Background: Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influence professional judgments and some researchers have suggested that widening disease definitions may be one driver of over-diagnosis, bringing potentially unnecessary labeling and harm. We aimed to identify guidelines in which disease definitions were changed, to assess whether any proposed changes would increase the numbers of individuals considered to have the disease, whether potential harms of expanding disease definitions were investigated, and the extent of members' industry ties.Methods and Findings: We undertook a cross-sectional study of the most recent publication between 2000 and 2013 from national and international guideline panels making decis...
The expansion of the concept of disease poses problems for epidemiology. Certainly, new diseases are...
Background: The revision process for and recent publication of the DSM-5 initiated debates about the...
Despite evidence about the "modern epidemic" of overdiagnosis, and expanding disease definitions tha...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influen...
Background: Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influence profession...
BACKGROUND: Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influence profession...
Expanding disease definitions are causing more and more previously healthy people to be labelled as ...
Expanding disease definitions are causing more and more previously healthy people to be labelled as ...
IMPORTANCE No guidelines exist currently for guideline panels and others considering changes to dise...
All medical subspecialties have been subject to increased scrutiny about the ways by which their fin...
Traditionally, the promotional activities of medical industries have been product specific. In recen...
Undue industry influence may be compromising the very guidelines that doctors rely on for diagnosing...
trials (23%), a PI had financial ties to the drug manufacturer and was also a DSM panel member who h...
This Viewpoint discusses the potential harms that can emerge from changing disease classifications, ...
trials (23%), a PI had financial ties to the drug manufacturer and was also a DSM panel member who h...
The expansion of the concept of disease poses problems for epidemiology. Certainly, new diseases are...
Background: The revision process for and recent publication of the DSM-5 initiated debates about the...
Despite evidence about the "modern epidemic" of overdiagnosis, and expanding disease definitions tha...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influen...
Background: Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influence profession...
BACKGROUND: Financial ties between health professionals and industry may unduly influence profession...
Expanding disease definitions are causing more and more previously healthy people to be labelled as ...
Expanding disease definitions are causing more and more previously healthy people to be labelled as ...
IMPORTANCE No guidelines exist currently for guideline panels and others considering changes to dise...
All medical subspecialties have been subject to increased scrutiny about the ways by which their fin...
Traditionally, the promotional activities of medical industries have been product specific. In recen...
Undue industry influence may be compromising the very guidelines that doctors rely on for diagnosing...
trials (23%), a PI had financial ties to the drug manufacturer and was also a DSM panel member who h...
This Viewpoint discusses the potential harms that can emerge from changing disease classifications, ...
trials (23%), a PI had financial ties to the drug manufacturer and was also a DSM panel member who h...
The expansion of the concept of disease poses problems for epidemiology. Certainly, new diseases are...
Background: The revision process for and recent publication of the DSM-5 initiated debates about the...
Despite evidence about the "modern epidemic" of overdiagnosis, and expanding disease definitions tha...