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Research ArticleOriginal Research

Creating Demand for Prescription Drugs: A Content Analysis of Television Direct-to-Consumer Advertising

Dominick L. Frosch, Patrick M. Krueger, Robert C. Hornik, Peter F. Cronholm and Frances K. Barg
The Annals of Family Medicine January 2007, 5 (1) 6-13; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.611
Dominick L. Frosch
PhD
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Patrick M. Krueger
PhD
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Robert C. Hornik
PhD
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Peter F. Cronholm
MD, MSCE
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Frances K. Barg
PhD
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The Article in Brief

Creating Demand for Prescription Drugs: A Content Analysis of Television Direct-to-Consumer Advertising

Dominick L. Frosch , and colleagues

Background Average American television viewers see as many as 16 hours of prescription drug advertisements per year. Arguments in favor of advertising prescription drugs on television state that they help educate people about health conditions and available treatments. This study analyzes the messages in television prescription drug ads to understand how they influence consumers and whether they meet their educational potential.

What This Study Found Television prescription drugs ads usually try to persuade viewers using reasons other than medical costs and benefits. Ads provide some factual claims and rational arguments, but they don�t usually describe the causes or risk factors for a condition, or whether the condition is common. Almost all ads use emotional appeals and show characters who have lost control over their social, emotional, or physical lives without the medication. Ads portray prescription drugs as medical breakthroughs and minimize the value of healthy lifestyle changes.

Implications

  • Despite claims that ads serve an educational purpose, they provide limited information about the causes of a disease or who may be at risk.
  • Because prescription drug ads are unclear about who might need or benefit from the products, they imply that people may be at risk for a wide range of health conditions that can be treated by prescription drugs.
  • The ads have limited educational value and may oversell the benefits of drugs in ways that may conflict with promoting health.

  View article

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