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 Improving the use of research evidence in guideline development: 4  Managing  conflicts of interests Boyd EA; Bero LAHealth Res Policy Syst  2006[Dec]; 4 (ä): 16BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO), like many other organisations  around the world, has recognised the need to use more rigorous processes to  ensure that health care recommendations are informed by the best available  research evidence. This is the fourth of a series of 16 reviews that have been  prepared as background for advice from the WHO Advisory Committee on Health  Research to WHO on how to achieve this. OBJECTIVES: We reviewed the literature on  conflicts of interest to answer the following questions: 1. What is the best way  to obtain complete and accurate disclosures on financial ties and other competing  interests? 2. How to determine when a disclosed financial tie or other competing  interest constitutes a conflict of interest? 3. When a conflict of interest is  identified, how should the conflict be managed? 4. How could conflict of interest  policies be enforced? METHODS: We searched PubMed, the Cochrane Methodology  Register and selectively searched for the published policies of several  organizations, We did not conduct systematic reviews ourselves. Our conclusions  are based on the available evidence, consideration of what WHO and other  organisations are doing and logical arguments. KEY QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS: What is  the best way to obtain complete and accurate disclosures on financial ties and  other competing interests? Although there is little empirical evidence to guide  the development of disclosure forms, minimal or open-ended formats are likely to  be uninformative. We recommend the development of specific, detailed, structured  forms that solicit as much information as possible about the nature and extent of  the competing interests. How to determine when a disclosed financial tie or other  competing interest constitutes a conflict of interest?* There is no empirical  evidence to suggest that explicit criteria are preferable to ad hoc committee  decisions when deciding if a disclosed financial tie is a conflict of interest.  However, explicit criteria may make decision-making easier. When a conflict of  interest is identified, how should the conflict be managed? Descriptive studies  suggest that appropriate management strategies are best determined on a  case-by-case basis. Thus, WHO should use a wide range of management strategies to  address disclosed conflicts of interest, with public disclosure of conflicts  associated with each meeting as a minimum and recusal of conflicted individuals  as the other extreme. How could conflict of interest policies be enforced?  Although there are no empirical studies of the enforcement of conflict if  interest policies, descriptive studies of other organizations and institutions  suggest that WHO convene a standing committee to review all financial disclosure  statements prior to the commencement of committee meetings/hearings and to make  management recommendations when necessary. A standard policy requiring all  financial ties to be made public (i.e., recorded into the meeting minutes) should  reduce the number of problematic cases. In instances where the conflicts seem  intractable, a recommendation of recusal may be necessary to protect the greater  interests of WHO and its constituents.ä
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