Department of Medicine, Section of Hematology/Oncology, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago Medicine, and the Cancer Research Center, Chicago, IL.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY.
Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book. 2020 Mar;40:1-11. doi: 10.1200/EDBK_279963.
In the United States, many cancer centers advertise their clinical services directly to the public. Although there are potential public benefits from such advertising, including increased patient awareness of treatment options and improved access to care and clinical trials, there is also potential for harm through misinformation, provision of false hope, inappropriate use of health care resources, and disruption in doctor-patient relationships. Although patient education through advertising is appropriate, misleading patients in the name of gaining market share, boosting profits, or even boosting trial accrual is not. It is critical that rigorous ethical guidelines are adopted and that oversight is introduced to ensure that cancer center marketing supports good patient care and public health interests. Patients with cancer have been identified as an especially vulnerable population because of fears and anxiety related to their diagnosis and the very real need to identify optimal sources of care. Cancer organizations have a fiduciary duty and a moral and legal obligation to provide truthful information to avoid deceptive, inaccurate claims associated with treatment success. In this article, actionable recommendations are provided for both the oncologist and the cancer center's marketing team to promote ethical marketing of services to patients with cancer. This tailored guidance for the oncology community includes explicit communication on (1) ensuring fair and balanced promotion of cancer services, (2) avoiding exaggeration of claims in the context of reputational marketing, (3) providing data and statistics to support direct and implied assertions of treatment success, and (4) defining eligible patient groups in the context of marketing for research. These recommendations for cancer centers are designed to promote ethical quality marketing information to patients with cancer.
在美国,许多癌症中心直接向公众宣传其临床服务。尽管这种广告宣传有潜在的公共利益,包括提高患者对治疗选择的认识,改善获得护理和临床试验的机会,但也存在通过错误信息、提供虚假希望、不当使用医疗资源以及破坏医患关系而造成伤害的潜在风险。尽管通过广告进行患者教育是合适的,但以获得市场份额、提高利润甚至增加试验入组为目的误导患者则是不合适的。至关重要的是,应采用严格的道德准则并引入监督机制,以确保癌症中心的市场营销能够支持良好的患者护理和公共卫生利益。癌症患者已被确定为一个特别脆弱的群体,因为他们对诊断感到恐惧和焦虑,并且非常需要确定最佳的护理来源。癌症组织有信托责任,有道德和法律义务向患者提供真实信息,以避免与治疗成功相关的欺骗性、不准确的声明。本文为肿瘤医生和癌症中心的营销团队提供了切实可行的建议,以促进向癌症患者提供服务的道德营销。该指导意见针对肿瘤学领域,包括(1)确保公平、平衡地推广癌症服务;(2)避免在声誉营销中夸大声明;(3)提供数据和统计信息,以支持对治疗成功的直接和间接断言;(4)在研究营销的背景下定义合格的患者群体。这些针对癌症中心的建议旨在为癌症患者提供符合道德规范的高质量营销信息。