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Patient
Education Update
Vol 4. No. 5
by Dr. Dorothy L. Smith, President, Consumer
Health Information Corporation. Visit our web site at http://www.consumer-health.com.
For 20 years, Consumer Health Information Corporation
has specialized in helping product teams integrate patient
education into their marketing strategies .... and enhance
ROI through patient retention.
The consumer will be the final judge of all
the marketing materials you produce for them. Once consumers
and patients understand the information being given to them
and believe that it is important to their own personal health,
the health care system will start working as it should ...
and I can guarantee that a product's ROI will increase.
DOES YOUR LABELING
PRESENT INFORMATION IN THE RIGHT ORDER?
No medication can be safe
and effective until patients take it correctly. Too often
we forget that the patient is the final judge in weighing
the risks of the medicine against the benefits. For the patient
to be able to make an informed decision, the order in which
the information is presented to them is extremely critical.
I recently spoke at a
Drug Information Association (DIA) meeting in Manhattan, where
I joined a panel of FDA experts and representatives of a major
advertising agency and public relations firm to explore the
topic, "New Ways To Promote ... Marketing of Pharmaceuticals:
How To Be Aggressive and In Compliance." I was asked to evaluate
DTC ads and patient education materials from the consumer's
perspective.
In my remarks, I pointed
out that millions of patients today are deciding not to take
a medicine at all because the information they are receiving
is not answering their questions in an order that would help
them better understand the risks and the benefits.
Too often, companies present
the risk information to the consumer ahead of the benefit
information. This doesn't make sense to me if you look at
it from the viewpoint of a consumer.
CONSUMERS WANT BENEFIT
INFORMATION BEFORE RISK INFORMATION
The first thing a consumer
wants to know is the potential benefits of the medication.
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"What
is this medicine used to treat and how will it help
me?" |
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Only after they receive
this information will they want to know about the risks.
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"How
safe is this medicine?" |
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Finally, after they decide
that the benefits of taking the medicine are greater than
the risks, they want to know how to take the medicine correctly
and manage side effects.
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How
do I take this medicine? |
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How
do I manage any side effects? |
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How
do I store the medication? |
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If companies flip this
order and list all the negative risks and warnings at
the very beginning of their patient information materials,
patients often become needlessly anxious. They may decide
not to read any further, and may even decide not to take the
medicine. This is the exact opposite of what health professionals
and FDA want to achieve.
A similar parallel can
be drawn to surgery. When a physician decides that
a patient needs surgery because the benefits outweigh the
risks, the surgeon does not begin the discussion by presenting
the risks of dying while in surgery. This is important, of
course - but at the proper time - for the patient to know.
But if all surgeons began their initial explanations that
way, very few people would ever opt for surgery even if they
clearly need it.
Similarly, with a medication,
patients want to know how the drug will help them, then have
enough information to decide if the benefits outweigh the
risks.
For more on consumer-friendly
patient labeling, check here:
http://www.consumer-health.com/services/patient_labeling.htm.
CONSUMER HEALTH INFORMATION
CORPORATION'S
EXPERTISE IN PATIENT COMMUNICATIONS
Developing messages for
consumers and patients on medications requires a very specialized
blending of medical information, regulatory requirements,
marketing techniques, health literacy principles, patient
compliance strategies, and behavior modification techniques...
then translating everything into language the average consumer
can understand ... and reinforcing it with an effective "patient-friendly"
design.
Even though a DTC campaign
or a patient information program has met all the requirements
of the company's clinical, marketing, legal and regulatory
teams as well as the FDA regulations, it can NEVER be maximally
effective if the consumer does not understand the information.
Consumer Health Information
Corporation's experts in patient compliance and consumer behavior
know how to develop "consumer-friendly" materials that motivate
patients to take the medication correctly. Only then can the
product fulfill its potential.
Check here to see why
we're unique: http://www.consumer-health.com/expertise.htm.
DID YOU KNOW ...
Patients have forgotten
50% of the prescription instructions given to them by physicians
by the time they arrive at the pharmacy.
For your product to be
clinically effective and promote maximum ROI, you need a patient
compliance program providing practical, understandable information
that helps patients to manage side effects, complicated dosage
schedules, and other issues that affect compliance.
For more on the value
of an effective patient compliance program, check here:
http://www.consumer-health.com/services/pat_compliance.htm.
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To request permission
to reprint any of this information, click
here.
If you have questions or would like
more information on how to increase patient compliance with
your product, please click
here or call (703) 734-0650.
If you want to sign up a colleague
to receive this regular briefing, please complete the request
form.
Copyright (c) 2001 Consumer Health
Information Corporation. All rights reserved.

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