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

Who benefits from direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising?

UMass Amherst researcher finds ‘it can be an effective tool to achieve public health objectives’

Who benefits from direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising?
2024-03-12
(Press-News.org)

A new study co-authored by a University of Massachusetts Amherst economist reveals the value of government vaccine recommendations to drugmakers, as well as potential benefits of advertising pharmaceuticals directly to consumers — a practice that is banned in every country apart from the United States and New Zealand. The research is the most comprehensive investigation to date of manufacturer marketing and consumer response to adult vaccine recommendations.

After the U.S. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended in 2014 that people aged 65 and over receive the pneumococcal vaccine Prevnar 13, Medicare and private insurance plans began covering the vaccine for patients. Pfizer, the sole manufacturer of the vaccine, then launched an advertising blitz to encourage older Americans to get vaccinated. Over the ensuing five years, the number of seniors who received the vaccine increased by about 10%, or 2.5 million people, and sales of Prevnar 13 grew by roughly $1 billion annually.

“Our results suggest there is real value to vaccine manufacturers in winning a recommendation from ACIP, and that direct-to-consumer advertising of pharmaceuticals is not the unequivocal boogeyman that some people think it is,” says Brandyn Churchill, assistant professor of resource economics at UMass Amherst. “It can be an effective tool to achieve public health objectives — as long as the incentives are aligned.”

In this case, the incentives were perfectly aligned: ACIP’s policy goal was to encourage more older adults to get vaccinated against bacterial pneumonia and Pfizer wanted to sell more vaccines.

Pneumococcal vaccines offer protection against streptococcus pneumoniae, a bacterial infection causing over 500,000 cases of pneumonia in the U.S. each year. Pneumonia is the seventh leading cause of death in the country and hospitalizations related to the disease cost an estimated $9 billion annually.

In addition to increased uptake and sales for Prevnar 13, Churchill and co-authors Laura E. Henkhaus, health economist and data scientist with Hill Physicians Medical Group and Emily C. Lawler, assistant professor of public administration and public policy at the University of Georgia, demonstrate that seniors who received the vaccine were also more likely to have recently visited a health care provider and to have received other vaccinations during those visits, creating what Churchill calls “bundling” of vaccine uptake.

However, the study concludes ACIP’s recommendation, and the resulting direct-to-consumer advertising, did nothing to reduce infection and mortality rates from pneumococcal disease.

“We didn’t find any evidence of a public health improvement, but someone benefited — in this case it was Pfizer,” Churchill says. 

In 2019, ACIP revised its recommendations, reaffirming that Prevnar 13 is indeed safe and effective, but no longer advising that it be administered as part of routine care for older adults, due to increased uptake of the vaccine by children, which has protected the broader population through the benefits of herd immunity.

“The marketing of Prevnar 13 was a success in that it helped achieve a stated policy goal — even if that goal changed as ACIP followed the science,” Churchill adds.

The complete study appears in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Who benefits from direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising? Who benefits from direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising? 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Discovery of a natural protective response in the brain could lead to treatments for concussions

Discovery of a natural protective response in the brain could lead to treatments for concussions
2024-03-12
  A team of Medical University of South Carolina researchers, led by Onder Albayram, Ph.D., reports in PNAS Nexus that they have discovered a novel protective response by which the brain naturally repairs itself after traumatic brain injury. Findings could lead to drug treatments that improve the brain’s ability to recover after concussions and prevent long-term brain disease. “Brain recovery mechanisms are very, very powerful,” said Albayram. “We don’t always have to develop new treatment approaches. We can also just give the brain a chance to heal itself properly.” Repetitive mild ...

Climate polices to reduce motor vehicle emissions can improve children’s health, save money

2024-03-12
A new study finds that policies to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from motor vehicles combined with investments in electric vehicles and public transportation would reduce air pollution and bring large benefits to children’s health. They would also save money. The findings by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health with collaborators at the University of California, Los Angeles, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the Boston University School of Public Health appear in the journal Environmental Research ...

Research finds a college degree remains a sound investment despite rising tuition

2024-03-12
A new analysis of 5.8 million Americans finds that earning a college degree is still a sound investment, although the rate of economic return varies across college majors and student demographics. The findings come as skepticism continues to grow over the value of a degree in the face of rising college costs, a decline in college enrollment, and a transforming economy. The study was published today in American Educational Research Journal, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Educational Research Association. It was conducted by Liang Zhang from New York University, Xiangmin Liu from Rutgers University, and Yitong Hu from New York University. The study estimated ...

Understanding chronic liver disease through the powerhouse of the cells

Understanding chronic liver disease through the powerhouse of the cells
2024-03-12
Scientists have identified a new organelle in liver cells called the mitochondria-lysosome-related organelle (MLRO). This discovery could improve our understanding of chronic liver diseases like alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) and metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD). Mitochondria are essential components of cells, often called the "powerhouses" because they generate energy. They also play a crucial role in metabolism, calcium signalling, and cell survival. When mitochondria malfunction, it's linked to various liver diseases. Cells have intricate mechanisms to maintain healthy mitochondria. One way is to ...

Outstanding achievements of UNIST students at the 30th Samsung Humantech Paper Award ceremony!

Outstanding achievements of UNIST students at the 30th Samsung Humantech Paper Award ceremony!
2024-03-12
Four exceptional UNIST students were honored for their outstanding academic and research achievements at the prestigious 30th Annual Samsung Humantech Paper Award ceremony. Among the many eminent individuals, JungSoo Lee (Advisor: Professor Han Gi Chae) from the Department of Materials Science and Engineering notched the highest score and won the Gold Prize within the category of Energy & Environment. His groundbreaking research on enhancing the efficiency of thermoelectric power generation through the development of a new power generation device structure technology earned him this accolade. By focusing on optimizing the structure ...

Increasing disability employment could boost national economy by billions

2024-03-12
-- There is a widening employment gap between people with and without disability -- -- In 2022, only 53.1 per cent of people with work-limiting disability were employed, compared to 81.8 per cent of people without disability -- -- People with disability are 25-30 percentage points less likely to be employed -- -- Over a quarter of people with disability cite transport as a barrier to finding work -- A new report by the Bankwest Curtin Economics Centre at Curtin University reveals that there has been no improvement in employment rates for people with disability ...

Novel risk score for cardiovascular complications after bone marrow transplant

2024-03-12
For thousands of Americans each year, a bone marrow transplant has the potential to cure diseases such as leukemias, lymphomas and immune deficiency disorders. While lifesaving, bone marrow transplants are taxing procedures that can affect various organs, including the cardiovascular system. With advances in medical science and improvement in protocols, more bone marrow transplants, also known as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, are being offered to older patients, a population at greater risk of cardiovascular disease.  Researchers led by ...

US drug approvals 2010-2019 align with US, but not global, burden of disease; expedited approval programs may make the gap worse

US drug approvals 2010-2019 align with US, but not global, burden of disease; expedited approval programs may make the gap worse
2024-03-12
BENTLEY UNIVERSITY Drug approvals in the United States between 2010-2019 were aligned with the US, but not global, burden of disease and the increasing number of expedited drug approvals could make the gap worse according to a study in the BMJ Open. The study also demonstrates that drugs indicated for conditions with the greatest burden of disease were less likely to be approved through the FDA’s expedited approval programs that reduce the timeline and cost of drug development, thus making it relatively more expensive to develop these products. US markets and FDA approval play an important role in shaping the product portfolios of global pharmaceutical companies; as such, expedited ...

Rising incidence of Legionnaires’ disease due to cleaner air

2024-03-12
A study links a rise in a serious bacterial illness to an unexpected factor: a decline in air pollution. Legionnaires’ disease is a respiratory illness with a fatality rate of 10–25% that is caused by inhaled Legionella bacteria. The bacteria live in water and outbreaks have been linked to water sources such as cooling towers, which cool indoor spaces by dissipating heat into the atmosphere in the form of water droplets and vapor. Other sources include improperly maintained public fountains, hot tubs, ice machines, home humidifiers, and showers. A global rise in Legionnaires’ disease since the year 2000 has puzzled ...

You didn’t see it coming: the spontaneous nature of turbulence

2024-03-12
We experience turbulence every day: a gust of wind, water gushing down a river or mid-flight bumps on an airplane. Although it may be easy to understand what causes some kinds of turbulence — a felled tree in a river or a bear splashing around for salmon — there is now evidence that a very small disturbance at the start can have dramatic effects later. Instead of a tree, think of a twig — or even the swerving motion of a molecule. University of California San Diego Chancellor’s Distinguished Professor of Physics Nigel Goldenfeld, along with his former student Dmytro Bandak, and Professors Alexei ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pusan National University study reveals a shared responsibility of both humans and AI in AI-caused harm

Nagoya Institute of Technology researchers propose novel BaTiO3-based catalyst for oxidative coupling of methane

AI detects first imaging biomarker of chronic stress

Shape of your behind may signal diabetes

Scientists identify five ages of the human brain over a lifetime

Scientists warn mountain climate change is accelerating faster than predicted, putting billions of people at risk

The ocean is undergoing unprecedented, deep-reaching compound change

Autistic adults have an increased risk of suicidal behaviours, irrespective of trauma

Hospital bug jumps from lungs to gut, raising sepsis risk

Novel discovery reveals how brain protein OTULIN controls tau expression and could transform Alzheimer's treatment

How social risk and “happiness inequality” shape well-being across nations

Uncovering hidden losses in solar cells: A new analysis method reveals the nature of defects

Unveiling an anomalous electronic state opens a pathway to room-temperature superconductivity

Urban natives: Plants evolve to live in cities

Folklore sheds light on ancient Indian savannas

AI quake tools forecast aftershock risk in seconds, study shows

Prevalence of dysfunctional breathing in the Japanese community and the involvement of tobacco use status: The JASTIS study 2024

Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks

Clinical trial using focused ultrasound with chemotherapy finds potential survival benefit for brain cancer patients

World-first platform for transparent, fair and equitable use of AI in healthcare

New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury

Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017

Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship

Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025

General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time

Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations

Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use

New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions

Study finds nationwide decline in rural family physicians

New public dataset maps Medicare home health use

[Press-News.org] Who benefits from direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising?
UMass Amherst researcher finds ‘it can be an effective tool to achieve public health objectives’