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Patient
Education Update
Vol 4. No. 6
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.
RISK VS. BENEFITS:
THE CONSUMER HOLDS THE TRUMP CARD
DTC advertising has added
an entirely new dimension to the role of consumers in making
decisions about prescription medications. Consumers are now
on the cutting edge-they are very concerned about the risks
vs. benefits of a medication because they are the ones who
are going to have to live with any consequences of the drug
therapy.
I was recently invited
to speak 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 our discussion, I noted
that when a person's health is at stake, they will do all
they can to protect it. Each consumer will decide if the benefits
of a medication are greater than the risks they are personally
willing to take. But in order to make an informed decision,
patients need to be able to understand both the benefits and
the risks. The information given to them in the Patient Package
Insert (PPI), patient compliance materials, and DTC ad (both
the front and the back of the ad) and collateral materials
must make sense to them. On the other hand, if the symptoms
are presented in a way that patients can't recognize from
their own experience, the warnings will be meaningless.
In this example taken
from an actual DTC ad, put yourself in the place of the
consumer. Would you be able to recognize the early warning
signs of any of these "possible side effects" so you could
take appropriate action that would allow you to continue taking
the drug?
What are the possible
side effects of [PRODUCT]?
Eye: Cataracts,
conjunctivitis/conjunctival infection, dry eyes, ocular itchings,
severe vision loss, subconjunctival, sub retinal or vitreous
hemorrhage.
Heart: "trial fibrillation, peripheral vascular disorder,
hypertension, varicose veins.
Metabolic/nutritional: Albuminuria, creatinine increased.
Urogenital: Prostatic disorder."
I guarantee that the average
consumer won't understand these terms. My concern is that
this listing of medical terms will work against the effectiveness
of the DTC ad as well as lead to decreased patient retention.
Symptoms of adverse events
must be presented in terms that patients can recognize and
understand. If you must inform patients that your product
could cause liver dysfunction such as hepatitis, go the extra
step and tell the patient the warning signs of hepatitis in
practical language. For example, "Call your doctor if you
become unusually tired; lose your appetite; or develop nausea
and/or vomiting, a yellow color to your skin or eyes, or dark-colored
urine or pale stools."
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 ...
It is simply inadequate
to tell a person that a certain side effect may occur. The
patient must be told how to manage potential side effects
at home and what symptoms should prompt him or her to call
the doctor.
When the information you
give patients lets them know what to expect and how to manage
common side effects, they have a positive alternative to stopping
the drug. Your product has a better chance to reach its maximum
ROI.
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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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