Drug
ads sell a problem, not a solution
August 21, 2006
It is an old saying in the advertising trade
that you sell the problem, not the solution.
That helps explain why the media today are awash
with images of disease. Erectile
Dysfunction, depression, stress, attention
deficit disorder, on and on – you can't
escape them and the sense of looming peril that
they conjure up.
Politicians sell terror and fear; pharmaceutical
companies sell disease. Every state and stage
of existence has become a pathology in need
of pharmaceutical "intervention,"
and life itself is a petri dish of biochemical
deficiency and need. Shyness is now "social
anxiety disorder." A twitchy tendency has
become "restless leg syndrome." Three
decades ago the head of Merck dreamed aloud
of the day when the definition of disease would
be so broad that his company could "sell
to everyone," like chewing gum.
That day is rapidly approaching, if it's not
already here. "We're increasingly turning
normal people into patients," said Dr.
Lisa M. Schwartz of the Dartmouth Medical School.
"The ordinary experiences of life become
a diagnosis, which makes healthy people feel
like they're sick."
In one sense, the ads have been successful.
The Kaiser Family Foundation found that every
dollar drug companies spend on ads brings more
than four dollars in additional sales. But for
most others, the result has been soaring medical
insurance costs, toxic side effects, and new
tensions between doctors and patients, who increasingly
badger doctors for the drugs they've seen on
TV.
One study found that 30 percent of Americans
have made these demands. A Minnesota doctor
complained recently that patients now push him
for sleep medications "when maybe they
just need to go to bed on a more regular basis."
But perhaps the worst part is that prescription
drug ads have immersed us all in a pervasive
drug culture that seems to have no boundaries.
We are being reduced to helpless "consumers"
who have no capacity to deal with challenges
other than by taking a pill. Last month Tim
Pawlenty, the Republican governor of Minnesota,
called for a moratorium on prescription drug
ads. It's about time.
For most of the past half century, there were
tight restrictions on the general advertising
of prescription drugs. These require doctors'
guidance for a reason; so why should Madison
Avenue get involved? But under heavy pressure
from the drug and advertising industries, the
government backed down in the late 1990s, and
that started the tsunami.
Spending on drug ads for the general public
more than tripled between 1996 and 2001. It
is now some $4 billion a year, which is more
than twice what McDonald's spends on ads. In
1994, the typical American had seven prescriptions
a year, which is no small number. By 2004, that
was up to 12 a year. Homebuilders are touting
medicine cabinets that are "triple-wide."
The industry says this is all about "educating"
the consumer. But an ad executive was more candid
when he said – boasted, really –
that the goal is to "drive patients to
their doctors." Reuters Business Insight,
a publication for investors, explained that
the future of the industry depends on its ability
to "create new disease markets." "The
coming years," it said, "will bear
greater witness to the corporate-sponsored creation
of disease."
The Kaiser study found that drug ads increase
sales for entire categories of drugs, not just
the one in question. The ads really are selling
the disease more than a cure.
Advertising is just one way the industry has
sought to accomplish this goal. It also funds
patient advocacy groups such as Children With
Attention Deficit Disorder (CHADD), and doctors
who push for expanded definitions of disease,
among a host of other things. (When the definition
of ADD expanded in the 1980s, the number of
kids tagged with this problem increased by 50
percent.)
But advertising is the most pervasive and aggressive
way of selling sickness. It also is the hardest
to justify. Medicine is supposed to be about
science, not huckstering; about healing people,
not persuading more of them that they are sick.
There are far better ways to inform the public
about health issues than to spend billions of
dollars a year pushing pills.
This is why more than 200 medical school professors
recently called for an end to prescription drug
ads, and why close to 40 health and seniors
groups have joined them. Even the American Medical
Association, many members of which have close
ties to the pharmaceutical industry, has urged
restrictions. Washington should listen to these
doctors. As Governor Pawlenty put it, we need
to put "the decisionmaking back where it
should be – on an informed basis between
the patient and the doctor."
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20060821/cm_csm/yrowe_1
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