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Direct-to-Consumer Advertising: Its Effects on Stakeholders
- Article from:
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Journal of Allied Health
- Article date:
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July 1, 2008
- Author:
- Montoya, Isaac D; Lee-Dukes, Gwen; Shah, Dhvani
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Copyright informationCopyright Association of Schools of Allied Health Professions Summer 2008. Provided by ProQuest LLC. (Hide copyright information)
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The escalating growth in the development of pharmaceutical drugs has caused the pharmaceutical industry to market drugs directly to consumers. Direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising has increased immensely in the past 15 years and continues to grow each year. The advantages of DTC advertising include an increase in consumer knowledge, patient autonomy, and possibly providing physicians and pharmacists with up-to-date information about the recent trends in the marketplace. However, there is also an equally notable list of disadvantages, which include concerns about the quality of information provided, loss in physician productivity due to time spent convincing patients that what they want is ...