Tsai Alexander C
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, OH 44106-4945, USA.
Int J Health Serv. 2003;33(4):751-68. doi: 10.2190/K0JG-EXG1-FB12-0ANF.
In 1992, researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles, published a study on the scientific merit and validity of pharmaceutical advertisements in medical journals. Their results led them to conclude, provocatively, that many pharmaceutical advertisements contained deficiencies in areas in which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration had established explicit standards of quality. This article provides a detailed account of third-party reactions to the study following its publication in the Annals of Internal Medicine, as well as the implications for those involved, including the authors, editors, and publisher. The increasingly diverging interests between medical journal editors and publishers are also discussed and highlighted by two recent cases of editors' departures from prominent general-interest medical journals.
1992年,来自加州大学洛杉矶分校的研究人员发表了一项关于医学期刊中药品广告的科学价值和有效性的研究。他们的研究结果促使他们得出了一个颇具争议的结论,即许多药品广告在美国食品药品监督管理局已明确规定质量标准的领域存在缺陷。本文详细介绍了该研究发表在《内科学年鉴》上之后第三方的反应,以及对相关人员(包括作者、编辑和出版商)的影响。医学期刊编辑和出版商之间日益分化的利益关系也通过最近两起编辑从著名的大众医学期刊离职的案例进行了讨论和强调。