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Understanding and Responding to Pharmaceutical Promotion A Practical Guide

Understanding and Responding to Pharmaceutical Promotion A Practical Guide WHO/HAI Educational Manual for m edical and pharmacy students. 20 May 2009 WHA Barbara Mintzes Health Action International University of British Columbia B arbara.mintzes@ti.ubc.ca. WHO/HAI joint initiative

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Understanding and Responding to Pharmaceutical Promotion A Practical Guide

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  1. Understanding and Responding to Pharmaceutical Promotion A Practical Guide WHO/HAI Educational Manual for medical and pharmacy students 20 May 2009 WHA Barbara Mintzes Health Action International University of British Columbia Barbara.mintzes@ti.ubc.ca

  2. WHO/HAI joint initiative Education on drug promotion • Drug promotion database • http://www.drugpromo.info/ • Survey of medical & pharmacy faculties • http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/en/d/Js8110e/ • Curriculum development • Pilot testing • Training and implementation

  3. Review of research evidence Norris et al 2005 http://www.drugpromo.info/ • Promotion strongly influences prescribing and medicine use • Health professionals underestimate this influence • The pharmaceutical industry is a frequent information source on new drugs • Funding of key opinion leaders, continuing education, and research predicts content favourable to the sponsor’s drug

  4. Education on drug promotionSurvey of identified educators, 2005137 medical, 91 pharmacy = 228 (46% response rate) 92 31 56 8 20 20 Americas Europe Western Pacific Eastern Mediterranean Africa South-East Asia

  5. Those who allocated less time (one half day or less) were less likely to judge the education to be successful.

  6. “…Whatever rational things we want to inculcate in them, that should be done in the student period itself. Once they taste big money then habits develop and later die hard.” • - a respondent from India

  7. “It is time for medical schools to end a number of long-accepted relationships and practices that create conflicts of interest, threaten the integrity of their missions and their reputations, and put public trust in jeopardy.” - Institute of Medicine. Conflict of Interest in Medical Research, Education, and Practice, April 2009

  8. Pilot educational manual

  9. Aims of this project • Model curriculum on drug promotion for pharmacy and medical students • Companion to ‘Guide to Good Prescribing’ • Improved therapy and ethical choices • Ultimately, better patient health

  10. WHO/ HAI Collaborative Project • Authors from South Africa, Ecuador, Russia, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand • Initially in English, Spanish, and Russian • Working draft available for pilot and review

  11. What topics are covered? • Promotion of medicines and patient health • Techniques that influence the use of medicine • Analysing drug advertisements • Promotion to consumers • Ethical conflicts of interest • Regulation of drug promotion • Using unbiased prescribing information • Promotion, professional practice and patient trust

  12. The US PROMOTIONAL SPENDING, 2004 Gagno MA, Lexchin J. PLoS Medicine, 2008

  13. “Gabapentin [Neurontin] was promoted by using education and research, activities not typically recognized as promotional. “independent” continuing medical education, “peer-to-peer” selling by physician speakers, and publications…” • - Steinman MA, Annals of Internal Medicine 2006

  14. Unapproved use Prescriptions for gabapentin by diagnostic category Steinman, M. A. et. al. Ann Intern Med 2006;145:284-293

  15. Indi What information should an advertisement contain? Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, Leprology, 2005

  16. Common influence techniques

  17. Orlowski et al. Chest 1992

  18. Sample exercise – Debate Divide students into debating teams of 4 to 6 people. Team 1: There is no ethical conflict in physicians and pharmacists accepting money from pharmaceutical companies.   Team 2: It is ethically unacceptable for physicians and pharmacists to accept money from pharmaceutical companies.

  19. In Conclusion • “At the heart of this manual is the patient. …This begins with the individual sitting in front of you in a consultation – a person who is often worried, sometimes frightened, but almost always trusting that the health professional will provide advice based on the best available information.” • - Dee Mangin, chapter 9, 2009

  20. Thank you www.haiweb.org

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