Drug Promotion - What We Know, What We Have Yet to Learn - Reviews of Materials in the WHO/HAI Database on Drug Promotion - EDM Research Series No. 032
(2004; 102 pages) Ver el documento en el formato PDF
Índice de contenido
Ver el documentoAcknowledgements
Ver el documentoExecutive summary
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoIntroduction
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoReview 1. What attitudes do professional and lay people have to promotion?
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoReview 2. What impact does pharmaceutical promotion have on attitudes and knowledge?
Cerrar esta carpetaReview 3. What impact does pharmaceutical promotion have on behaviour?
Ver el documento3.1 Impact of promotion on individual prescribing practices
Ver el documento3.2 Self-reported reasons for prescribing changes
Ver el documento3.3 Prescribing by those who rely on commercial information
Ver el documento3.4 Prescribing and exposure to promotion
Ver el documento3.5 Exploring the impact of samples on prescribing
Ver el documentoSummary
Ver el documento3.6 Impact of promotion on overall sales
Ver el documento3.7 Impact of promotion and industry funding on requests for formulary additions
Ver el documento3.8 DTCA and consumers’ decisions
Ver el documento3.9 Impact of sponsorship on content of continuing medical education courses
Ver el documento3.10 Impact of industry funding on research
Ver el documento3.11 Does funding affect the research agenda?
Ver el documento3.12 Do authors reveal funding sources?
Ver el documentoSummary of conclusions
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoReview 4. What interventions have been tried to counter promotional activities, and with what results?
Ver el documentoFinal conclusions
Ver el documentoReferences
 

Summary of conclusions

Increased promotion is associated with increased medicines sales, promotion influences prescribing more than doctors realise, and doctors rarely acknowledge that promotion has influenced their prescribing. Doctors who report relying more on promotion prescribe less appropriately, prescribe more often, and adopt new drugs more quickly.

Samples stimulate prescribing.

Doctors who receive drug company funds tend to request additions to hospital formularies. Drug company sponsorship influences the choice of topics for continuing medical education and the choice of research topics and the outcome of research. It leads to secrecy, delay in publication for commercial reasons, and conflict of interest problems for contributors to guidelines. Researchers often do not disclose funding from drug companies.

DTCA leads to increased requests from patients for medicines. Doctors who prescribe a requested drug are often ambivalent about the medicine.

Directions for future research

There are major gaps and weaknesses in the evidence. One important gap is the lack of evidence about public health outcomes of behaviour changes: does promotion lead to appropriate levels of use of medicines? The evidence that shows conclusively that doctors who rely more on promotion are poorer prescribers suggests that it does not. However, because these results could be due to other underlying doctor characteristics, this argument is somewhat weak. More work is needed to establish causal relationships between promotion and prescribing of drugs which have little or no place in rational prescribing, or which have serious adverse consequences when over-prescribed, such as antibiotics.

Other gaps include the lack of evidence from developing countries. All of the studies presented in this review are from developed countries. It is very difficult to untangle the effect of promotion from other inadequacies in systems of medicines distribution in developing countries. In addition there is less funding available for sophisticated studies. However the Cleary study126 shows how a small, low budget project can provide quite convincing evidence.

Weaknesses include lack of clarity about what studies can and cannot prove. Some researchers do not seem appropriately sceptical about self-report data, and many infer causality from data which simply show associations. There is also some laxity in use of concepts, and in describing previous research. For example, in their survey Lurie et al.98 asked about ‘changes in practice’ but in their discussion they discuss ‘changes in prescribing habits’. These are not equivalent. A change in practice could be one small change and may not be related to prescribing, while a change in habit suggests an ongoing and substantial change. Inaccurate descriptions of previous studies are sometimes found in literature reviews at the beginning of articles, particularly inaccurate claims about the conclusions that can be drawn from these studies. Future research needs greater methodological rigour in order to yield more definitive answers to the questions being posed.

 

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Última actualización: le 3 mayo 2013