Patterns in Direct-to-Consumer Prescription Drug Print Advertising and Their Public Policy Implications

Through a content analysis, the author identifies several patterns in direct-to-consumer prescription drug print advertisements. In general, many of the advertised brands are market leaders within their therapeutic class, are targeted at a broad patient base, and are relatively new drugs used for chronic and frequently occurring diseases. Most of the disease states and associated symptoms and treatments for which prescription drugs are advertised to consumers are easily understood relative to other diseases. Thus, the advertisements attempt to communicate information about diseases and products that consumers are likely to understand. Pharmacists’ assessments of advertising information content reveals that the majority of advertisements present a “fair balance” of benefit and risk information but occasionally omit information that may be useful to consumers. The author concludes by discussing public policy and social marketing implications for the FDA, pharmaceutical manufacturers, and medical advertising agencies.

[1]  L. Morris,et al.  The attitudes of consumers toward direct advertising of prescription drugs. , 1986, Public health reports.

[2]  J. R. Williams,et al.  Direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs. , 1995, Journal of health care marketing.

[3]  S. Cobb,et al.  Health behavior, illness behavior, and sick-role behavior. II. Sick-role behavior. , 1966, Archives of environmental health.

[4]  A. Worsley Perceived reliability of sources of health information , 1989 .

[5]  I. Rosenstock The Health Belief Model and Preventive Health Behavior , 1974 .

[6]  H. H. Kassarjian Content Analysis in Consumer Research , 1977 .

[7]  W. Viscusi,et al.  Informational regulation of consumer health risks: an empirical evaluation of hazard warnings , 1986 .

[8]  M. R. Fields HEALTH EDUCATION MONOGRAPHS , 1960 .

[9]  P. Rubin Matching Prescription Drugs and Consumers: The Benefits of Direct Advertising , 1985, The New England journal of medicine.

[10]  Philip Kotler,et al.  Marketing Warfare in the 1980s , 1981 .

[11]  I. Rosenstock,et al.  Social Learning Theory and the Health Belief Model , 1988, Health education quarterly.

[12]  S. Kopp,et al.  Advertising Prescription Drugs to the Public: Headache or Relief? , 1990 .

[13]  Robert A. Peterson,et al.  First-Mover Advantage: A Synthesis, Conceptual Framework, and Research Propositions , 1992 .

[14]  A. Burns The expanded health belief model as a basis for enlightened preventive health care practice and research. , 1992, Journal of health care marketing.

[15]  S. Cobb,et al.  Health behavior, illness behavior, and sick role behavior. I. Health and illness behavior. , 1966, Archives of environmental health.

[16]  Alice Henderson The CBS Consumer Model , 1986 .

[17]  W. Michael Dickson,et al.  Direct to Consumer Prescription Drug Advertising: Consumer Attitudes and Physician Reaction , 1987 .

[18]  D. Kessler,et al.  The federal regulation of prescription drug advertising and promotion. , 1990, JAMA.

[19]  C. Moorman,et al.  A Model of Consumers' Preventive Health Behaviors: The Role of Health Motivation and Health Ability , 1993 .

[20]  A. Alkhawajah,et al.  The role of pharmacists in patients' education on medication. , 1992, Public health.

[21]  A. Masson,et al.  Plugs for drugs. , 1986, Regulation.

[22]  M. Perri,et al.  An exploratory analysis of consumer recognition of direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription medications. , 1987, Journal of health care marketing.

[23]  M. Roth Enhancing Consumer Involvement in Health Care: The Dynamics of Control, Empowerment, and Trust , 1994 .

[24]  D. Smith,et al.  Prescription drug abuse. Patient, physician, and cultural responsibilities. , 1990, The Western journal of medicine.

[25]  W. D. Perreault,et al.  Reliability of Nominal Data Based on Qualitative Judgments , 1989 .

[26]  Person-Role Conflict in Pharmacists: Its Relationship to Job Scope, Need for Achievement, and Propensity to Leave an Organization , 1988 .

[27]  R. Kolbe,et al.  Content-Analysis Research: An Examination of Applications with Directives for Improving Research Reliability and Objectivity , 1991 .