Robinson Andrew R, Hohmann Kirsten B, Rifkin Julie I, Topp Daniel, Gilroy Christine M, Pickard Jeffrey A, Anderson Robert J
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and HealthONE Presbyterian/St Luke's Hospital, Denver, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2004 Feb 23;164(4):427-32. doi: 10.1001/archinte.164.4.427.
Previous studies have shown that direct-to-consumer (DTC) pharmaceutical advertising can influence consumer behavior and that many physicians have negative views of these advertisements. Physician and public opinions about these advertisements and how they may affect the physician-patient relationship are not well established.
Mail survey of 523 Colorado physicians and 261 national physicians and telephone survey of 500 Colorado households asking respondents to rate their agreement with statements about DTC advertising.
Most physicians tended to view DTC advertisements negatively, indicating that such advertisements rarely provide enough information on cost (98.7%), alternative treatment options (94.9%), or adverse effects (54.8%). Most also believed that DTC advertisements affected interactions with patients by lengthening clinical encounters (55.9%), leading to patient requests for specific medications (80.7%), and changing patient expectations of physicians' prescribing practices (67.0%). Only 29.0% of public respondents agreed that DTC advertising is a positive trend in health care and 28.6% indicated that advertisements make them better informed about medical problems; fewer indicated that advertisements motivated them to seek care (10.5%) or led them to request specific medications from their physicians (13.3%).
Most physicians have negative views of DTC pharmaceutical advertising and see several potential effects of these advertisements on the physician-patient relationship. Many public respondents have similarly negative views, and only a few agree that they change their expectations of or interactions with physicians. While these advertisements may be influencing only a few consumers, it seems that the impact on physicians and their interactions with patients may be significant.
先前的研究表明,面向消费者的药品广告(DTC)会影响消费者行为,并且许多医生对这些广告持负面看法。医生和公众对这些广告以及它们可能如何影响医患关系的看法尚未明确。
对523名科罗拉多州医生和261名全国医生进行邮件调查,并对500个科罗拉多家庭进行电话调查,要求受访者对有关DTC广告的陈述表示同意程度。
大多数医生倾向于对DTC广告持负面看法,表明此类广告很少提供关于成本(98.7%)、替代治疗方案(94.9%)或不良反应(54.8%)的足够信息。大多数人还认为,DTC广告通过延长临床问诊时间(55.9%)、导致患者要求使用特定药物(80.7%)以及改变患者对医生开药习惯的期望(67.0%)来影响与患者的互动。只有29.0%的公众受访者认为DTC广告是医疗保健中的积极趋势,28.6%的人表示广告使他们对医疗问题有了更多了解;较少有人表示广告促使他们寻求治疗(10.5%)或导致他们向医生要求使用特定药物(13.3%)。
大多数医生对DTC药品广告持负面看法,并认为这些广告对医患关系有几种潜在影响。许多公众受访者也有类似的负面看法,只有少数人同意这些广告改变了他们对医生的期望或与医生的互动。虽然这些广告可能只影响了少数消费者,但对医生及其与患者互动的影响似乎可能很大。