India (MCI) are being touted
as a bid to punish doctors accepting freebies from pharma companies. However,
these guidelines, doctors fighting corruption in the profession point out, will
legitimise doctors' associations taking money from the pharma industry.
While the guidelines elaborate the quantum of
punishment for doctors on the basis of the value of favours or freebies
received from pharma companies, they also include an amendment that ensures
that doctors' associations are beyond the MCI's jurisdiction.
Under the Societies Registration Act, it
takes just seven people to form an association. In effect, what is barred for
an individual doctor can be done as soon as seven or more of them get together
to form a society or association.
The guidelines are actually five years old,
but were notified in the official gazette on February 1. Without them being
notified by the government, they could not come into effect. As a result, the
council could not allow associations to go scot free claiming that it has no
jurisdiction over them.
These guidelines were framed by the MCI in
March 2010, when Dr Ketan Desai, twice removed from the president's post on
charges of corruption though not convicted, was heading the council. The new
guidelines were meant to amend the Indian Medical Council (Professional
conduct, Etiquette and Ethics) Regulations, 2002. The first amendment was to
delete the words "and professional association of doctors" from
section 6.8 of the Code of Medical Ethics Regulation 2002. Earlier, this
section read: "code of conduct for doctors and professional association of
doctors in their relationship with pharmaceutical and allied health sector
industry". In the amended version, the words "professional
association" have been deleted.
This was within months of the new code of
ethics barring doctors and professional association of doctors from taking
gifts and sponsorships from pharmaceutical and health sector industry being
published in the gazette on December 14, 2009. According to the minutes of the
central working committee meeting of the Indian Medical Association in June
2010 Dr Desai when asked about clause 6.8 regarding organisations had
"promised that this would be rectified". That promise has now been
fulfilled.
"This is a national shame. You are
allowing a gang to do the corruption but not one person. It is plain and simple
legalising of corruption. This gives legal sanction to pharma companies to
bribe doctors and the poor will suffer as companies will go on paying doctors
and the money will come from the pockets of the common man," said Dr G S
Grewal, president of the Punjab Medical Council.
"This sudden hurry to notify the
five-year-old guidelines is because it was recently reported in the media that
the council cannot exonerate the IMA and other doctors' associations for taking
money as the amendments were not notified.
Once notified, these so-called ethical
guidelines may help to legitimise pharma bribes for doctors'
associations," explained Dr KV Babu, who had complained against the IMA
taking money from Pepsi and Dabur to endorse their products.
The absurdity of making something illegal for
individual doctors but legit for their associations was pointed out in a
submission made by the MCI in the Delhi High Court in 2011. It said, "what
is not allowed to be done directly, cannot be permitted to be done
indirectly" and that it was unsustainable to argue that what an individual
doctor cannot do can be done by doctors forming an association.
This submission was in a case involving the
IMA taking money from private companies and was made during the tenure of the
Board of Governors (BoG), who ran MCI after it was disbanded in 2010. Yet, the
reconstituted medical council that replaced the government-appointed BoG in
2013 reverted to the stance that it had no jurisdiction over doctors'
associations.
Source:
http://health.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/policy/mcis-code-of-ethics-gives-docs-way-to-accept-freebies/50925411
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