Drug Information for Prescribers and Dispensers: Toward a Model System

Four alternative ways of providing health care professionals with drug information are examined in terms of medical and social values. It is assumed that maximum patient benefit will result when prescribing decisions can be made in an environment of enlightened neutrality. The alternative of maintai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical care 1976-02, Vol.14 (2), p.156-165
1. Verfasser: Rucker, T. Donald
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container_title Medical care
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creator Rucker, T. Donald
description Four alternative ways of providing health care professionals with drug information are examined in terms of medical and social values. It is assumed that maximum patient benefit will result when prescribing decisions can be made in an environment of enlightened neutrality. The alternative of maintaining the status quo is discarded because it does little to provide practitioners with complete data. The second alternative notes major reforms that would further regulate promotional efforts and upgrade the qualifications of detailmen. Because this approach yields a suboptimum solution, a third alternative introduces the concept of a National Drug Education Foundation. This countervailing force would disseminate objective drug information to clinicians through 2,000 therapeutic consultants, subsidize professional journals and schools, develop regional drug information centers, and conduct a variety of related functions. Foundation operations are estimated to cost $167 million per year or about one-seventh of current expenditures for drug promotion and information. Since commercial inputs would not only be redundant but also tend to negate Foundation efforts, the fourth model contends that social benefits can be optimized only when such outlays are terminated.
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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Advertising as Topic
Costs and Cost Analysis
Drug design
Drug Industry
Drug prescriptions
Education, Medical, Continuing
Education, Pharmacy, Continuing
Foundations
Humans
Information Services
Medical specialists
Medical treatment
Methods
Models, Theoretical
Monopoly
Periodicals as Topic
Pharmaceutical industry
Pharmaceutical preparations
Physicians
Prescription drugs
Reference Books
Social Control, Formal
Subcommittees
United States
United States Food and Drug Administration
title Drug Information for Prescribers and Dispensers: Toward a Model System
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