Where am I? > Home > News > Health

Study finds most TV prescription drug ads minimise risk information

Science Centric | 4 January 2008 13:52 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size

Prescription drug ads on television first hit the airwaves just over a decade ago, but a new University of Georgia study finds that most of them still do not present a fair balance of information, especially when it comes to the risk of side effects.

A team led by Wendy Macias, associate professor in the UGA Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, analyzed a week's worth of direct-to-consumer ads on broadcast and cable television. The found that the average 60-second ad contained less than 8 seconds (13 percent of total ad time) of side effect disclaimers, while the average 30-second ad has less than 4.4 seconds (15 percent of total ad time) of disclaimers. Most of the 15-second ads studied devoted no time at all to disclaimers.

'These ads clearly don't devote enough time to information about risk,' said Macias, whose results appear in the November/December issue of the journal Health Communication. 'Adding to the problem is that the information is often presented in a way that people aren't likely to comprehend or even pay attention to.'

Macias and her team, which includes Kartik Pashupati at Southern Methodist University and Liza Lewis at The University of Texas at Austin, found that almost all of the ads disclosed side effects solely in a voice-over portion of the ad. Only 2.2 percent of ads had the disclosure in voice-over as well as in text form.

The 1997 FDA guidelines that allowed drug companies to greatly expand the scope of their direct-to-consumer advertising required the companies to 'present a fair balance between information about effectiveness and information about risk.'

Fair balance is not defined by the FDA, so Macias created a four-tiered classification: 1.) Lawbreakers are ads that don't mention side effects at all; 2.) bare minimums are those that list side effects but spend less than 10 percent of time on risk information; 3.) the main pack includes ads that spend more than 10 percent of time on risk information, and 4.) the proactive, safety oriented approach, which gives equal treatment to both the risks and the benefits of the drug.

The researchers found that two percent of the ads studied were clear lawbreakers, 10 percent met bare minimum requirements and 88 percent were in the main pack. The researchers analysed commercials that aired in 2003, but Macias said current ads are similar in their content and leave much to be desired.

'Very few advertisers are really doing well enough when it comes to actually trying to educate the consumer,' she said. 'The ads are presented in such a way that the consumer would have to be paying very close attention and be adept at processing the information to really understand the risks as well as the benefits.'

Proponents of direct-to-consumer ads argue that they help raise awareness of various medical conditions and their treatments. Critics argue that the ads drive up health care costs by steering consumers to costly drugs that they might not need. Still, Nielsen Media Research estimates that pharmaceutical companies spent more than $1.5 billion on direct-to-consumer television ads during the first half of 2007.

Macias said most ads could clearly do more to educate consumers, and points to recent advertisements for Johnson and Johnson's Ortho Evra birth control patch that give equal emphasis to the risks and benefits of the drug as an example of a more balanced approach.

'A prescription drug is something that consumers should be making a rational decision about,' Macias said. 'And the more information consumers have, the better decisions they can make.'

Source: University of Georgia

U.Va. sociologist Jeff Dew, (c) University of Virginia'Whose turn to pay?' can be deal-breaker for cohabiting couples

— 8 May 2009

Couples living together face dozens of spending decisions every week. Should we eat out tonight? Whose turn to pay? Should we hire a lawnmower or a house cleaner, or skip both to pay... — full story

Chemist Staci Simonich examines a vial containing air pollutants at her lab at Oregon State University. She's the lead U.S. researcher on a project that will study the impact of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons on the health of Chinese and U.S. residents, (c) Tiffany WoodsOSU to study air pollutant's impact on Chinese, U.S. health

— 29 April 2009

Scientists at Oregon State University and China's Peking University plan to use part of a $12.4 million grant to study the impact that the burning of fuels like coal and biomass - as... — full story

The number of steps a patient has taken each day of the week can be recorded on a mobile phone during rehabilitation, (c) David McCleneghan, CSIROCardiac patients trial home-based rehabilitation

— 28 April 2009

Patients who have been treated in hospital for cardiac health problems, such as a heart attack, are being given a powerful new option to help set them on the path to good health. CSIRO's... — full story

Law professor Beth Burkstrand-Reid says a review of recent reproductive rights cases shows that judges may shortchange women's health when it is pitted against other legal interests, such as religious freedom, (c) L. Brian StaufferHealth undervalued in reproductive rights debate

— 11 April 2009

Women's health is increasingly undervalued in conflicts over reproductive rights, including clashes based on moral objections under so-called conscience clauses, a new study by a University... — full story


Popular tags in Health: cancer · diabetes · malaria · obesity