BMJ 1996;312:1494 (15 June)

Editorials

Pharmaceutical representatives

Effective if used with caution

Pharmaceutical representatives are the "stealth bombers" of medicine: they swoop in, change physicians' prescribing habits (better than any journal article or formal educator), and disappear again. In the United States there is one drug representative for every 15 practising physicians--a teacher to student ratio that would be the envy of many universities. Though some doctors welcome the free samples and gifts, most dismiss representatives' information as a sales pitch. However, when their advice is actively sought and treated with caution, they can be a valuable source of new information for a busy doctor.

Obtaining information from drug representatives requires minimal effort. As communication experts, drug representatives package their messages into tight bundles, delivering them neatly between patients, often accompanied by a free lunch. Their bottom line message--"prescribe my drug"--is seemingly supported by medical evidence, yet this is frequently intermingled with emotional appeals and logical fallacies.1 . . . [Full text of this article]


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This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Greenhalgh, T. (1997). How to read a paper: Papers that report drug trials. BMJ 315: 480-483 [Full text]  
  • Tiner, R. (1996). Pharmaceutical representatives. BMJ 313: 881a-881 [Full text]  
  • Ferner, R E (1996). Doctors should decline to see them. BMJ 313: 881b-881 [Full text]  



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