It's not possible to calculate the exact number of physicians represented, because drug companies haven't used unique identification numbers that cross company lines. But it's clear that the figure is in the hundreds of thousands.
Excluding research payments, the drugmaker Pfizer appeared to have interactions with the most health care professionals last year — about 142,600. AstraZeneca came in second with about 111,200. Johnson & Johnson and Forest Labs each had nearly 100,000. There are an estimated 800,000 to 900,000 active doctors in the United States.
Below are the approximate numbers of health
professionals who received some payment from each company in 2013,
excluding research. We based this on the number of unique names, cities
and states per company.
Company | Doctors Paid |
---|---|
Pfizer | 142,600 |
AstraZeneca | 111,200 |
Forest | 98,900 |
Johnson & Johnson | 97,000 |
GlaxoSmithKline | 85,100 |
AbbVie | 82,900 |
Boehringer Ingelheim | 82,900 |
Merck | 81,300 |
Eli Lilly | 79,000 |
Novartis | 64,500 |
Amgen | 50,500 |
Valeant | 21,200 |
UCB | 21,200 |
Cephalon* | 14,600 |
EMD Serono | 7,900 |
ViiV | 3,400 |
Note: Dollars for Docs only includes data for Cephalon from the first six months of 2013.
Source: ProPublica's Dollars for Docs.
Larger companies (as measured by 2013 U.S. drug
sales) did not always spend the most on promotional speakers. Some
companies in Dollars for Docs do not break out speaking payments (they
are not listed here). Johnson & Johnson and Amgen call their
speaking categories "non-consulting."
Company U.S. Sales
Company Spending on Speaker Fees
Note: Merck U.S. sales includes both Merck & Co. and Schering Plough.
Source: IMS Health and ProPublica's Dollars for Docs.
No comments:
Post a Comment