Medical Council of India (MCI) has banned medical practitioners from accepting Phrama perks across the country.


Last Updated: 2010-01-04T05:22:39+05:30

MCI Bans Doctors from Accepting Phrama Perks

New Delhi: Medical Council of India (MCI) has issued new directives for the medical practitioners across the country. According to the new directives, those doctors found involved in private studies on efficacy of drugs and accepting any kind of hospitality from the pharmaceutical companies, now may not fit in within the prescribed code of conduct enumerated by the MCI. The decision was taken by MCI in order to strike the balance between endorsement and prescription.
 
As per sources,MCI has recently amended the Indian Medical Council (Professional Conduct, Etiquette and Ethics) Regulation 2002, according to which, it does not allow the medical practitioners to accept any gifts or travel facility from any pharmaceutical company or the health care industry. The new rules specify that a medical practitioner is free to carry out, participate or work in research projects funded by pharmaceutical and allied health care industries, but has to ensure permission to carry out the particular project from the competent authorities. He also has to ensure that the research project gets clearance from an institutional ethics body.
 
Further, whiledealing with the pharmaceutical and allied health care industries, a medical practitioner has to always ensure that there shall be no compromise either with his or her own professional autonomy or with the autonomy and freedom of the medical institution where he or she is working. Talking about endorsements, a doctor would not endorse any drug or product of the industry publicly. Any study conducted on the effectiveness or otherwise of such products shall be presented to or through appropriate scientific bodies or published in appropriate journals in a proper way, is the prescribed path to be followed now.
- By Raihan Hassan
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