We are continually, from time to time, informed about how some
supposedly independent researchers had in fact received undisclosed
payouts from pharmaceutical companies. In more disconcerting news
about the undesirable influence of pharmaceutical companies, a review
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association
has found that media reporting of studies on drug medications could
skew public and medical opinion toward commercial interests.
Two factors contribute to this. Firstly, the mainstream media often
fails to report the use of funding provided by drug companies for
this kind of research. On top of that, both medical and mainstream
reporters tend not to use generic names when referring to specific
drug medications,
but instead use their brand
names.
And the study team found that these shortcomings existed even though
the editors involved felt otherwise.
Details of Study
The study team, led by Dr Michael Hochman, a resident physician
at Cambridge Health Alliance in Cambridge, Mass., had looked at
306 news articles discussing research on drug medications. These
articles were sourced from websites as well as United States newspapers,
and the studies which were discussed in these news articles had
been published in five important medical journals, including the
New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
At the same time, the study team asked 100 editors from the newspapers
with the highest readership in the US about their reporting practices.
Findings of Study
The researchers found that 42% of the news articles failed to disclose
the fact that drug medication
research had received funding from pharmaceutical
companies. Even when they did, it was deep within the article
and not prominently stated.
67% of 277 news articles which had reported on drug medications
only used the drug's brand name at least half the time when
referring to the medication. According to the study team, each year,
up to $9 billion is spent in the US when medical doctors
prescribe brand name drugs, even though a generic would have done
the job too.
Compare these figures to the perceptions of the editors – about
88% of them had the impression that news articles which they published
often or always stated the presence of company funding. Further,
some 77% of them thought that their articles referred to drug medications
by their generic name.
It is also worth noting that only 3% of the newspapers in question
had formal written policies with regard to the disclosure of company
funding, while only 2% had such policies with regard to the use
of the generic names of drug medications.
Discussion
Members of the public have the right to expect to be presented with
unbiased and objective facts when they read news articles about
health and medical
research. Unfortunately, that does not seem to be happening, and
most certainly not happening enough.
"As a doctor, I am increasingly worried in recent years that company-funded
research can't be trusted in the same way that other research can
be trusted," said Dr Hochman.
"All of us, doctors, patients, journalists, have gotten into a bad
habit of referring to medications by their proprietary brand names.
At a philosophical level, I think we need to be referring to them
by the generic name. We want to keep commercial interests as much
out of the doctor-patient relationship as possible," he added.
Andrew Holtz, independent journalist, former president of the Association
of Health Care Journalists, and a former CNN medical correspondent,
added to the discussion. "Funding sources should be included in
every story where it's relevant," he said.
To be fair, we must take note of one point raised by Holtz – Dr
Hochman's study itself may be limited because it only looked at
news articles which had a length of at least 200 words.
"Two hundred words is not a very long story and I didn't see in
the study anything about whether there was a correlation between
length of article and how thorough the article was in mentioning
funding and generic and brand names," Holtz said. He added that
such articles could also have left out other important information,
for example the possible drug side effects.
Moving Forward
Dr Hochman admitted that it would be difficult to use generic drug
names over their brand names. This is because many of them are unpronounceable,
even for experts, let alone laypeople.
"It's a problem but we're not going to change it unless we take
the hard step of trying to learn generic names," he said.
The other issue regarding study funds raised by this study had previously
already been discussed by peer-reviewed medical journals. Most of
those journals now require researchers to reveal their sources of
funding.
"News organizations, in my opinion, really should have explicit
written policies that they enforce," Dr Hochman said. "We always
need to disclose how a medical study is funded. I'm particularly
concerned about commercial studies. We have many examples of how
company-led research led us astray."
One specific example which Dr Hochman referred to was Vioxx (rofecoxib)
– a scandal erupted in 2004 when the arthritis drug was taken off
the market due to concerns that it affected the heart.
In the meantime, readers may have to exercise extra discretion when
reading news articles regarding drug medications, realizing that,
even though no mention is made, many studies on them may actually
have been funded by pharmaceutical companies themselves.
Main Source
Media Doesn't Often Mention Pharma Funding on Research (http://health.usnews.com/articles/healt...)









