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
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuReview 1. What attitudes do professional and lay people have to promotion?
Fermer ce répertoireReview 2. What impact does pharmaceutical promotion have on attitudes and knowledge?
Afficher le document2.1 Reported use of promotion as a source of drug information
Afficher le document2.2 Reported use of promotion as a source of information in adopting new medicines
Afficher le document2.3 Impact of promotion on self-reported attitudes and knowledge
Afficher le document2.4 Research designs that aim to avoid the limitations of self-report data
Afficher le documentSummary of conclusions
Afficher le documentDirections for future research
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
 

Summary of conclusions

Promotion influences doctors’ attitudes much more than they realise. They often use it as a source of information about new medicines, and for medicines used outside their usual therapeutic field. Doctors in private practice, or who graduated long ago, report the highest use of promotion as a source of drug information.

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Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013