A year after the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced a new requirement for universities and medical schools to put up websites disclosing any financial arrangements between corporations and NIH-funded researchers, the Obama administration is quietly trying to gut the plan.
In May 2010, the
Department of Health and Human Services (overseer of the NIH) proposed new rules after Congress and the media exposed NIH grant recipients who had failed to tell their universities or medical schools about payments from companies that may have influenced their government-funded research. The regulations called for schools to publish any potential conflicts of interest on websites, in an effort to “underscore our commitment to fostering transparency, accountability, and public trust,” declared federal health officials.
But the website provision has reportedly been dropped by the White House
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which finalizes new regulations. Indications are that the higher education lobby may have leaned on Obama officials to do away with the online disclosure requirement.
But all is not lost yet. In addition to the
Project on Government Oversight, a watchdog organization, calling for OMB to restore the website rule, Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) has demanded that Obama’s budget office turn over all documentation relating to the rule change.
“I am troubled that taxpayers cannot learn about the outside income of the researchers whom the taxpayers are funding, and this flies in the face of President Obama’s call for more transparency in the government,” Grassley wrote to the OMB. “The public’s business should be public....I urge OMB to follow through and approve a rule that includes a publicly available website.”
-David Wallechinsky