Multiple Grantors, Multiple Challenges

As issues surrounding content validity and fair balance remain in the spotlight, many accredited providers are seeking and receiving grants from multiple commercial interests to help minimize commercial bias in their continuing education activities. By receiving support from multiple grantors, the opportunity for a single grantor to control or influence the content of the certified activity is minimized. Organizations that may have relied in the past on a handful of grantors to fund all their CE activities can now find ways to reduce the potential bias toward one therapeutic agent and minimize the risk to the grantors. But multiple funding for CE activities comes with a number of pitfalls as well.

Letters of Disagreement

Case in point: An accredited provider identifies a need, submits grant requests to multiple commercial interests, and receives the grants. This process alone is arduous, and many great CE activities have withered and died on this vine. The accredited provider drafts a letter of agreement (LOA) and submits it to the grantors. Here comes the dreaded phone call, the one from Grantor A who doesn't want to sign the LOA because the company legal department won't approve it. Another grantor calls and says it can't sign an LOA with the name of a competitor on it and asks why the terms and conditions don't contain language its legal department always uses. The accredited provider checks the Accreditation Council for CME's updated Standards for Commercial Support, but they simply state there must be an LOA between the accredited provider and the commercial interest. They do not mandate whose LOA must be used or specify the terms and conditions.

Defuse Power Struggles

Over the years, accredited providers have worked diligently with their grantors to educate them about the regulatory guidelines and other guidances governing CE activities. Many of us have endured hours of discussions with legal departments whose interpretations of these guidelines range from very liberal to extremely conservative. With multi-funded activities, accredited providers find themselves revisiting similar questions with new grantors — and facing challenging new scenarios with familiar grantors. For instance, what should a provider do when each grantor wants its company name to appear first on the commercial support designation statement for a multi-funded activity? How should a provider respond to grantors who initially agreed to provide assistance in generating the target audience, but now cannot disseminate invitations because their legal departments feel it is against ACCME guidelines? More so now than ever, accredited providers must become master negotiators and diplomats.

As an accredited provider, you can get grantors to sign LOAs by using a combination of your agreement and theirs. The goal should be compliance with minimal disagreement. Consider listing the names of your grantors in alphabetical order on commercial support statements to avoid awkward power struggles. During the planning process, outline in writing all the grantors' issues, such as supplemental recruitment assistance, and clarify the legal and regulatory questions that you or they may have. What's important is how we as accredited providers demonstrate compliance with the spirit of the regulatory guidelines while skillfully negotiating with our grantors and faculty to provide flexibility and protection for all parties involved in certified CE activities.


Ann C. Lichti is the assistant director of CME for a New York — based medical education and communication company. She has worked in continuing education for three and a half years. She previously worked for a clinical research organization in northern New Jersey as a document/database manager. Reach her at justann@mindspring.com.

Save This Page

For more articles on CME, click here.

RSS Share

Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2010 Penton Media Inc.


Acceptable Use Policy
blog comments powered by Disqus

Search for Meeting Space

Find Event Suppliers, Request Quotes

Search 100,000 Venues


Advanced Search

The Meeting Planning Blog

NEW! Capsules Latest Posts

Sign Up for Our Free E-Newsletters

Meetings Collaborative

Rate your experience with meeting venues and suppliers.

Facility / Hotel

 
Powered by: Meetings Collaborative

Apex Webinars

Demonstrating Leadership in Turbulent Times

Join MeetingsNet, the Convention Industry Council, and two meeting professionals to learn how seeking out professional development and volunteer opportunities can enhance your career advancement. Click here for free registration.
View it Now! | View APEX Archives

Webinars

Medical Meeting Compliance: It Doesn't Have to Hurt

Overwhelmed by state and federal rules about what pharmaceutical meeting planners can—and can’t—do with meetings that involve healthcare practitioners? We’ll help you take it one step at a time. Join us August 5th from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. ET.
Register Here! | View Archived Webinars

Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

Back to Top

Explore Our Newsletters

On Medical Meetings


Meeting Planner Survival Guide

Whether you're a novice planner or a veteran, this compilation of must-read articles is your meeting planning resource.

Pharma Meeting Management Forum

Medical Meetings and the Center for Business Intelligence co-organize the Annual Pharmaceutical Meeting Management Forum.

Visit our photo gallery from the Sixth Annual Forum.

Suppliers/
Facilities/CVBs

MeetingsNet makes it easy to find the CVBs, tourist boards, and facilities you need for your next meeting.

Deal Finder

Special offers brought to you by MeetingsNet.

Find A Job

Targeted to all aspects of the hospitality and special events industry.

Education
Central

Upcoming Events, Live and Online

Facebook   Twitter   RSS Feed   Email

Inside Current Issue

MTNGS Cover

July/August 2010

June 2010 cover

June 2010

March 2010 cover

March 2010

January 2009 Cover

January 2010

December 2009

December 2009

Browse Back Issues