The inverse benefit law: how drug marketing undermines patient safety and public health
- PMID: 21233426
- PMCID: PMC3036704
- DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2010.199844
The inverse benefit law: how drug marketing undermines patient safety and public health
Abstract
Recent highly publicized withdrawals of drugs from the market because of safety concerns raise the question of whether these events are random failures or part of a recurring pattern. The inverse benefit law, inspired by Hart's inverse care law, states that the ratio of benefits to harms among patients taking new drugs tends to vary inversely with how extensively the drugs are marketed. The law is manifested through 6 basic marketing strategies: reducing thresholds for diagnosing disease, relying on surrogate endpoints, exaggerating safety claims, exaggerating efficacy claims, creating new diseases, and encouraging unapproved uses. The inverse benefit law highlights the need for comparative effectiveness research and other reforms to improve evidence-based prescribing.
Figures
References
-
- Hart JT. The inverse care law. Lancet. 1971;1(7696):405–412 - PubMed
-
- Tudor Hart J. Commentary: three decades of the inverse care law. BMJ. 2000;320:18–19 - PubMed
-
- A look back at pharmaceuticals in 2006: aggressive advertising cannot hide the absence of therapeutic advances. Prescrire Int. 2007;16:80–86
-
- Olson MK. Are novel drugs more risky for patients than less novel drugs? J Health Econ. 2004;23:1135–1158 - PubMed
-
- Carpenter D, Zucker EJ, Avorn J. Drug-review deadlines and safety problems. N Engl J Med. 2008;358:1354–1361 - PubMed
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
