PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Free drug samples can change prescribing habits of dermatologists

2014-04-16
(Press-News.org) The availability of free medication samples in dermatology offices appears to change prescribing practices for acne, a common condition for which free samples are often available.

Free drug samples provided by pharmaceutical companies are widely available in dermatology practices.

The authors investigated prescribing practices for acne vulgaris and rosacea. Data for the study were obtained from a nationally representative sample of dermatologists in the National Disease and Therapeutic Index (NDTI), a survey of office-based U.S. physicians, and from an academic medical center where free drug samples were not available.

Branded and branded generic drugs (products that have novel dosage forms of off-patent products or use a trade name for a molecule that is off patent) accounted for 79 percent of the prescriptions written nationally by dermatologists compared with 17 percent at an academic medical center without samples. The average total retail cost of prescriptions at an office visit for acne was estimated to be twice as high ($465) nationally compared with about $200 at an academic medical center without samples.

"Free drug samples can alter the prescribing habits of physicians away from the use of less expensive generic medications. The benefits of free samples in dermatology must be weighed against potential negative effects on prescribing behavior and prescription costs."

Michael P. Hurley, M.S., and colleagues from the Stanford University School of Medicine, California.

(JAMA Dermatology. Published online April 16, 2014. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2013.9715. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: An author made a conflict of interest disclosure. Funding/support disclosures were also made. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

Editorial: Drug Samples in Dermatology

In a related editorial, Kenneth A. Katz, M.D., M.Sc., of the Permanente Medical Group Inc., Pleasanton, Calif., and colleagues write: "The study was cross-sectional and did not determine causality, and no clinical outcomes were assessed. But the demonstrated association between samples and prescribing is strong and is consistent with a growing body of evidence that drug samples affect physician prescribing practices."

"Hurley et al conclude their article by calling for policies to 'properly mitigate' the 'inappropriate influence on prescribing patterns.' We agree, and furthermore call on our own profession's leaders to help dermatologists recognize the lack of evidence of benefit from samples and the substantial evidence of harm to patients and the health care system," they continue.

"Our specialty should take a strong, united stance discouraging physicians from dispensing free drug samples in any form, including topical medications," they conclude.

(JAMA Dermatology. Published online April 16, 2014. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2013.9711. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: Authors made a conflict of interest disclosures. A funding/support disclosure also was made. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

INFORMATION: Media Advisory: To contact corresponding author Alfred T. Lane, M.D., M.A., call Krista Conger at 650-725-5371 or email kristac@stanford.edu. To contact editorial author Kenneth A. Katz, M.D., M.Sc., call Janet Byron at 510-891-3115 or email janet.l.byron@kp.org.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Atypical brain connectivity associated with autism spectrum disorder

2014-04-16
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in adolescents appears to be associated with atypical connectivity in the brain involving the systems that help people infer what others are thinking and understand the meaning of others' actions and emotions. The ability to navigate and thrive in complex social systems is commonly impaired in ASD, a neurodevelopmental disorder affecting as many as 1 in 88 children. The authors used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate connectivity in two brain networks involved in social processing: theory of mind (ToM, otherwise known ...

For cells, internal stress leads to unique shapes

For cells, internal stress leads to unique shapes
2014-04-16
From far away, the top of a leaf looks like one seamless surface; however, up close, that smooth exterior is actually made up of a patchwork of cells in a variety of shapes and sizes. Interested in how these cells individually take on their own unique forms, Caltech biologist Elliot Meyerowitz, postdoctoral scholar Arun Sampathkumar, and colleagues sought to pinpoint the shape-controlling factors in pavement cells, which are puzzle-piece-shaped epithelial cells found on the leaves of flowering plants. They found that these unusual shapes were the cell's response to mechanical ...

Researchers track down cause of eye mobility disorder

Researchers track down cause of eye mobility disorder
2014-04-16
Imagine you cannot move your eyes up, and you cannot lift your upper eyelid. You walk through life with your head tilted upward so that your eyes look straight when they are rolled down in the eye socket. Obviously, such a condition should be corrected to allow people a normal position of their head. In order to correct this condition, one would need to understand why this happens. In a paper published in the April 16 print issue of the journal Neuron, University of Iowa researchers Bernd Fritzsch and Jeremy Duncan and their colleagues at Harvard Medical School, along ...

Scientists observe quantum superconductor-metal transition and superconducting glass

2014-04-16
The article "Collapse of superconductivity in a hybrid tin–grapheme Josephson junction array'" (authors: Zheng Han, Adrien Allain, Hadi Arjmandi-Tash,Konstantin Tikhonov, Mikhail Feigelman, Benjamin Sacépé,Vincent Bouchiat, published in Nature Physics on March 30, 2014, DOI:10.1038/NPHYS2929) presents the results of the first experimental study of the graphene-based quantum phase transition of the "superconductor-to-metal" type, i.e. transformation of the system's ground state from superconducting to metallic, upon changing the electron concentration in graphene sheet. The ...

Stanford scientists develop 'playbook' for reverse engineering tissue

2014-04-16
STANFORD, Calif. — Consider the marvel of the embryo. It begins as a glob of identical cells that change shape and function as they multiply to become the cells of our lungs, muscles, nerves and all the other specialized tissues of the body. Now, in a feat of reverse tissue engineering, Stanford University researchers have begun to unravel the complex genetic coding that allows embryonic cells to proliferate and transform into all of the specialized cells that perform myriad biological tasks. A team of interdisciplinary researchers took lung cells from the embryos of ...

Red moon at night; stargazer's delight

Red moon at night; stargazers delight
2014-04-16
Monday night's lunar eclipse proved just as delightful as expected to those able to view it. On the East Coast, cloudy skies may have gotten in the way, but at the National Science Foundation's National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) near Tucson, Ariz., the skies offered impressive viewing, as seen from the pictures provided here. Nicknamed a "blood moon," this lunar eclipse's color was similar to the majority of lunar eclipses. This has to do with the Earth's atmosphere's propensity for longer-wavelength light (e.g., the reds, oranges and yellows seen in sunrises ...

Information storage for the next generation of plastic computers

2014-04-16
Inexpensive computers, cell phones and other systems that substitute flexible plastic for silicon chips may be one step closer to reality, thanks to research published on April 16 in the journal Nature Communications. The paper describes a new proposal by University of Iowa researchers and their colleagues at New York University for overcoming a major obstacle to the development of such plastic devices—the large amount of energy required to read stored information. Although it is relatively cheap and easy to encode information in light for fiber optic transmission, ...

Two new species of yellow-shouldered bats endemic to the Neotropics

Two new species of yellow-shouldered bats endemic to the Neotropics
2014-04-16
Lying forgotten in museum collections two new species of yellow-shouldered bats have been unearthed by scientists at the American Museum of New York and The Field Museum of Natural History and described in the open access journal ZooKeys. These two new additions to the genus Sturnira are part of a recent discovery of three bats hidden away in collections around the world, the third one still waiting to be officially announced. Up until recently the genus Sturnira was believed to contain only 14 species. In the last years closer morphological and molecular analysis have ...

Researchers: Obesity can amplify bone and muscle loss

Researchers: Obesity can amplify bone and muscle loss
2014-04-16
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida State University researchers have identified a new syndrome called "osteosarcopenic obesity" that links the deterioration of bone density and muscle mass with obesity. "It used to be the thinking that the heavier you were the better your bones would be because the bones were supporting more weight," said Jasminka Ilich-Ernst, the Hazel Stiebeling Professor of Nutrition at Florida State. "But, that's only true to a certain extent." The syndrome, outlined in the May issue of Ageing Research Reviews, explains how many obese individuals experience ...

Researchers develop a new drug to combat the measles

2014-04-16
A novel antiviral drug may protect people infected with the measles from getting sick and prevent them from spreading the virus to others, an international team of researchers says. Scientists from the Institute for Biomedical Sciences at Georgia State University, the Emory Institute for Drug Development and the Paul-Ehrlich Institute in Germany developed the drug and tested it in animals infected with a virus closely related to one that causes the measles. As reported in the current issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine, virus levels were significantly ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cosmic rays streamed through Earth’s atmosphere 41,000 years ago

ACP issues clinical recommendations for newer diabetes treatments

New insights into the connections between alcohol consumption and aggressive liver cancer

Unraveling water mysteries beyond Earth

Signs of multiple sclerosis show up in blood years before symptoms

Ghost particle on the scales

Light show in living cells

Climate change will increase value of residential rooftop solar panels across US, study shows

Could the liver hold the key to better cancer treatments?

Warming of Antarctic deep-sea waters contribute to sea level rise in North Atlantic, study finds

Study opens new avenue for immunotherapy drug development

Baby sharks prefer being closer to shore, show scientists

UBC research helps migrating salmon survive mortality hot-spot

Technical Trials for Easing the (Cosmological) Tension

Mapping plant functional diversity from space: HKU ecologists revolutionize ecosystem monitoring with novel field-satellite integration

Lightweight and flexible yet strong? Versatile fibers with dramatically improved energy storage capacity

3 ways to improve diabetes care through telehealth

A flexible and efficient DC power converter for sustainable-energy microgrids

Key protein regulates immune response to viruses in mammal cells

Development of organic semiconductors featuring ultrafast electrons

Cancer is a disease of aging, but studies of older adults sorely lacking

Dietary treatment more effective than medicines in IBS

Silent flight edges closer to take off, according to new research

Why can zebrafish regenerate damaged heart tissue, while other fish species cannot?

Keck School of Medicine of USC orthopaedic surgery chair elected as 2024 AAAS fellow

Returning rare earth element production to the United States

University of Houston Professor Kaushik Rajashekara elected International Fellow of the Engineering Academy of Japan

Solving antibiotic and pesticide resistance with infectious worms

Three ORNL scientists elected AAAS Fellows

Rice bioengineers win $1.4 million ARPA-H grant for osteoarthritis research

[Press-News.org] Free drug samples can change prescribing habits of dermatologists