News

Over 40% of patients asking for an advertised drug get it


 

References

About 28% of patients surveyed say that they have talked to a physician about a prescription drug they saw advertised, and 44% of those patients report that they were given the drug they asked about, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation Health Tracking Poll conducted Oct. 14-20.

About 54% say that their physicians recommended behavior or lifestyle changes after being asked about a drug the patient had seen advertised, while 49% of patients say that the physician recommended a different prescription drug and 39% say that the physician recommended an over-the-counter drug, Kaiser reported.

The results were similar to a Health Tracking Poll conducted in March of 2008, when 32% of patients had talked with their physicians about a drug they had seen advertised. Of those patients, 57% had physicians who recommended lifestyle or behavior changes, 54% recommended a different prescription drug, 44% recommended the drug the patient asked about, and 30% recommended an OTC drug.

The 2015 poll was conducted by phone among a nationally representative sample of 1,203 adults living in the United States.

rfranki@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Survey: Medicaid pay holds steady in states
MDedge Cardiology
HHS: Remaining uninsured worry about costs of coverage
MDedge Cardiology
PQRS informal review period opens; closes Nov. 9
MDedge Cardiology
Responding to online physician review sites
MDedge Cardiology
What is your practice worth?
MDedge Cardiology
Malpractice premiums flat in 2015, but changes could be ahead
MDedge Cardiology
Evidence-based medicine the future of health care, experts say
MDedge Cardiology
ACA insurance networks lack specialist coverage
MDedge Cardiology
Healthcare.gov: Premiums to jump in 8 states
MDedge Cardiology
Midair medical emergencies
MDedge Cardiology