Abstract

IntroductionThe Physician Payment Sunshine Act created the Open Payments Program (OPP), which is used to disclose transactions between physicians and industry. The impact of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic on this relationship is yet to be determined. Our aim was to compare payments before and after the onset of COVID-19 through the OPP. MethodsThe OPP database was queried between 2014 and 2021 for all general surgery specialties. Payments were classified as general payments and research payments. Payments during 2014-2019 were classified as pre-COVID and compared to payments from 2020 to 2021 which were classified as post-COVID-Outbreak. ResultsFrom 2014 to 2021, 60,245 surgeons received general payments totaling $1.16 billion dollars. Comparing 2019 to 2020, general payments declined from $204.6 million to $108.5 million (−47%) and research payments from $157.3 million to $115.7 million (−26.5%). When comparing trends from 2014-2019 to 2020-2021, the mean number of payments was significantly higher at 394,782 versus 240,778 (P = 0.03) for general payments and 13,671 versus 10,382 (P = 0.03) for research payments. When comparing general payments among various surgical subspecialties, all fields saw a notable decline in general payments. Travel/lodging was the category of payment that saw the most significant change. ConclusionsIndustry payments declined as we entered the COVID-19 pandemic for both general and research payments. This decrease was seen across all surgical subspecialties. These trends in payments seen during the COVID-19 pandemic and the long-term economic impact of COVID-19 on the physician-industry relationship are still developing. Ongoing changes in future years to industry payments are worthy of continued monitoring.

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