Do Gifts From Pharmaceutical Companies Really Affect The Way Doctors Prescribe Drugs?

in #steemstem7 years ago

Welcome to the latest installment of my water is wet series of posts...well it isn't really a series but I've been made fun of in the past for discussing articles which examine topics of which the answers are "obvious." Todays post will not differ from that trend in the slightest! I say this because I am quite sure you are already aware of the answer to the question posted by the title! Or are you? Yes, you probably are :)

Nevertheless, today we will be discussing an article recently published in the jounal PLoS One titled "Influence of pharmaceutical marketing on Medicare prescriptions in the District of Columbia." In this succinctly titled article the authors were trying to provide some quantifiable data looking at whether or not gifts from pharmaceuticals had an effect on the way physicians prescribe medications to their patients.


Water Is Wet.. I mean Giving Gifts Affects Human Behavior

Seen Here A Doctor Opening A Gift Promoting Boner Pills

This isn't exactly an earth shattering idea, I mean... why do people give gifts in the first place? It's usually to get something in return, even if that something is just good will from the person gifted the item. So, it shouldn't come as much of a surprise to anyone that when a pharmaceutical company gives some fancy swag to a doctor (or buys them lunch, dinner, breakfast, a coffee... really anything) its going to change how the doctor views that particular company, as well as how the doctor thinks about the product they are selling. [2]

The whole concept revolving around this conflict of interest of interacting with pharmaceutical companies and the effect it has on how doctors prescribe medication has been studied quite a bit in reality. [3], [4].

Ask physicians if they think other physicians are affected by gifts from pharmaceuticals and 77% of them will tell you yes! [5]. Ask a physician if they think it effects them... well they will tell you that it doesn't (and they will be wrong!) Further still, many believe that smaller gifts don't affect any physicians behavior at all. [6] This is just an illustration of peoples inherent inability to identify their own bias at times. I am sure I fall prey to this in many circumstances as well, so its hard to fault the doctors for thinking they are not themselves a part of the problem.

What Did The Researchers In This Publication Look At?

The authors of this article were studying Medicare claims made by physicians and their patients in Washington D.C., they used these claims and the information available therein to quantify the relative amounts of what drugs were prescribed, the total amount of money that the prescriptions cost, and what the ratio of name brand and generic drug prescriptions were. They then correlated this data with pharmaceutical marketing data available through either Washington D.C's Department of Health AccessRx program, which requires pharmaceuticals to disclose their marketing and promotional activities to doctors in the D.C. area, or another database called Open Payments.

What Did They Find?


Reproduction of Figure 1 from [1]

Not shocking to anyone, they found that the overall cost of the claims filed by physicians in a variety of specializations were higher for those who had received gifts from pharmaceutical companies (blue) then for those who had not received gifts (red). The authors report that on average a claim filed to medicare for medical care by a physician who had not received a gift was $85, while claims filed for care by physicians who had recently received pharma swag were $135! An increase of $50 per claim on average! That's quite a steep increase!

Beyond this the authors also showed that the more expensive the gifts were that the doctors received (ooohh some over $500) the more expensive the claims ended up being, and also the more likely a doctor was to prescribe a name brand medication over that of a generic one.

What we can take away from this data is that there is a correlation between doctors receiving gifts and more expensive healthcare costs.

Some Other Thoughts From The Authors Discussion Of The Data

You might ask, how do I know that the more expensive gifts are not just being targeted to doctors who prescribe the most name brand drugs, rather than the prescribing of the drugs resulting from receiving the gifts. The authors concede this point, we don't. However the end result from this line of thinking doesn't matter, because the gifts in this case are still being given to reinforce the behavior of those doctors and keep them writing more expensive prescriptions.

So next time you go to your physician and they prescribe you the name brand version of a medication, is that because it truly works better than the generic (this is sometimes the case) or because they recently had a fancy dinner? As someone who works for a pharmaceutical company that REFUSES to engage in this sort of promotional material (likely to the tune of smaller profits, but it's worth it to not be shady) I recognize that this sort of promotional behavior is not good for patients and not good for healthcare in general.

If only more companies felt that way.

At least better educating doctors on this phenomenon is a start in the right direction!


Sources

Text Sources

  1. http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0186060
  2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27322350
  3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8309031
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10647801
  5. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2398609
  6. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/196871

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Probably the biggest kinds of bribery come in the form of trips, lunches, and conferences. The most disturbing part is that disclosure only makes matters worse.1

Some of the doctors I know are so overworked and feel so underappreciated that things like pens or mugs might do the trick.

1 Daylian M. Cain , George Loewenstein , and Don A. Moore , "The Dirt on Coming Clean: Perverse Effects of Disclosing Conflicts of Interest," The Journal of Legal Studies 34, no. 1 (January 2005): 1-25.

Some of the doctors I know are so overworked and feel so underappreciated that things like pens or mugs might do the trick.

This is ... depressing.

The realm of nutrition was of great interest to me at one stage. The more I dove into the literature, the more confused I became due to the contradicting publications. My Dad then gave me sound advice: “follow the money trail and the truth will be revealed".

Since then I always pay attention to who funds the studies I read. If the sponsor stands to benefit, I always take the results with a pinch of salt.

This is a hugely important topic and many whistleblowers have already come forward with shocking exposures of the industry's criminal behaviour - including regularly paying for drugs and prostitutes for some doctors the US to bribe them to prescribe their drugs.
I really suggest reading through these 2 posts from my whistleblower series if you haven't already:

https://steemit.com/health/@ura-soul/the-whistleblowers-series-1-pharmacuetical-professionals-expose-the-massive-criminality-of-the-medical-industry

https://steemit.com/health/@ura-soul/the-whistleblowers-series-18-top-drug-company-sales-rep-i-was-trained-to-mislead-doctors-and-the-public-legal-drugs-are

Also - on a tangent - I'm reaching out to all my followers who have significant Steem Power to ask them to consider voting for me as a Steem witness - as I need the votes to boost me up the ranks and that helps pay my costs and funds exciting projects I have planned to help grow Steemit.
My witness application is here. Cheers!

It worth a upvote (though my upvote carry no rewards).
By the way, why in this earth the researchers had the idea to do research on such topics!!

Considering normal human behavior, it is not unusual phenomena. Personally, if get some give from someone, I can't take rest unless I can return some favor. Interestingly, I am a doctor by profession and after finishing my MBBS, I am listening this issue. Obviously, I have seen some doctors or teachers who are using MR (medical representative) of various pharmaceutical company shamelessly. And giving return the company in the form of prescription without considering the effectiveness of drugs of those company.

I, personally, when am visited by company representative, when they are asking if I need any special favor or "things", I simply turn them down. I know a good number of doctors who also do the same. But different types of doctor also present in our community.

It worth a upvote (though my upvote carry no rewards).

I appreciate every upvote, especially when they come along with a thoughtful comment like yours here. Rewards are what ever, chatting with people is more fun anyway.

By the way, why in this earth the researchers had the idea to do research on such topics!!

Because some people (physicians) won't believe they are susceptible to the biases with out data to back it up.

Obviously, I have seen some doctors or teachers who are using MR (medical representative) of various pharmaceutical company shamelessly.

Yup.

I know a good number of doctors who also do the same.

I am sure most doctors have a strong moral code and do that, however others just don't see the issue. Research like this just might convince them. Or perhaps it will convince the general public to get mad enough to try to institute policies making sure this isn't allowed.

Some Pharma companies are always going to try to sweeten the deal for doctors with regards to their drugs, making this as difficult as possible will result in more consistent care for people over all IMO.

All Pharmaceutical company have strategy. They target the doctor just after getting their graduation. I can remember, in early 2012, while was doing my internship with other friends, we were invited in various events where there were general gift packs, restaurants where buffet were arranged with delicious food item, fantasy park to enjoy different rides etc. Personal gift was also different from company to company starting from pens engraving company name to more costly gift.

Those gift also varies according to the position of the doctor. Those who have more option to right medicine , those were given more valuable gift. Shockingly, some of our senior were so sold to those company that they used cut prescribed drug from juniors prescription and replaced it with his/her favorite company's drugs. Professors levels doctors were offered to visit outside country where company used to bear all the expenses.

Shockingly, some of our senior were so sold to those company that they used cut prescribed drug from juniors prescription and replaced it with his/her favorite company's drugs.

That is really messed up IMO

Nice article. I know my Dad and his office has gotten a lot of perks from pharma companies in the past. NY regulations have reduced these perks substantially, but they are still an issue.

I wonder if he would acknowledge that the perks affected the medications he prescribed. The data available from the literature indicates that he would likely not be able to see the bias in his own prescribing.

I just try to find the medication they can afford. Sometimes these companies (often to promote their product) will have samples. For an asthmatic who is being denied mediacation after medication from an insurance company, sometimes those samples could literally be a life changer until they qualify for something else. If the studies are sound for a companies drug then I may be more inclined to read the literature on that drug. That could bring bias. However, at the end of the day my main goal is to have a patient be compliant with a medical plan, not a specific drug if multiple options are available. Generic is fine with me for a majority of drugs.

These are the innocent examples, free samples and such aren't the issue. Its with pharmaceutical reps taking doctors out for dinner to promote a drug that introduces real bias, or giving them merchandise (mugs, water bottles).

If the studies are sound for a companies drug then I may be more inclined to read the literature on that drug.

If there is insufficient data to support the drug then yeah you shouldn't bother with it. I can't speak to what all companies do, but where I am at now (and we are small) we really strive to understand as much about how a compound works before even thinking of moving forward into a clinical trial. So when something does get submitted for approval, there is a strong set of publications which go along with it.

according to me, the pharmaceutical company and physician therie is cooperation. because it is impossible for a pharmaceutical company to give gifts without a specific purpose.

Well of course, the companies are trying to get the doctors to prescribe their drugs. They are relying on the doctors not recognizing the conflict of interest, and it is clear that many either do not recognize it, or choose to ignore that fact. The whole practice needs stopped.

in service to patients is still less. this is still happening in Aceh. even they sell expensive

Thanks for bringing up the topic!
And unfortunately that is the tip of the iceberg. Those acts are so common, that even at times they are initiated by the Dr himself, asking for specific compensation in return. That no longer classifies as a gift, it's seriously a bribe!
In our region here, the effects might be further worse, with Drs prescribing "unneeded" medications for some patients. We are talking oncology cases!
Sadly in a profession such as medicine, where ethics and integrity are much needed, I believe many Drs just forget about their oath.

We are talking oncology cases!

That is pretty horrifying and depressing.

Do you remember the criminal case that was brought against Pfizer for fraudulent marketing of the painkiller Bextra? I first heard about this on the CNBC show "American Greed."

The drug was part of a "revolutionary" class of painkillers known as Cox-2 inhibitors that were supposed to be safer than generic drugs, but at 20 times the price of ibuprofen. But medical studies, including some done at Pfizer, showed that the drug posed an increase risk of death from heart attack or stroke. In 1991, the FDA ordered that Bextra could only be sold for a very limited purpose (arthritis and menstrual cramps). It further ordered that Bextra could not be prescribed for acute surgical pain.

Not only did Pfizer ignore that, its sales managers engaged in an aggressive marketing campaign, paying off anesthesiologists, foot surgeons, orthopedic surgeons and oral surgeons to become educational advocates for the drug. At least one Pfizer manager wrote a sales pitch for doctors to use with their patients, claiming that the FDA had given Bextra "a clean bill of health" all the way up to a 40 mg dose. That was twice what the FDA actually said was safe.

Internal company documents show that the fraud included a multimillion-dollar medical education budget to pay hundreds of doctors as speakers and consultants to tout Bextra.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/04/02/pfizer.bextra/index.html

Some companies have done some shady shit. I don't know how revolutionary cox-2 inhibitors are/were at the time. However the issues they have are present in any NSAID, including ibuprofen.

Altering the tolerable dose is unacceptable behavior, that should have been punishible with large fines and jail time... Though I doubt it was.

You're right. The top execs were never really prosecuted. News reports at the time decried the excuse as being "Pfizer is too big to fail."

Nothing is too big to fail, no executive too powerful to jail.

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Good article.

Another problem is pharmaceuticals being advertised on tv. I have personally heard physicians on conference calls I've been on complain of patients that come in and demand a drug they saw on tv. When the doctors tell them they don't need that drug, the patient demands it or they will find another doctor.

My unprofessional approach to pharmaceuticals is to get diagnosed by a competent doctor, take the medication as recommended after you have discussed with your doctor what the side effects might be, search information on dietary changes and natural supplements that might help that condition, try only those things that are safe to restore health.

When you are under a doctor's care, If there is a supplement that you want to try, don't hide it from your doctor. Doctors tend to tell patients that they don't need that supplement. But the question to ask your doctor is: "Are there any contraindications for me to take this supplement?" And let your doctor see the ingredients of the supplement. Your doctor can let you know if there is anything harmful in it.

There is a lot of information on the internet. Not all of it is true. Be sure to search for agreeable and disagreeable information from credible sources. Do your homework and read from many sources, and don't believe everything. Your and your family's health is important.

And don't forget to pray.

Your described course of action with regards to all of this, seems like a very logical and smart path to take. I understand how many drugs work, and what many are for. I understand many things better than my physicians and we often spend time in my checkups with me lecturing them on mechanism of one thing or another. Yet still, I don't decide what drugs I need or how much I need, I leave that to them and always try their prescribed course of action.

I don't think there should be drug advertisements at all. Leave that to physicians. The average person lacks the training to effectively self diagnose.

Pharmacists have also told me that it is common for them to have to fix errors doctors have made in their prescriptions. It is important to have a competent pharmacist.

Indeed they are essential to check for drug interactions with other medications already being taken.

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