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Patient Information in an Era of Change

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Patient Information in an Era of Change Louis A. Morris, Ph.D. Senior Vice President PRR, Inc. Communications Change Source from HCP to Manufacturer Channel from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patient Information in an Era of Change


1
Patient Information in an Era of Change
  • Louis A. Morris, Ph.D.
  • Senior Vice President
  • PRR, Inc.

2
Communications Change
  • Source
  • from HCP to Manufacturer
  • Channel
  • from personal and print to mass customization
  • internet
  • Message
  • from health education to marketing
  • Audience
  • from dumb terminal to active decision maker

3
Thesis
  • Redefinition of communications structure creates
    new opportunities
  • We need new thinking
  • marketing approach to patient education
  • Implications for Pharmacy
  • public health advocates
  • implementers of cultural change
  • who pays?

4
Patient Info Sources Traditional
Face to Face Mass Media

Help Seeking/ Reminder Ads
Through HCPs
Manufacturer
Through HCPs
Public Service Ads
Independent
5
Patient Info Sources Modern
Face to Face Mass Mass Media
Customization

1-800 s
Registries
Manufacturer
DTCA
HCPs - Start Kits
Public Relations
Database Marketing
Infotisements
Independent
PSA/En- dorsemts
HCP/Com- mercial
HCPs
6
Blending
  • Starter Kits - info packages
  • Disease/Drug Newsletters
  • Registries
  • Clinical Experience Trials
  • Direct mail
  • Ads in direct mail pubs
  • Ads in patient information at Pharmacy

7
Blending on the Internet
  • Is it independent content or an ad?
  • What is the Source?
  • Search Engine Results?
  • Paid Linkages?
  • Future Increase in Internet Use
  • Multimedia Content
  • Faster Access, Smart Slaves, Always On less
    active search, more passive use

8
Blending - Resch Questions
  • How important is source credibility in patient
    information?
  • How important is face-to-face?
  • Hi tech/Hi touch
  • How does this affect pharmacy?
  • Pharmacist rated highest in credibility
  • Pharmacists viewed as most accessible
  • Ability to take advantage?

9
Why DTCA?
  • HCPs MCOs Pats
  • Gatekeeper
  • Influencer
  • Therapy Selector
  • Buyer
  • User

10
Message Evolution
  • User
  • Finish all your medicine, even if you feel
    better
  • Gatekeeper
  • The doctor has treatment programs that can help
  • Influencer
  • Easy to swallow

11
New Messages
  • User Medication Compliance - Will there be a
    rebirth?
  • Barrier Assessment Tools
  • AARDEX (MEMS Monitor) as a feedback tool
  • Influencer Quality of Life
  • FDA barriers
  • Implicit, benefit-related messages
  • symbolism

12
Message / Audience Interaction Patient
Information Processing
  • Willingness and Ability to Learn
  • Motives - Message Involvement/Goals
  • Ability - Literacy/Self-efficacy
  • Opportunity - Task Constraints
  • Perceived and Actual Cognitive Load
  • Simplification
  • Signals

13
Audience Tailoring - Stages
  • Smoking Cessation
  • Precontemplation, Contemplation, Preparation,
    Action, Maintenance
  • Abstinence at 18 mo
  • Single Brochure 11.0
  • Individualized to Stage 18.5
  • Interactive feedback 25.2
  • Personalized (calls) 18.0

  • Velicer et al., 1993

14
Information Search Clusters Factors Ambivalent
Uncertain Risk Assertively
Learners Patients Avoiders
Self-Reliant n140 n132 n200
n153 Information Involvement
.502 .069 -.275
-.160 Self-Care Orientation -.124 .575
-.483 .249 Regimen Barriers .170
1.056 -.563 -.365 Information
Avoidance 1.167 -.603
-.327 -.121 Risk Aversion .239 .056
.302 -.664 Question- Asking .013
-.163 -.542 .838
15
New Role for Pharmacy
  • Message Tailoring
  • New diagnostic tools?
  • Feedback Provider (Compliance Coach)
  • Computer records to measure refill compliance
  • Financial Barriers
  • Can this be provided through manufacturer
  • mass customization? - privacy favors Pharmacy
  • Pharmacist user fees?

16
New Role for Pharmacy (2)
  • Location for services
  • in pharmacy (face to face)
  • in central location (mass customization)
  • Activity
  • initiator or responder to patient requests
  • passive or active service implementation

17
Health Education and Marketing
  • Health Education
  • combination of interventions to change behavior
    (info transfer)
  • select by what works
  • focus on trials to establish efficacy
  • Marketing
  • facilitating equitable exchanges (2 way flow)
  • select by communications goal
  • focus on efficient resource use

18
Marketing Perspective
  • Health Behavior Change is more likely if
  • people are involved with healthcare decisions
  • educate and empower patients
  • people actively plan how to comply
  • planning helps overcome barriers
  • health professionals teach and explain treatment
  • people do what MDs and RPhs tell them to do
  • 3 Inverse Relationships

19
Behavior Change
Persuadable (weak messages)
Low Involvement High Involvement
20
Behavior Maintenance
Ease of Adoption
Thought/Planning
21
Behavior Change
Frequency/ Reach
Complex Messages
22
Marketing Insights
  • People Change Behavior
  • when it is easy
  • when they want to
  • when it serves their needs/interests
  • People Maintain Behavior
  • when they internalize beliefs/culturally driven
  • Population Interventions Cost-effectiveness
  • Targeting/Relationships/Market tests

23
When is 7 change successful?
  • Health Education
  • significantly better than control
  • depends on sample size
  • Marketing
  • major success
  • define in terms of made, share of market,
    meeting projections

24
Relationship Era
  • Time Era Attitude
  • 20s Production A Good Product Sells Itself
  • 50s Sales Creative Advertising
  • 80s Marketing Find a Need and Fill it
  • 90s Relationship Long-term Relationships

25
Pharmacy
  • Pharmacy as Cultural Change Agents
  • technology, cross-(sub)cultural, dramatic events
  • intercept strategies for nonsearchers
  • tailoring interventions
  • Take advantage of relationships
  • database marketing
  • How to make it pay?

26
Why Pharmacy?
  • Credibility (Expertise and Trust)
  • Decision making - Framing
  • Accessibility
  • Close to the Consumer
  • understand peoples interest
  • Existing relationships
  • keep info private

27
Segmentational Bases
  • Demographics- age, gender, literacy
  • Disease- severity, stage, timing
  • Geographies- location, Prizm characteristics
  • Psychographics- Customized AIOs, VALS
  • Volume- consumed, concurrent therapy
  • Outcome- responders, compliers, QoL
  • Benefits Sought- motives for therapy, info

28
Implications for Pharmacy
  • Credibility
  • Economics - little face-to-face
  • lost opportunity - OBRA 90
  • New Switches
  • renewed call for 3rd class of drugs
  • Nutrition Supplements

29
Historical Perspective
  • Let no physician teach the people about
    medicines or even tell them the names of the
    medicines, particularly the potent ones, such a
    purgatives, opiates, narcotics, abortifacients,
    emetics or any other which are particularly
    dangerous for the people may be harmed by their
    improper use. This under penalty of forty
    shilliings - Royal College of Physicians, 1555

30
Why Advertise to Consumers?
  • DTC Promotion

MD
Patient
Manufacturer
RPh
31
Objectives
  • Why advertise to consumers?
  • How is consumer marketing different?
  • What role does FDA play?
  • What will be the ultimate effect of DTC?

32
8 FDA Concerns
  • Reminder/Institutional
  • Implied Claims
  • Disclosure Adequacy
  • Contextual Fair Balance
  • Limits on Effectiveness
  • Overall Fair Balance
  • Unsubstantiated Claims
  • Distractions
  • RID the CLOUD of DDMAC Response

33
DTC Considerations
  • Hot, Hot, Hot
  • FDA Guidance relaxes TV disclosures
  • 800 mil in 1997, 1.3 bil in 1998
  • Multiple Media
  • TV, magazines, internet, professional
    distribution, direct mail, outdoor
  • Different Challenges and Still Learning
  • FDA Very Sensitivity to TV 11 of 20 DTC ads had
    an FDA letter

34
What Evidence Suggests Hypotheses
  • DTC increases MD visits (Pravacol)
  • DTC increases patient requests for drugs
  • People want risks but info may be confusing
  • Physicians still dont like it (fluid)
  • MCO hate DTC
  • Risk information may be problematic
  • may also detract from benefits
  • Additional disclosures may be problematic
  • information overload, supers have min impact

35
What Evidence is Needed Too Early to Form
Hypotheses
  • How are TV claims interpreted?
  • Uses / risks / info availability
  • How prices/costs/liability will change?
  • Impact on consumer as influencer, user
  • Cumulative effects (trivialization)
  • What is a positive/negative outcome?
  • Eye of the beholder, consensus needed
  • Need research agenda

36
Truthfulness, Balance, Disclosure
  • Roth
  • 1/3 of ads lack fair balance (unclear what
    definition was used)
  • General Concerns
  • Multiple streams of info (see pictures, hear/see
    words, hear background)/ Limited take away (only
    49 of supers are comprehended)
  • Explicit and Implicit Claims
  • Limited internal context-availability
  • Disclosure as a remedy?

37
Future of DTC
  • More, More, More
  • Patient as central in future marketing
  • Marketing as part of drug development
  • Mixed Media
  • campaigns designed to move through process
  • Pharmacists as Implementers
  • passive or active role?

38
Audience Evolution
  • Information Hungry Segment
  • Remains Stable for 2 Decades (about 12)
  • Heterogeneous Elderly
  • Multiple Meds
  • Aging Boomers
  • More willing to question HCPs
  • Service Directed
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