Department of the History of Science, Harvard University, Science Center 364, One Oxford St, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2010 May;100(5):793-803. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2009.181255. Epub 2010 Mar 18.
Although the public health impact of direct-to-consumer (DTC) pharmaceutical advertising remains a subject of great controversy, such promotion is typically understood as a recent phenomenon permitted only by changes in federal regulation of print and broadcast advertising over the past two decades. But today's omnipresent ads are only the most recent chapter in a longer history of DTC pharmaceutical promotion (including the ghostwriting of popular articles, organization of public-relations events, and implicit advertising of products to consumers) stretching back over the twentieth century. We use trade literature and archival materials to examine the continuity of efforts to promote prescription drugs to consumers and to better grapple with the public health significance of contemporary pharmaceutical marketing practices.
尽管直接面向消费者(DTC)药品广告对公众健康的影响仍是一个极具争议的话题,但这种促销形式通常被理解为近几十年的现象,这是过去二十年来联邦对印刷和广播广告监管规定变化所允许的。但是,如今无处不在的广告只是 DTC 药品促销(包括为流行文章代写、组织公关活动以及向消费者暗示产品广告)这一更长历史的最新篇章,可追溯到 20 世纪。我们使用行业文献和档案材料来考察向消费者推销处方药的努力的连续性,以便更好地应对当代药品营销实践对公共健康的意义。