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) Voir le document au format PDF
Table des matières
Afficher le documentAcknowledgements
Afficher le documentExecutive summary
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuIntroduction
Fermer ce répertoireReview 1. What attitudes do professional and lay people have to promotion?
Afficher le document1.1 Attitudes do not necessarily match behaviour
Afficher le document1.2 Studies of the prevalence of different attitudes to promotion (excluding direct-to-consumer advertising)
Afficher le document1.3 Do trainers and trainees think that sales representatives should be banned during medical training?
Afficher le document1.4 Do doctors think they have enough training to deal with sales representatives?
Afficher le document1.5 Do doctors think that sales representatives have a valuable role in medical education?
Afficher le document1.6 What do health professionals think about the quality of the information provided by sales representatives and advertisements about drugs?
Afficher le document1.7 What do other groups of people think of promotional information?
Afficher le document1.8 What are doctors’ views of pharmaceutical company support of conferences and speakers?
Afficher le document1.9 Do trainee doctors plan to see sales representatives in their future practice?
Afficher le document1.10 What are professionals’ and patients’ attitudes to the appropriateness of gifts?
Afficher le document1.11 Do health professionals feel that discussions with sales representatives affect prescribing?
Afficher le document1.12 Do people feel that accepting gifts influences prescribing?
Afficher le document1.13 Ethics and promotion
Afficher le document1.14 Attitudes to direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs
Afficher le document1.15 Studies of differences in attitudes to promotion (excluding DTCA)
Afficher le documentSummary of conclusions
Afficher le documentDirections for future research
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuReview 2. What impact does pharmaceutical promotion have on attitudes and knowledge?
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuReview 3. What impact does pharmaceutical promotion have on behaviour?
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuReview 4. What interventions have been tried to counter promotional activities, and with what results?
Afficher le documentFinal conclusions
Afficher le documentReferences
 

1.1 Attitudes do not necessarily match behaviour

Several studies show that finding out what people think about promotion may not be a good way to predict their behaviour. For example, Peay and Peay’s 1984 paper1 suggests a doctor’s view of the worthiness of an information source may not be reflected in how often s/he uses it. Sales representatives and other commercial sources were not evaluated highly, but sales representatives were the most frequent source of first information about medicines, and were one of the most frequently mentioned sources of information needed to prescribe. Other commercial sources were also often mentioned as sources of first information about a drug. Similarly, Gambrill and Bridges-Webb found that 56% of the Australian doctors in their study reported that they used sales representatives as a regular source of information, but only 17% ranked them as the most useful2. McCue et al.3 surveyed general practitioners (GPs), internists and surgeons in North Carolina, about their attitudes towards and use of different sources of information about new drugs. Although only 27.7% of the respondents viewed drug sales representatives as accurate and accessible sources of information about new drugs, they were used more frequently than other sources. This study had a low response rate.

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Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013