Influence of Patients' Requests for Direct-to-Consumer Advertised Antidepressants: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Creator
Kravitz, Richard L.
Epstein, Ronald M.
Feldman, Mitchell D.
Franz, Carol E.
Azari, Rahman
Wilkes, Michael S.
Hinton, Ladson
Franks, Peter
Bibliographic Citation
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 2005 April 27; 293(16): 1995-2002
Abstract
CONTEXT: Direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising of prescription drugs in the United States is both ubiquitous and controversial. Critics charge that it leads to overprescribing, while proponents counter that it helps avert underuse of effective treatments, especially for conditions that are poorly recognized or stigmatized. OBJECTIVE: To ascertain the effects of patients' DTC- related requests on physicians' initial treatment decisions in patients with depressive symptoms. DESIGN: Randomized trial using standardized patients (SPs). Six SP roles were created by crossing 2 conditions (major depression or adjustment disorder with depressed mood) with 3 request types (brand-specific, general, or none). SETTING: Offices of primary care physicians in Sacramento, Calif; San Francisco, Calif; and Rochester, NY, between May 2003 and May 2004. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred fifty-two family physicians and general internists recruited from solo and group practices and health maintenance organizations; cooperation rates ranged from 53% to 61%. INTERVENTIONS: The Sps were randomly assigned to make 298 unannounced visits, with assignments constrained so physicians saw 1 SP with major depression and 1 with adjustment disorder. The Sps made a brand-specific drug request, a general drug request, or no request (control condition) in approximately one third of visits. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Data on prescribing, mental health referral, and primary care follow-up obtained from SP written reports, visit audiorecordings, chart review, and analysis of written prescriptions and drug samples. The effects of request type on prescribing were evaluated using contingency tables and confirmed in generalized linear mixed models that accounted for clustering and adjusted for site, physician, and visit characteristics. RESULTS: Standardized patient role fidelity was excellent, and the suspicion rate that physicians had seen an SP was 13%. In major depression, rates of antidepressant prescribing were 53%, 76%, and 31% for Sps making brand-specific, general, and no requests, respectively (P
Date
2005-04-27Collections
Metadata
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Direct-to-Consumer Advertising and Physician Prescribing
Miller, Franklin G.; Wendler, David; Kravitz, Richard L.; Franks, Peter; Epstein, Ronald M.; Feldman, Mitchell D.; Franz, Carol E. (2005-08-10)