AAOS Annual Meeting Voluntary Disclosure Rate High

At the 2011 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Annual Meeting, voluntary conflict of interest disclosures were very common, and 100 percent were reported in the symposia, according to an article published in a recent issue of Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.

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Program committee participants disclosed their conflict of interest as well. Additional disclosures included:

•    75 percent of presentations
•    80 percent of scientific exhibits
•    76 percent of podium presentations
•    75 percent of posters

Approximately 53 percent of disclosures were for paid consultancy while 51 percent were for research support for the principle investigator. Forty-one percent of the disclosures were for paid presentations, 39 percent were for royalties and 39 percent were for stock.

The researchers also found that the number of disclosures per author correlated with the number of presentations per author, and 7 percent of the 379 companies associated with the disclosures were listed in 67 percent of the presentations.

More Articles on Orthopedic Surgeons:

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