http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/324/7342/910
BMJ 2002;324:910-911 ( 13 April )
Education and debate
For and against
Direct to consumer advertising is medicalising normal human experience
In direct to consumer advertising, drug companies target advertisements for
prescription drugs directly at the public. Barbara Mintzes argues
that this type of advertising risks medicalising normal human
conditions, with the drug companies raking in increasingly healthy
profits. Silvia N Bonaccorso and Jeffrey L Sturchio argue that,
through advertising, drug companies can enable patients to make
better informed choices about their health and treatment
Against
Silvia N Bonaccorso, vice president, marketing
and medical services, Jeffrey L Sturchio,
executive director, public affairs (Europe, Middle East, Africa).
Merck, One Merck Drive, Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889-1000, USA
Correspondence to: S N Bonaccorso
silvia_bonaccorso@merck.com
Medicalisation refers to the theory that people seek to categorise life's
normal vicissitudes as medical problems. The term is also used in
medical sociology, to suggest that those with a pecuniary or
territorial interest in ill health
not
least doctors and the pharmaceutical industry
try
to foster exaggerated anxiety about disease and potential disease, so
as to encourage essentially healthy people to seek unnecessary
medical products and services. 1
2 In this latter sense "medicalisation" has become a theory of
social control and has been used as an argument against direct to
consumer communication by pharmaceutical companies.
The
health deficit
In stark contrast to these theoretical constructs, epidemiological evidence
shows a substantial under-diagnosis of many of the major diseases and
known risk factors for which effective treatments exist
(hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes, osteoporosis, depression,
and childhood asthma). Even after diagnosis, these diseases are
massively undertreated. 3 4
This failure to treat
together
with non-compliance (estimated as some 50% for prescribed medicines
across all the major chronic diseases)
leads
to a considerable social burden of otherwise avoidable morbidity and
mortality.5-8
These data make the most powerful case for greater public awareness of the
benefits of modern medicine. The pharmaceutical industry in Europe
has been limited in contributing to this awareness by regulations
that, although intended to safeguard public health, may be acting
against the interests of European citizens.
The
stakeholders
Doctors and others have started to come to terms with informed patients.9
Health related information is freely available on the internet, and
its use by consumers is accelerating. Physicians must now often share
the facts and uncertainties of medicine with their patients as they
prescribe appropriate treatments. And patients are taking greater
personal responsibility for the choices they consequently make in
consultation with their doctors.
Direct to consumer communication (including advertisements) from
pharmaceutical companies about prescription only medicines will not
diminish the role of the doctor.10 But it may
well shift the balance of control in the consultation. It can alert
patients to possible diagnoses, risks, and potential treatments
choices
that otherwise might not be apparent.11
The quality of the consultation can only be enhanced by the widening
and deepening of the patient's knowledge in this way.
Poor communication and misunderstanding between patient and physician is
known to lead to suboptimal health outcomes (for example, through
medication errors and non-adherence to long term treatment). If
doctors must now defend their advice, so much the better for the
integrity and robustness of the doctor-patient relationship and for
the possibility of geater health gain. Indeed, well informed patients
comply better with long term treatment than those who are not.12-14
Proponents of the medicalisation theory would argue that the information
offered by a pharmaceutical company must be biased in ways in which
information from doctors and public agencies will not be. Certainly,
all stakeholders have different agendas. Companies will want to
increase the market for their medicines; doctors will want to guard
professional territory; and the government will want to minimise the
cost to the exchequer. But it seems condescending to assume that
consumers have no consciousness of these mixed motives and that their
scepticism will be dissolved in their anxieties about health and
illness. Moreover, consumer surveys and other studies show that
direct to consumer advertising provides valuable information on
treatments (including risks and side effects); motivates consumers to
seek additional information from doctors, pharmacists, and other
sources; and increases adherence to treatment and adoption of
behavioural changes that lead to better health.15-18
It is mischievous to suggest that reducing levels of diagnosis and
treatment will somehow improve both the health and wealth of a
society.
Information asymmetry
When a government controls the flow of medical knowledge for purely budgetary
reasons, it is the government
not
the patient
that
is declaring what condition is or is not a normal vicissitude
of life. The same might be said of other potential stakeholders
convinced that guidance on healthy living is the only information
with which the public should be trusted. Yet the issue about direct
to consumer communication is not whether it should exist or not
consumers
and patients are already inundated with myriad sources of health
information. The real question is how to ensure that people have
access to the best quality information they need, when they need
it. Direct to consumer advertising is just one channel by which
healthcare information reaches consumers.
At the moment the pharmaceutical industry, which has perhaps the best
information on the medicines they make (and which is legally
accountable for their claims) is constrained in Europe from
communicating this directly to consumers, whereas other people and
organizations are free to disseminate information of perhaps dubious
quality. European citizens deserve access to balanced, accurate,
evidence based, and comprehensive information about the healthcare
choices they face
when
and how they wish.
For this to happen they need broad access to product related information from
the industry, whether through the internet, advertorials,
advertisements, or other information channels. Patients and their
care givers, in consultation with healthcare professionals, can then
make the best informed decisions.
Guidelines for liberalised direct to consumer information
Information from the pharmaceutical industry must meet all applicable
standards for balance and accuracy
but
so should other sources of information. Industry advertising is
already controlled through legal or regulatory agency initiatives.
Other sources of direct to consumer product information from industry
should be evidence based, fairly presented, and easily understood.
Some new internet guidelines developed by the European Federation of
Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations are designed to ensure
that consumers receive properly vetted information from the industry.19
The internet is already a wide open marketplace of information,
and European regulators cannot turn back the tide. But guidelines
like these, which are consistent with the European Commission's
Health Online set of quality criteria for health websites, will
help to protect the interests of European citizens.20
Finally, conditions that might seem part of the normal vicissitudes of life
to some, can be worrisome to others. And, as indicated above, a
strong case can be made for liberalised direct to consumer
information on seriously undertreated and undiagnosed diseases. To
limit access to product information arbitrarily because of unfounded
fears about direct to consumer advertising impinges on the rights of
Europeans to have all the information they need to make informed
choices about their health.
Silvia
N Bonaccorso, Jeffrey L Sturchio
Acknowledgments
We thank Marshall Marinker, Hildrun Sundseth, and Kate Tillett for commenting
on early drafts.
Footnotes
Competing interests: Both authors are employees of the pharmaceutical company
Merck.
References
| 1. |
Zola IK. Medicine as an institution of social control.
Sociol Rev 1972; 20: 487-504[Medline].
|
| 2. |
Conrad P. Medicalization and social control. Ann Rev
Sociol 1992; 18: 209-232.
|
| 3. |
Chassin MR. Is health care ready for six sigma quality?
Milbank Q 1998; 76: 565-591[Medline].
|
| 4. |
Schuster MA, McGlynn EA, Brook RH. How good is the quality
of health care in the United States? Milbank Q 1998; 76: 517-563[Medline].
|
| 5. |
Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. From
compliance to concordance: achieving shared goals in medicine taking.
London: RPSGB, 1997. |
| 6. |
Sackett DL, Snow JC. The magnitude of compliance and
non-compliance. In: Haynes RB, Taylor WD, Sackett DL, eds. Compliance in
health care. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979:11-22.
|
| 7. |
Smith M. The cost of non-compliance and the capacity of
improved compliance to reduce health care expenditures. In: National
Pharmaceutical Council. Improving medication compliance: proceedings of a
symposium. Reston, Virginia: NPC, 1985:35-44. |
| 8. |
Dunbar-Jacob J, Dwyer K, Dunning EJ. Compliance with
anti-hypertensive regimen: a review of the research in the 1980s. Annals
Behav Med 1991; 13(1): 31-39.
|
| 9. |
Coulter A. Paternalism or partnership? BMJ 1999;
319: 719-720[Full
Text].
|
| 10. |
Rosenthal MB, Berndt ER, Donohue JM, Frank RG, Epstein AM.
Promotion of prescription drugs to consumers. N Engl J Med 2002; 346:
498-505[Abstract/Full
Text].
|
| 11. |
Ostrove NM. Statement of deputy director, division of drug
marketing, advertising and communications, Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research, US Food and Drug Administration, before the US Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation, subcommittee on consumer affairs,
foreign commerce, and tourism. Public hearings on direct-to-consumer
advertising of prescription drugs, 24 July 2001. www.fda.gov/ola/2001/drugpromo0724.html
(accessed 7 Mar 2002). |
| 12. |
Greenfield S, Kaplan SH, Ware JE. Expanding patient
involvement in care: effects on patient outcomes. Ann Intern Med
1985; 102: 520-528[Medline].
|
| 13. |
Kaplan SH, Greenfield S, Ware JE. Assessing the effects of
physician-patient interactions on the outcomes of chronic disease. Med
Care 1989; 3(suppl): S110-S127.
|
| 14. |
Coulter A, Entwistle V, Gilbert D. Sharing decisions with
patients: is the information good enough? BMJ 1999; 318: 318-322[Full
Text].
|
| 15. |
Year two: a national survey of consumer reactions to
direct-to-consumer advertising. Prevention magazine. Emmaus,
Pennsylvania: Rodale Press, 1999. |
| 16. |
International survey on wellness and consumer reacdtions to
direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs. Prevention magazine.
Emmaus, PA: Rodale Press, 2000. |
| 17. |
Calfee JE. Testimony before the US Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation, subcommittee on consumer affairs,
foreign commerce, and tourism. Public Hearings on direct-to-consumer
advertising of prescription drugs, 24 July 2001. (www.aei.org/ct/ctcalf010724.htm)
(accessed 7 Mar 2002). |
| 18. |
Henry J. Understanding the effects of direct-to-consumer
prescription drug advertising. Menlo Park, CA: Kaiser Family Foundation,
2001. (Publication No 3197.) |
| 19. |
European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and
Associations. Guidelines for internet web sites available to health
professionals, patients and the public in the EU. EFPIA: Brussels, 2001. (www.efpia.org/6_publ/Internetguidelines.pdf)
|
| 20. |
European Commission. Quality criteria for health related
websites. Brussels: EC, 2001. (www.europa.eu.int/information_society/eeurope/ehealth/quality/draft_guidelines/index_en.htm)
|
© BMJ 2002
This article has been cited by other articles:
- Moynihan, R., Smith, R. (2002). Too much medicine?. BMJ 324:
859-860 [Full
text]
Other related articles in BMJ:
- EDITOR'S CHOICE
Postmodern medicine.
- BMJ 2002 324: 0.
[Full text]
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.