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Office Hours: |
Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
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Drug Advertisement Ban
Upheld in Europe
In October of 2002 the European Parliament voted against
plans to allow pharmaceutical companies to advertise or
provide information on drugs directly to patients with
certain conditions. Catherine Stihler, Labour's health
spokesman in the European Parliament, said: "We don't
want consumers sitting on their couches bombarded with a
hard sell from big drug companies in the advertising
break."
A challenge to that ruling was upheld by the European
Union's Council of Ministers in a ruling that upheld the
restrictions. In effect drug companies will not be able
to advertise prescription medicines direct to the
public. The latest reports appeared in the June 3, 2003
BBC News World Report.
The BBC article noted that consumer organizations
welcomed the continuation of the ban on "direct to
consumer" advertising. Jackie Glatter, spokeswoman for
the Consumers' Association, said: "What patients need is
high quality, independent, comparative information on
medicines so that they are able to make informed choices
about their health care." A report published earlier in
2002 suggested that the pharmaceutical industry is
incapable of providing impartial information on its
medicines and that such information should only come
from independent sources.
"Today's decision sends a clear message to the
pharmaceutical industry that drug promotion is not the
same as good quality information." Glatter said: "The
government now needs to take steps to significantly
improve patient information. It must also prevent
further industry attempts to circumvent the ban." The
Consumers' Association also suggested advertising may
lead to over-prescribing of expensive and heavily
advertised drugs and the under-use of cheaper, more
effective drugs. |
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