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By Dr. Dorothy L. Smith
Expert in safe medication use, author of 23 books for consumers on prescription drugs, and President of Consumer Health Information Corporation.
Improving Profits by Informing Patients
Vol. 1 No. 2
 
 

Dr. Dorothy L. Smith is an internationally recognized expert in patient education, patient compliance, and behavior modification programs. She has devoted her career to helping people make informed decisions about health care and use of medications. Dr. Smith is the author of 23 books and has appeared on radio and television programs across the country to increase awareness of the important role consumers play in their prescription drug therapy.

In 1983, she founded Consumer Health Information Corporation, a company internationally recognized for its innovative patient information programs. The organization has produced a broad range of print and audiovisual programs that have helped millions of people learn to make wise decisions about their health and medications. The company is a teaching site for several schools of pharmacy across the United States and a member of the Board of Directors of the National Council on Patient Information and Education.

 

The consumer will be the final judge of all the patient communication materials you produce for them. If you can develop information that is written in language that patients can understand and incorporates behavior modification techniques, you will be able to convince the patient that the information is important to their own personal health. Patients will start taking their medications correctly. The health care system will start working as it should .. and I can guarantee that the product's ROI will increase because patients will not drop out of therapy and will refill their prescriptions.

 

What Every Product Manager Should Ask:

  • Do you work directly with the patient education experts developing your DTC program? Or is your agency just a "middleman," subcontracting work out to freelancers?
  • Does the average consumer understand the labeling information in your DTC ad? Is it patient-friendly? Will the side effect information educate consumers...or alarm them?
  • Can your agency work directly with your legal and regulatory teams to incorporate additional wording requirements in a way that keeps the message patient-friendly?
  • Are your DTC follow-up materials designed to motivate consumers to continue to take appropriate actions?

Make sure your ad dollars produce results.

 

Sharing chopsticks may spread the bacteria linked to peptic ulcers?
Researchers report increased rates of infection among Chinese family members who may have transmitted Helicobacter pylori through saliva on their chopsticks..

Patients taking vitamin C tablets should brush their teeth or rinse their mouth after each use?
The ascorbic acid in the tablets can stick to the teeth and overtime erode the enamel. One patient required 12 crowns after taking high doses of chewable vitamin C.

Patients with lingering throat or mouth infections should use a new toothbrush every few weeks, or run it through the dishwasher?
It takes only 17 to 35 days for a toothbrush to become heavily infected. The combination of moisture, warmth of the bathroom and food from the mouth provide a breeding ground for bacteria.

Which direction to pull the ear when administering ear drops?
For children younger than 3 years pull the top of the ear down and back. For children over 3 years and adults pull the ear up and back. This helps straighten the ear canal so that the drops can reach the eardrum.

 

Direct-to-Consumer Programs:
Content Is Key to Increasing Sales

Direct-to-consumer (DTC) and direct-to-patient communications will not deliver unless they answer the question: "What does the consumer really need?"

That was the message of Consumer Health Information Corporation President Dorothy L. Smith, Pharm.D., to a "town meeting" of media and health care agency leaders.

Practical content means increased sales
"It comes down to knowing what patients need to know, and how to put it into words they will understand," Smith said.

  • Listing side effects in complicated medical terms can confuse or frighten the patient. This can lead to lost sales.

That's where Consumer Health Information Corporation is unique. We are internationally recognized as content experts in patient education.

"Studies show that 97% of patient information materials can't be understood by the average consumer," Smith said.

  • The average reading level of U.S. consumers is between grades 6 and 8. Yet a random sample of DTC ads we evaluated shows that almost all of the Patient Labeling information is written at the grade 12 to 16 reading level.

"That is disturbing," Smith said, "because the vast majority of people will never be able to understand them, and the opportunity to effectively promote your product is lost."

Content is the key to DTC programs that deliver a good ROI.

"Simple" Words Can Be Confusing

Even if your patient information materials pass readability tests with flying colors, that is not enough. They must be understandable.

A person may be instructed to eat less "red meat." These words seem simple, but many consumers don't know what foods are classified as red meat.

It's far more complicated than using simple words! Our team of clinical experts know how to deliver your message so it is readable and understandable.

How Many People "Think"
They Are Allergic to Your Drug?

Your patient information materials must clearly explain the difference between a drug allergy that requires professional intervention ... and side effects that can often be managed effectively by the patient.

More than one-third of patients confuse true allergic reactions to a medication with such common side effects as nausea, diarrhea, and dizziness. Many health professionals also fail to make the distinction between true allergies and expected side effects.

What does this mean for a product manager?
The patient may stop taking what is actually an appropriate and effective medication—possibly for the rest of their life. Or the doctor might switch them to a different medication.

A well-designed patient information program can prevent this from happening.

 

 

Consumer Health Information Corporation is an internationally recognized leader in the development and production of patient education programs for pharmaceutical companies, managed care organizations, and consumers.

8300 Greensboro Drive, Suite 1220 | McLean, Virginia 22102
(703) 734-0650 | Fax (703) 734-1459

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