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Fewer drug sales reps = more patients

WSJ this week discussed an article by a family practitioner, Dr. Benjamin Brewer, detailing why he stopped seeing drug reps .His main concern was the time spent and the fact that his patients did not like to wait while he talked to drug-company reps. He found that on average there were 6 rep visits per day, which he later replaced with one to two additional patient visits.

 

There was also a perception among his patients that drug companies give doctors a lot of free stuff - influencing their prescribing habits. He chose to pass up on the freebies so his office was not viewed as an 'unofficial billboard for the pharmaceutical industry'. So now he buys his own generic pens and has even lost a few pounds from missing lunches with reps! 

 

His main concern in keeping reps out of his office was that he no longer would have free drug samples to give away -- especially to his lower-income patients. However, these samples are not as useful as they are often expensive, new medications that may not have good health plan coverage or may have layers of preauthorization before he can prescribe them. And even if a patient gets a good response - they can't afford them.  

 

As a recommendation he'd like the industry to put their educational programs online, employ less sales staff to make sales calls and instead make a charitable donation each time someone views this information.

 

Bottom line: replaced time spent with drug reps with additional patient visits and "I'm not fueling the perception of influence by making my office an unofficial billboard for the pharma industry".

 

Amen brother.

 

Dr. Mike

 

Comments

 

HornJM said:

Makes a lot of sense...

Can Lumenos provide a list of doctors that have some sense, like Dr. Brewer?
January 12, 2007 9:07 AM
 

klhester said:

I just completed a graduate class in Biotech and this was a very heated topic.  I agree with Dr. Brewer and many other doctors must also agree. 2 out of the 4 Big Pharma reps in the class had recently been laid off.  
January 12, 2007 11:58 AM
 

Pingu said:

Big Pharma also buys pharmacy records to see what doctors prescribe what so that they can apply 'pressure' in the right areas....doctors have no control over their prescription records once your prescription goes to the pharmacy!!!
January 12, 2007 7:20 PM
 

Tavish19 said:

I've come to believe that much of medicine is run by drug companies. They fund many of the studies that "coincidentally" prove that their expensive drug is essential for our health (Lipitor, etc). How can a study be objective when the researchers are being paid by a drug company?  I'm very cynical about this part of medicine.  Lumenos gives me hope that there are people with common sense somewhere out there.
January 12, 2007 8:52 PM
 

AA03303 said:

I applaud Dr. Brewer we need more physicians like him. It was once the mission of physicians to provide caring service to patients. Now it seem like it is about money, money, money. The execptions to this mentality is probably hard to find. :)
January 16, 2007 7:50 AM
 

Molly said:

I wish more doctors would have this attitude.  Just how often these visits by drug company sales people affect doctors decisions I don't know, but I'm sure it's more than they would admit.  And I know that the process of continueing to learn and have the most current information is time consuming, it's too bad that it's the drug companies (not a disinterested third party) who often seem to be the ones keeping many of our doctors 'current'.  Would be nice if more doctors were willing to educate themselves on alternatives to prescription drugs and be willing to discuss them with patients.
January 18, 2007 12:32 PM

About mparkinson

Dr. Mike, EVP and Chief Health and Medical Officer, is responsible for the strategic direction and health care management at Lumenos. Formerly Director of Medical Programs and Resources for the U.S. Air Force, he was responsible for policy and planning for the Medical Service with over 2 million beneficiaries, 70 facilities and a $4 billion budget. A retired colonel, he served as deputy director of Air Force Medical Operations and chief of preventive medicine. He is President-Elect of the American College of Preventive Medicine and a member of the Institute of Medicine Committee reviewing NASA prevention programs, the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board. Mike is a recipient of the Air Force Legion of Merit, the Distinguished Service Award of the American College of Preventive Medicine and Distinguished Recent Graduate Award from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. He received his A.B. from Cornell University, M.D. from George Washington University, family practice training at the UCLA and his M.P.H., preventive medicine residency and chief residency at the Johns Hopkins University.

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