nick1985
Lifer
- Dec 29, 2002
- 27,153
- 6
- 81
Then no more viagra, cialis, etc ads?![]()
If you get a 4 hour boner, call your doctor.
Then no more viagra, cialis, etc ads?![]()
HA HA HA.... no.What does work? 'Good government', with neutral experts who serve the public interest regulating the industries in ways that work for everyone, and cut out the corruption of policy by profit motives.
The drug commercials are f'n hilarious. What's wrong with sending someone to ask their doctor about any particular drug? If your doctor has any skills and integrity, at all, then they'll recommend a generic alternative. If not, and you later discover that one exists, then find a new f'n doctor.Direct to consumer advertising of prescription drugs should be banned, IMO.
Direct to consumer advertising of prescription drugs should be banned, IMO.
The FDA is the problem, not Republicans. Has been for decades. Although I see how you (wrongfully) link the two.
HA HA HA.... no.
Your ideology and theories completely break down the moment each of your precious government agencies becomes just as corrupt as those they are meant to regulate.
-snip-
A drug company might have a patent on drug 1, and drug 2 might be in the public domain. Each might cost $1 - but drug 1 can be sold for $100, $20, $5 - some big markup in big profit since there is no competition, the sky the limit as far as marketig to create demand for the drug can take the price, because no one else can sell it, compete, and lower the price. Meanwhile, drug 2 might get the manufacturer $1.25, and retail for $2.50 on the market, makin gvery little profit.
And so in this system, there can be enormous pressure - based on profit - for the drug companies to get drug 1 used - and that may well mean instead of drug 2 even if drug 2 is better.
In a perfect world, drug 2 would get full use for the good of the patient - but when, when there are such huge economic distortions to incent the wrong choice, has the perfect world not had corruption?
"Ask your doctor about" is one way. With huge marketing budgets, drug companies can build demand directly among the public to 'ask their doctor', who typically have competitive pressure not to say no to their patients too much where they're allowed to say yes, and the use of the drug increases. Everyone's happy - the patient has his manufactured desire met, the doctor has his patient, and the drug company gets more sales.
I think the problem is mis-stated.
1) With insurance/Medicaid/Medicare covering the cost, the individual just doesn't care about costs.
2) Doctors letting patients influence their decisions? FFS why? That won't fly in other professions like accounting. Does this indicate another area where tort reform is necessary? Are doctors afraid to prescribe the "tried & true" out of fear they'll be sued?
3) Agree that marketing presecirtion drugs to the general public s/b mostly forbiden or majorly scaled back. I do think it OK to empower people with knowledge about (new) drugs that may help them, but the current state of drug marketing borders on brainwashing.
Somewhere in here is a very contradictory view held by progrssives/liberals. On the one hand, we need UHC so everybody can afford their expensive drugs - the best HC. OTOH, doing so may not be in their best (medical) interest and is a capitalist rip-off. Predictably, Craig234 tries to 'square' this by advocating increased government intrusion and regulations. It really does sound like Craig234 and the 'progressives' want the government to make the decisions for you and your doctor, something they constantly deny yet at other times clearly advocate.
Fern
Yes, if only ads were banned we would squash our appetite for prescription drugs in this country lmao.
So what you're saying by this is that marketing doesn't work ?
Doctors are afraid to prescribe "tried and true" because their customers have their minds pre-set by TV commercials on (treatment a) which is not "tried and true". They fear that if they don't prescribe (treatment a), their patient will go somewhere else to get (treatment a), and will not return. End result is that they usually just prescribe (treatment a) as long as it won't kill/harm the patient.
That is garbage, doctors are afraid to prescribe "tried and true" because so many of them don't know what "tried and true" are. Did you read the article linked in the OP. Some of the most trusted medicines today would not have a chance in hell of being approved because they are so dangerous. Physicians are not like accountants, when you add two numbers, the answer is always the same. When you give two patients the same drug, the outcome is not the same, because every patient is different. Read the article, the problem is not doctors and advertising, the problem is an actual lack of knowledge. Studies are not being done that compare drugs, so since there is no study which identifies which drug works best, doctors cannot know which drug works best. In other words, there is no "tried and true" in modern medicine and it turns out our old "tried and true" like aspirin and tylenol can be very harmful to patients. You give doctors too much credit for knowledge, when that knowledge you presume they know is not actually known to anyone.
The drug industrys intense marketing to physicians has been well covered. But its worth noting here that some marketing is designed to push out perfectly worthwhile older treatments (whose patent protection has often expired and can therefore be sold as cheap generics) in order to advance newer treatments (which are under patent protection, and therefore are more expensive).
Please read this portion of the article:
"Tried and True" was my paraphrasing. Clearly the article is saying that established (a better description?) drugs that are effective are being pushed aside for more expensive drugs, often with no benefit (other than profit for Pharma).
So the question remain "Why" are doctors prescribing the newer more expensive drugs. The fact that there is no comparable studies, while unacceptible, is almost irrelevent. If there are no comparable studies, neither doctors nor Pharma can make the claim that newer more expensive are superior. Similarly, doctors could bring this point to the attention of their patients. The average consumer won't spend for the more expensive product unless their is a perceived superiority or benefit. If this were any other product where the consumer had to spend their own money I suggests it's unlikely the 'unproven' newer product would get as many sales. But the HI companies are picking up the tab, so why should they care?
I suppose the lack of comparable studies should mean that tort risks is not a factor. If there is no comparable study how can one be faulted for whatever appropriate drug they prescribe? No one cn demonstrate the more expensive is superior. But that assume a certain of legal sophistication among physicians, IMO that's unlikey.
Otherwise, the whole "they don't know" thing as an excuse for recomending the more expensive drug sounds both unlikely and concerning. I think it equally as likely that doctors get benies/kickbacks from pushing new expensive drugs (and patients don't care because they don't pay).
Fern