A Minnesota state senator is calling on Hennepin Healthcare leadership to make swift reforms to its conflict-of-interest practices, responding to revelations of a doctor's financial ties to the manufacturer of police stun guns.
Sen. Jeff Hayden, DFL-Minneapolis, said he's asked interim hospital CEO John Cumming to investigate Dr. Jeffrey Ho's work outside the hospital and to review whether the current ethics policies adequately prevent staff from profiting off work that conflicts with the safety-net hospital's mission.
"Right now, it appears that there are all kinds of loopholes in the system, and on multiple levels this doesn't pass the smell test, at least to me," said Hayden.
Hayden said he contacted Cumming after reading a Star Tribune report detailing Ho's relationship with law enforcement. In addition to his role as chief EMS medical director for Hennepin Healthcare, Ho is also a sheriff's deputy in Meeker County and the medical director for Arizona-based Axon Enterprise Inc., the manufacturer of the Taser. Axon pays the hospital about $140,000 per year in exchange for Ho dedicating 32 hours per month to Axon work.
Ho travels the world making presentations on Axon's products. He has defended Axon or law enforcement agencies more than two dozen times — charging up to $400 per hour for his services as an expert — often when someone says a Taser has killed or severely injured a person.
"This idea that Dr. Ho was going around the country as an expert witness for the Taser company is repulsive to me," said Hayden in an interview Tuesday. If that's not a conflict of interest, he said, "then your policy's wrong."
In an interview Tuesday, Cumming said Ho has been transparent about his outside sources of income to the appropriate channels.
"Very clearly, Dr. Ho is not in violation of the conflict of interest policy or process we have in place presently," he said. "And I can say that unequivocally."