conflict_of_interest_bias

Conflict of Interest (COI) Bias refers to a systematic distortion in research, interpretation, or decision-making that arises when an individual or organization has competing interests—often financial—that may influence their objectivity or integrity.

A conflict of interest exists when professional judgment concerning a primary interest (such as patient welfare or validity of research) may be influenced by a secondary interest (such as financial gain, academic promotion, or personal relationships).

  • Industry funding of clinical trials
  • Authors holding stock or patents related to the intervention studied
  • Editorial board members promoting their own research
  • Undisclosed consultancy or advisory roles
  • Sponsorship of continuing medical education
  • Favorable reporting of study outcomes
  • Selective outcome reporting
  • Underreporting of adverse effects
  • Biased interpretation in discussion or conclusions
  • Skewed meta-analyses due to sponsored studies
  • A neurosurgeon promoting a surgical implant from a company in which they hold equity
  • Biased trial results favoring devices produced by the study sponsor
  • Conflicted guideline panels issuing weak recommendations based on low-quality evidence
  • Full and transparent disclosure of all financial ties
  • Independent peer review
  • Use of conflict-free guideline panels
  • Pre-registration of protocols and outcomes
  • Critical appraisal of funding sources in systematic reviews
  • conflict_of_interest_bias.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/07/02 06:29
  • by administrador