Trials, tricks and transparency: How disclosure rules affect clinical knowledge
Scandals of selective reporting of clinical trial results by pharmaceutical firms have underlined the need for more transparency in clinical trials. We provide a theoretical framework which reproduces incentives for selective reporting and yields three key implications concerning regulation. First, a compulsory clinical trial registry complemented through a voluntary clinical trial results database can implement full transparency (the existence of all trials as well as their results is known). Second, full transparency comes at a price. It has a deterrence effect on the incentives to conduct clinical trials, as it reduces the firms' gains from trials. Third, in principle, a voluntary clinical trial results database without a compulsory registry is a superior regulatory tool; but we provide some qualified support for additional compulsory registries when medical decision-makers cannot anticipate correctly the drug companies' decisions whether to conduct trials.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Dahm, Matthias ; González, Paula ; Porteiro, Nicolás |
Published in: |
Journal of Health Economics. - Elsevier, ISSN 0167-6296. - Vol. 28.2009, 6, p. 1141-1153
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Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Pharmaceutical firms Strategic information transmission Incentives Clinical trials Registries Results databases Scientific knowledge |
Saved in:
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