Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)

<p><h4>Aims</h4></p> <p>To examine how pharmaceutical products that were first marketed between 1950 and 1980 were promoted to physicians through advertisements and briefly review advertising regulations and accuracy of the advertisements in the light of modern knowledg...

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Main Authors: Green, A, Haddad, P, Aronson, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018
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author Green, A
Haddad, P
Aronson, J
author_facet Green, A
Haddad, P
Aronson, J
author_sort Green, A
collection OXFORD
description <p><h4>Aims</h4></p> <p>To examine how pharmaceutical products that were first marketed between 1950 and 1980 were promoted to physicians through advertisements and briefly review advertising regulations and accuracy of the advertisements in the light of modern knowledge.</p> <p><h4>Methods</h4></p> <p>We systematically reviewed advertisements promoting drugs for specific therapeutic areas, namely central nervous system disorders (anxiety and sleep disorders, depression, psychoses, and Parkinson's disease), respiratory disorders, cardiovascular disorders, and gastrointestinal disorders. We examined about 800 issues of the British Medical Journal (1950–1980) and about 150 issues of World Medicine (1965–1984).</p> <p><h4>Results</h4></p> <p>Advertising material was minimally regulated until the mid‐1970s. Many drugs were marketed with little preclinical or clinical knowledge and some with the expectation that prescribers would obtain further data. The peak of advertising occurred in parallel with the surge in the release of novel drugs during the 1960s, but declined markedly after the mid‐1970s. Advertisements generally contained little useful prescribing information. The period we investigated saw the release of many novel pharmaceuticals in the therapeutic areas we examined, and many (or their class successors) still play important therapeutic roles, including benzodiazepines, tricyclic antidepressants, phenothiazines, levodopa, selective and non‐selective β‐adrenoceptor antagonists, thiazide diuretics, β‐adrenoceptor agonists, and histamine H2 receptor antagonists.</p> <p><h4>Conclusions</h4></p> <p>Advertising pharmaceuticals in the BMJ and World Medicine in 1950–1980 was poorly regulated and often lacked rigour. However, advertisements were gradually modified in the light of increasing clinical pharmacological knowledge, and they reflect an exciting period for the introduction of many drugs that continue to be of benefit today.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:4b712410-9277-41d6-93cc-4962713120f22022-03-26T15:43:40ZMarketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4b712410-9277-41d6-93cc-4962713120f2EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2018Green, AHaddad, PAronson, J<p><h4>Aims</h4></p> <p>To examine how pharmaceutical products that were first marketed between 1950 and 1980 were promoted to physicians through advertisements and briefly review advertising regulations and accuracy of the advertisements in the light of modern knowledge.</p> <p><h4>Methods</h4></p> <p>We systematically reviewed advertisements promoting drugs for specific therapeutic areas, namely central nervous system disorders (anxiety and sleep disorders, depression, psychoses, and Parkinson's disease), respiratory disorders, cardiovascular disorders, and gastrointestinal disorders. We examined about 800 issues of the British Medical Journal (1950–1980) and about 150 issues of World Medicine (1965–1984).</p> <p><h4>Results</h4></p> <p>Advertising material was minimally regulated until the mid‐1970s. Many drugs were marketed with little preclinical or clinical knowledge and some with the expectation that prescribers would obtain further data. The peak of advertising occurred in parallel with the surge in the release of novel drugs during the 1960s, but declined markedly after the mid‐1970s. Advertisements generally contained little useful prescribing information. The period we investigated saw the release of many novel pharmaceuticals in the therapeutic areas we examined, and many (or their class successors) still play important therapeutic roles, including benzodiazepines, tricyclic antidepressants, phenothiazines, levodopa, selective and non‐selective β‐adrenoceptor antagonists, thiazide diuretics, β‐adrenoceptor agonists, and histamine H2 receptor antagonists.</p> <p><h4>Conclusions</h4></p> <p>Advertising pharmaceuticals in the BMJ and World Medicine in 1950–1980 was poorly regulated and often lacked rigour. However, advertisements were gradually modified in the light of increasing clinical pharmacological knowledge, and they reflect an exciting period for the introduction of many drugs that continue to be of benefit today.</p>
spellingShingle Green, A
Haddad, P
Aronson, J
Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title_full Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title_fullStr Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title_full_unstemmed Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title_short Marketing medicines: charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in UK medical journals (1950–1980)
title_sort marketing medicines charting the rise of modern therapeutics through a systematic review of adverts in uk medical journals 1950 1980
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AT haddadp marketingmedicineschartingtheriseofmoderntherapeuticsthroughasystematicreviewofadvertsinukmedicaljournals19501980
AT aronsonj marketingmedicineschartingtheriseofmoderntherapeuticsthroughasystematicreviewofadvertsinukmedicaljournals19501980